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For Immediate Release
Jennifer Ward for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: cell: (613) 292-5439 or
www.startinggate.ca
Victoria Birdsall Claims FEI Children’s Qualifier at Vermont Summer Festival
East Dorset, VT — August 11, 2005
–Victoria Birdsall of Topsfield, MA, claimed the
International Equestrian Federation (FEI) Children’s
Jumping Qualifier at the Vermont Summer Festival Horse Show
running July 13 to August 14 in East Dorset, VT.
For the first time, the Vermont Summer Festival
hosted a Qualifying event for the prestigious FEI Children’s
Jumping Final being held for the second year in a row in Simi
Valley, CA, from November 22-27. Open to athletes’ aged
12-14, this annual event brings together the world’s
best, and youngest, show jumping competitors for a week of
camaraderie and international competition.
In her first year of eligibility, 12-year-old
Victoria Birdsall topped the field at the Vermont Qualifier
held August 10 and 11. Over four rounds of competition, all
held over four different courses, Birdsall incurred just four
faults. Her one knock-down came in the first round on Wednesday,
but after making that one mistake, Birdsall and her horse,
Maxim W, didn’t put a foot wrong.
“I rode a lot better than yesterday,”
said Birdsall, who has been riding since the age of five and
trains with Patricia Harnois of Holly Hill Farm. As for her
equine partner, an 11-year-old chestnut Dutch Warmblood gelding,
Birdsall says, “I have had Maxim for a year, and I love
him so much. He is so funny, and he has the biggest personality.
I love to play with him, and I know when we go into the show
ring together, I can gallop around the course and he will
take care of me.”
If her final score of four faults qualifies
her for the FEI Children’s Final, Birdsall will happily
pack her suitcase for California. In fact, Vermont Summer
Festival sponsor, Tumi, generously donated a wheel-a-way deluxe
garment bag for exactly that purpose.
Two riders incurred eight faults each so their
times for completing the courses were used to break the tie.
That tipped the scales in favor of Holly Cerasano of Stillwater,
NY, who was riding her cute bay mare, Koko.
Placing third was 13-year-old Zazou Hoffman
who attended last year’s FEI Children’s Jumping
Final. A native of Santa Monica, CA, Hoffman was the recipient
of the first-ever R.W. Mutch Working Student Scholarship and,
as a result, spent two weeks over the winter in Florida training
with Vermont-based coach, Missy Clark. She again hooked up
with Clark, traveling from her home in Southern California
to the Vermont Summer Festival, in the hopes of finding a
horse that she could ride in the FEI Children’s Qualifier
under Clark’s tutelage. That horse was Mad Hatter, a
big white Dutch Warmblood gelding owned by Tony Weight, that
arrived in Clark’s barn a week earlier. Riding the new
mount, Hoffman took the early lead by posting two clear rounds
on Wednesday and returned to the ring on Thursday to have
eight faults in the first round.
“I hope that the three top competitors
here at the Vermont Summer Festival will qualify for the Final
in California,” said FEI Olympic judge Francois Ferland
of Canada who presided over the competition. “All three
are good candidates and demonstrated strong riding skills.
It will be their first opportunity to compete at an international
event, and this is not only important as a competitor, but
as a human being. They will make friendships that will last
a lifetime.”
As the host country, the United States will
field 16 entries, and an additional 16 athletes will qualify
based on their results in events held around the world. While
American riders will have the luxury of competing on their
own horses, foreign riders will compete on borrowed horses
supplied by the host country.
The 2005 Vermont Summer Festival features five
weeks of exciting equestrian competition running July 13 to
August 14 at Harold Beebe Farm in East Dorset, VT. In addition
to being New England’s largest ‘AA’ rated
hunter-jumper horse show, it is also the largest sporting
event in the State of Vermont, awarding a total of $.6 million
in prize money.
Each of the five weeks of competition features
a $10,000 Friday Mini Prix while the first four weeks has
featured a $30,000 Sunday Grand Prix. New for 2005, the Vermont
Summer Festival culminates with the $50,000 Vermont Summer
Celebration Grand Prix on Sunday, August 14.
For more information on the Vermont Summer Festival, please
call (802) 496-9667 or (802) 362-9023 or email.
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