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For Immediate Release
Jennifer Ward for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: cell: (613) 292-5439 or
www.startinggate.ca
Ian Silitch Navigates Grand Prix Win at Vermont Summer Festival
East Dorset, VT — August 7, 2005 –Ian
Silitch made a triumphant return to the Vermont Summer Festival
Horse Show by winning the $30,000 Manchester and the Mountains
Grand Prix held Sunday, August 7, in East Dorset, VT.
A total of 26 horses attempted the 13-obstacle
track set by course designer and Olympic Silver Medalist Michel
Vaillancourt of Canada, but only three managed to leave all
the rails in their place to advance to the jump-off round.
Interestingly, all three clear rounds came from among the
first ten horses.
First to challenge the shortened jump-off course,
Silitch and Navigator left all of the rails in the their place
and stopped the clock at 39.44 seconds, laying down the gauntlet
for the two riders who followed.
Sheila Burke of Elmira, NY, had her hopes dashed
early on when the second fence on course came down. Her four-fault
effort in a time of 42.95 seconds riding the cute bay gelding,
Quincy B, would eventually leave her in third place.
The final challenger, Bill Lowry, went for
the win, but when the clock stopped at 39.66 seconds, it left
him just shy of Silitch’s winning time.
Silitch claimed his victory aboard Navigator,
a 12-year-old chestnut Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by
Bethany Curtis, in only the horse’s second Grand Prix
event. His first was one week earlier when Silitch showed
him in the $30,000 Mt. Equinox Grand Prix.
“He jumped really well, he’s a
cool horse with a big step that is very careful, and Bill
was kind enough to go just a little bit slower,” joked
Silitch, who is based in Ocala, FL, and spends his summers
in Virginia. “This was my first time showing in Manchester
in 11 years, so it is a triumphant return.”
For Lowry, who is based in Rhode Island, his
second place finish marked the best Grand Prix result to date
for Rio Corde. Lowry owns the nine-year-old bay Hessen gelding
by Ramiro Z in partnership with Ton Visscher of the Netherlands.
“I was too slow,” Lowry said philosophically
of being in the runner-up position. “I added one stride
too many to the final jump, I did eight strides and Ian only
did seven. That made the difference between winning and being
second.”
Linda Sheridan had the distinction of placing
fourth and fifth when her two entries, Tudor News and Invitational
respectively, each incurred four faults but stopped the clock
at the fastest times.
Silitch and Lowry will face-off once more in
next Sunday’s $50,000 Vermont Summer Celebration Grand
Prix, the grand finale of the 2005 Vermont Summer Festival
Horse Show. They will encounter stiff competition from Jimmy
Torano, who won the first two Grand Prix events of the five-week
circuit, as well as Christine Tribble, the winner of Week
Three’s $30,000 Mt. Equinox Grand Prix.
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 based on prize money awarded in the State of Vermont.
As is the tradition at the Vermont Summer Festival, each of
the first four weeks of competition features a $30,000 Grand
Prix and a $10,000 Mini Prix. New for 2005 is the $50,000
Vermont Summer Celebration Grand Prix to conclude the five-week
Vermont Summer Festival 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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