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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (802) 362-9023
Canadian Olympian Beth Underhill Makes Vermont
Debut at Manchester
Summer Festival
East Dorset, VT — July 16, 2005 –
The Vermont Summer Festival is now sanctioned by Equine Canada,
the national body for equestrian sport in Canada. Canadian
riders competing in the Junior/Amateurs and Hunters can now
earn points at the Vermont horse show that count towards qualifying
for the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto, Canada. The points are
significant for some riders, but for Canadian Olympian Beth
Underhill, who will be competing in the $30,000 Battenkill
Grand Prix on Sunday, July 17, there were other factors that
figured into her decision to compete at the Vermont show for
the first time.
“I always like to experience new venues,”
Underhill said. “We were in Culpeper (Virginia) last
week and planning to compete in Bromont (Quebec, Canada) the
next two weeks, so it was a natural tour – Culpeper,
Vermont, Bromont. Logistically it made sense. Also, I had
heard that the Vermont Summer Festival was a very nice show,
nice environment, and well-run, so I thought it would be a
great new experience.”
Underhill, 42, operates Beth Underhill Stables
in Schomberg, Ontario. She arrived with eight horses and three
of her students to compete in the Manchester Summer Festival
(July 13-17), opening week of the five-week horse show. Underhill
is enthusiastic about the area and the event. “Beautiful,
just beautiful,” Underhill enthused. “I love the
topography, the mountains, the trees. It is just gorgeous.
And the colonial style homes – that’s what I really
enjoy. It’s almost as if time stopped and we can get
back to a little more tranquility for the horses and ourselves.
Fun restaurants and good shopping make the whole experience
nice and enjoyable. We’ve really had a great time. Everyone
has been very welcoming.” Underhill is equally impressed
with the Harold Beebe Farm show grounds. “I found the
facility and the footing excellent, and the course designing
has been wonderful. Anthony D’Ambrosio, the course designer,
has done a wonderful job.”
Underhill and her clients have been collecting
good ribbons all week. “We’ve had some great results
so far,” she said. She’s looking forward to the
featured events on Sunday (July 17). Underhill will ride Magdaline,
owned by Darryl B. Williams and Associates, Inc., in the $30,000
Battenkill Grand Prix. “I’m hoping that she’s
on form,” Underhill said of the 11-year-old Dutch warmblood
mare. “She’s been great so far this year.”
One of Underhill’s students, Carly Campbell-Cooper,
22, who just moved up to the Grand Prix level, will also compete
in the Grand Prix.From 2000 to 2003, Campbell-Cooper was a
successful competitor at the North American Young Riders Championships
(NAYRC), winning three individual and four team medals with
former ride, Rex Get Busy and current mount Croft Temptation.
Campbell-Cooper will be riding her NAYRC Gold Medal winning
horse, Croft Temptation in the $35,000 Battenkill Grand Prix.
“We’re really excited about that!” said
Underhill. Underhill’s clients will also contest the
$10,000 High Junior/Amateur-Owner Classic and the Junior/Amateur-Owner
Low Classic on Sunday. “Hopefully, we’re ready
to win!” Underhill said.
Underhill’s long list of world-class
credentials includes competing at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics;
the 1991 Pan American Games, where she won both Team and Individual
Silver Medals; the 1999 Pan Am Games, where she won Team Bronze;
and the 1998 World Equestrian Games in Rome, Italy. She also
won the Canadian Show Jumping Championship title in 1994,
1996, and 1999. Underhill is the first woman to win the World
Cup League – and she’s done it twice, 1993 and
1999.
Underhill is very familiar with the skills
of Course Designer D’Ambrosio, and predicts the $30,000
Battenkill Grand Prix course will be very technical. “He’s
building for a fairly broad group of horses and riders,”
Underhill explained. “He’s going to have some
very experienced riders and some less experienced riders that
are moving up to that division. He’ll also have some
younger horses as well as some more experienced horses. As
a course designer he has quite a tricky job
in that he has to challenge the more experienced horse-and-rider
combinations but still keep it fair for the young horse-rider
combinations. That’s where Anthony is very strong and
a very experienced course designer. We’ll find a lot
of technicality and certainly bigger jumps than in Friday’s
Mini Prix, but I think he’ll stress more the technicality
and try and make the riders make errors rather than over-facing
the horses.”
Underhill explained that a designer could build
a course to test the riders’ technical expertise by
using related distances between the jumps, giving riders options
in approaching the jumps. “He’ll probably make
some difficult options in terms of distance,” Underhill
said, “and that’s where a more experienced rider
will have a little bit more knowledge or strength because
they know their horse a little bit better or just have more
experience. And a young horse is not as adept at
being able to shorten and lengthen its stride as a more experienced
horse is. Anthony will be trying to make some challenging
distances between the jumps just to lead you into making a
little bit of a mistake and hence having a rail.”
After contributing to the Canadian Team’s
performance in Barcelona in 1992, Underhill qualified to compete
in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and the 2000 Sydney Olympics,
but had to withdraw prior to the Games due to injury incurred
by her mounts. Does Underhill have her sites set on the 2008
Beijing Olympics with her current mount Magdaline? “This
is her second season, so time will tell,” Underhill
said with a smile. “I take it one day at a time.”
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. 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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