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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (802) 362-9023
Blythe Marano Aboard Little Foot Victorious in USEF Talent
Search
Whitney Goulart on Convent 8 Wins USEF Hunter Seat Medal
Andrew Philbrick and E Ticket Triumph in NAL Open Speed
East Dorset, VT — July 14, 2005 —–
EAST DORSET, VERMONT, July 14, 2005 Blythe Marano, 17,
of Bedminster, New Jersey, riding Little Foot for owner Missy
Clark and North Run Stables, topped a class of 22 entries
today to win the two-phase USEF Talent Search at the Manchester
Summer Festival, the first week of the Vermont Summer Festival
Horseshows in East Dorset, Vermont. With 800 horses on the
grounds and five rings in action, stand-out performances also
included Whitney Goulart’s win in the USEF Hunter Seat
Medal, and Andrew Philbrick’s victory in the Open NAL
Speed III.
With Judge Mike Rosser officiating, Marano
solidly showcased her expertise in the USEF Talent Search,
which included an equally weighted jumper phase and a flat
phase. It was only the second time Marano had ever ridden
the seven-year-old bay gelding, Little Foot, and she gave
full credit to the talented young horse. “He’s
flashy on the flat and he’s very simple for me to ride,”
said Marano. “I like riding him a lot. He’s very
straightforward. He doesn’t spook at anything.”
Marano is aiming to qualify for her third consecutive
trip to the USEF Talent Search finals held at the USET Foundation
headquarters in Gladstone, New Jersey. She has won the flat
phase of the finals for the past two years. Marano competes
in the high junior jumpers, but she prefers classes on the
flat. “I like doing equitation more. I have a tendency
to make my jumpers go low and do equitation courses on them.
I like doing tighter turns rather than flying!” she
laughed.
Anthony D’Ambrosio designed the USEF
Talent Search 11-jump course, the first phase of the class,
which included three double combinations and several bending
lines. “The jumper phases are always my stronger point
because there’s a
lot of room to fix things, especially on a bending line,”
Marano said. “I don’t usually count (strides)
very much when I go around the course. I ride off of my eye.”
All 22 riders were invited back for the flat phase. Marano
noted that the horse’s abilities to show extensions
or to respond appropriately to the rider’s leg are part
of what contributes to the judge’s assessment, and she
acknowledged that with Light Foot, she had the advantage of
a cooperative mount. “Light Foot will do whatever you
ask,” Marano said. “It was up to me to keep my
heels down and my back straight.”
Marano, a high school junior who plans to attend
Columbia University in New York as a business major, has been
riding since age three, and for the past four years has been
in training with Missy Clark. Marano notes that at North Run
Stables, she’s grown accustomed to riding horses she
doesn’t know well, which helped prepare her for today’s
win aboard a new partner. “The good thing is we ride
so many horses in the barn that eventually it gets easier
and easier
just to hop on.”
Whitney Goulart on Convent 8 Wins USEF Hunter
Seat Medal
Whitney Goulart, 17, of Mendham, New Jersey, topped a field
of 23 to claim victory in the USEF Hunter Seat Medal, riding
Convent 8 for owner Winsor Farm Sales, Inc. Convent 8 is stabled
at Quiet Hill Farm with Christine Schlusemeyer, who has been
Goulart’s trainer since last fall. “He’s
18-hands but he’s really comfortable to ride for all
sorts of people because he’s very short coupled,”
said Schlusemeyer of the winning mount. “He’s
a beautiful white. His nickname is ‘Pegasus’ because
he looks like the USEF horse on their logo.” Pegasus
was imported last year from Europe where he was competing
in the Grand Prix classes. In the U.S., Pegasus has traveled
to West Palm Beach and also competed at Devon with Evan Coluccio
aboard. Goulart had ridden Pegasus once in Florida, but not
in competition. Leading up to her win, today Goulart and Convent
8 competed in the USET Talent Search where they placed 8th,
then the WIHS (Washington International Horse Show) Hunter
Phase where they were 5th, and then the USEF Medal class for
the big win.
All 23 riders rode the first round of the Medal
class, but only four were called back to test. In the test,
riders were instructed to gallop fence 3, trot fence 4, canter
a rollback to fence 5, walk and then counter-canter fence
1, and finish by sitting the trot back to the line-up. To
her advantage, Goulart went last of the four. “I could
see what people were doing and what they could improve on.
I got to pick exactly where I wanted to get the trot and the
hand gallop,” Goulart explained. “I knew I had
to really be on it because Nikko Ritter (who placed second)
went before me and he really got a great hand-gallop. I had
to be able to get that to beat him. I stayed positive and
Pegasus was awesome. He was right there for me,” Goulart
said. “I’m an analytical person. I can do very
specific short things like that. It’s very precise and
I’m
very disciplined. I love to test. If I can get into the test,
that’s my favorite part.”
The USEF Medal is judged on the rider, but
Goulart believes it was the consistency Pegasus displayed
all day that clinched the win from Judge Mark Rosser, who
officiated at all three of the pair’s classes. “Each
round that I did
today, I got to know Pegasus a little better. I got to know
exactly what I needed to do to make him perform perfectly,”
Goulart said, and added, “He’s a great horse,
so you don’t have to do all that much!”
The USEF Hunter Seat Medal class was a qualifier
for the Medal Finals that will be held at the Pennsylvania
National Horse Show in Harrisburg this fall. Goulart, who
resides in USEF Zone 2 (New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut)
is
well on her way to the 60 points she needs to qualify, having
added 20 points today to her already accumulated 16
all earned on different horses. Goulart was especially thrilled
about her win with Pegasus. “I’ve done a lot of
different horses some green, some really good. It was
my first day to ride Pegasus, he was great, and it was a lot
of fun. It was exciting!” she said. Goulart has been
riding most of her life, and started competing in lead-line
at Devon at age four. She shares the love of equestrian sport
with her mother and three sisters who all ride, as well as
her uncle, Mark Wattring, who competed in the 2004 Athens
Olympic Games for Puerto Rico. “It’s kind of in
the family,” Goulart acknowledged.
Andrew Philbrick and E Ticket Triumph in
NAL Open Speed
Andrew Philbrick riding E Ticket for owner C Ray Investment
bested a field of 10 horses to win the NAL Open Speed class.
Anthony D’Ambrosio designed the 10-jump course, which
only two riders were able to jump clean. Going fourth in the
order, Juliana Starbuck riding Contino for RCG Farms notched
the first clear trip, clocking in at 52.72 seconds. Going
last in the order, Philbrick blazed around the course in 51.
35 seconds to edge Starbuck into second place and claim the
win. Daniel Damen riding his own Jewel Thief had a rail down
for four faults, but his fast time of 52.93 earned him the
third place ribbon.
The North American League (NAL) runs season-long
series in six hunter and jumper divisions Children’s
Hunter, Children’s Jumper, Adult Hunter, Adult Jumper,
Pony Jumper, and Open Jumper Speed. Each series culminates
with a
championship final at the Pennsylvania National Horse Show
in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in October. Riders need not be
members of the NAL to compete in any qualifying classes, but
only current members earn points toward year-end finals.
For more information and a list of qualifying competitions
for 2005, please visit the Ryegate Show Services website at
www.Ryegate.com.
Featured Classes Upcoming at Vermont Summer
Festival As per tradition, the Vermont Summer Festival will
feature a $10,000 Mini Prix every Friday, as well as a $30,000
Grand Prix held each Sunday for the first four weeks. New
for 2005, the Vermont Summer Festival will conclude with a
grand finale, the $50,000 Vermont Summer Celebration Grand
Prix. The Vermont Summer Festival is New England's largest
'AA' rated hunter-jumper horse show, and is now sanctioned
by Equine Canada, the national body for equestrian sport in
Canada.
Each of the five weeks will also feature a
$10,000 Show Jumping Hall Of Fame High Junior/Amateur-Owner
Jumper class, part of the Show Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper
Classic Series. Marshall & Sterling and North American
League (NAL)classes are also held throughout the five weeks of competition.
For more information on the Vermont Summer
Festival, please call (802) 496-9667 or (802) 362-9023 or
email.
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“Whitney Goulart and Convent 8”
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Photo credit: David Mullinix Photography (Photos also
available of Blythe Marano and Andrew Philbrick)
Photos may be used free of charge in relation to the above
press release.
Photo also available in high resolution, please e-mail:
jward@startinggate.ca
Please advise of links to web postings.” |
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