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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (802) 362-9023
Jimmy Torano Wins Again – Claims Victory
Riding Marlo in the $30,000 Otter Creek Grand Prix at Vermont
Summer Festival
Joy Slater and Shindig Win $10,000 Jr/A-O Jumper Classic
East Dorset, VT — July 24, 2005 –
Jimmy Torano riding Marlo, the big gray mare he owns with
Sir Ruly, Inc., topped a field of 20 horses to win the $30,000
Otter Creek Grand Prix today, his second consecutive Grand
Prix win at the Vermont Summer Festival in East Dorset, Vermont.
Torano’s Grand Prix winning streak is
now up to four wins in five weeks, including his victory at
HITS-on-the-Hudson in Saugerties, New York, and the I Love
New York show in Lake Placid, New York. “I need to pinch
myself,” laughed a delighted Torano. “It’s
almost too good to be true. To win three in a row, and four
out of five, is really pretty unbelievable.” Marlo,
a seven-year-old Dutch mare, was competing in her first Grand
Prix today. Torano noted that the plan is for his wife Danielle
Torano to compete Marlo in the Selection Trials for the 2008
Beijing Olympics.
Jimmy Torano rode three horses in the $30,000
Otter Creek Grand Prix and qualified all three of them for
the nine-horse jump-off, claiming the win with Marlo, fifth
place with Morgan owned by Sir Ruly, Inc., and ninth with
last week’s winner, Edesa’s Caruso owned by Pirtle/Caruso
Group, who retired on course. Danielle Torano rode two horses
owned by Sir Ruly, Inc. and qualified Capitano for the tiebreaker,
claiming third place, but had a rail in the first round with
Gibson, which was still good enough for twelfth place.
Dave Ballard designed the Round One track of
14 jumps, winnowing out the nine horses for the seven-effort
Jump-Off. Jimmy Torano led off the tiebreaker round with Marlo
and set the pace at 32.179 seconds, which proved to be unbeatable.
“She just has a huge stride,” Torano explained.
“She was the only horse that was able to do eight strides
down the last line. The other horses, even my own horses,
were galloping for nine. She was fast everywhere but I think
that really sealed it.”
Daniel Damen aboard his own Jewel Thief took
second place, clocking in clean at 33.580 seconds. Danielle
Torano gave it a shot with Capitano, going clear in 34.130
for third. Darragh Kerins riding Hot Wheels for owner Miranda
Fisher was the only other rider to go double-clear today,
but with a time of 34.158, he had to settle for fourth. Kerins
also qualified Far West owned by Caristo & The Regos for
the tiebreaker, but a rail down in 34.204 placed him sixth.
Torano said that going into the Grand Prix,
he was confident that Marlo could win it, even though it was
her debut at this level. “She’s been in three
classes this week and she won all three – she won the
open on Wednesday, the Mini Prix on Friday, and the Grand
prix today,” noted Torano, and praised the mare highly,
“She’s just an unbelievable mare. She’s
the best horse we have in our string. She’s just got
so much quality. She’s careful, she’s scopey,
she’s rangy, she’s got really everything you’d
want in a horse. She has to get just a tiny bit more rideable
and when that comes, she’ll be in my opinion, everything.
She’s a horse for the future for Danielle.” Torano
said next year’s World Cup Championship Trials are premature
in Marlo’s career. “But the following year she
should be the horse for Danielle to do the Olympic Trials
on,” Torano stated.
Torano noted that his fifth placed horse Morgan
could have been as fast as Marlo, but “the jump-off
was very twisty-turny, and when you turned, the jumps just
weren’t showing up like you’d like them to,”
he said. “Even on Marlo, on the turn from six to seven
in the jump-off, it just didn’t show up, but again with
her scope and range, she was able to do it, no problem. That’s
where it became a little bit of a hard jump-off because the
jumps just weren’t showing up off the tight turns.”
Torano explained that on his third trip into
the jump-off ring, this time aboard Edesa’s Caruso,
“I probably went in there a little too hungry.”
Torano retired after having a rail down at the second fence
and then a refusal. “I was already winning the class
and I knew Darragh Kerins was still behind me, so I could
be beat. I jumped the first jump and I turned back way too
tight. [Edesa’s Caruso] is a trier. I was way underneath
the second jump. He went straight up in the air and down on
the back pole. Then I lost my concentration and said, why
make him jump anymore? At that point I was already ninth so
I just pulled up and saved him for another day.”
Torano was also coaching Danielle for her two
rides, but noted, “Luckily all these horses are pretty
much seasoned except my first horse,” he said. “After
they jump the first round they really didn’t need a
lot for the jump-off.”
Torano also credited his ground crew for today’s
success. “Right now I have a very good staff and they’re
all working together. We have seven grooms who each take care
of three to four horses, but even those that didn’t
have a horse in the Grand Prix today were all up here helping.
They needed to be. We had a lot in it and fortunately all
except one jumped clean, so everyone was lending a hand, which
was nice.”
Show Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper Classic Series
In earlier competition today, the Manchester Classic Horse
Show featured the Show Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper Classic
Series.
$10,000 Junior/Amateur-Owner Jumper Classic
Joy Slater, 51, of Unionville, Pennsylvania, riding Shindig
owned by her Fat Chance Farm won the $10,000 Junior/Amateur-Owner
Jumper Classic, besting a field of 18 horses. The riders jumped
a first round course of 12 fences designed by Dave Ballard.
Eight horses went clean and qualified for the jump-off. In
the tiebreaker, only four horses were able to clear the course,
with Slater and Shindig posting the fastest time for the win.
Round one included a triple at Fence 6 and
a double at Fence 9. “It was a little bit awkward because
it was straight lines and then a lot of squiggle turns,”
said Slater. “And the last fence, a plank, was a long
run to a vertical, but that shouldn’t bother me because
I’ve ridden over timber where you have 120 strides between
the verticals and you’re going faster and they don’t
fall down – you do.” Slater is the first woman
to win the Maryland Hunt Cup, claiming victory in 1980 and
1981 in the four-mile timber race that challenges horses with
five-foot fences. But Slater acknowledged that on today’s
course, the final plank was particularly challenging for her
horse “because with him if you hold him, he’ll
have it down. We got there nice and long and it suited him
just fine. It just worked out perfectly.”
In the Jump-Off, the fourth rider to attempt
the shortened course posted the first clear round, Megan Spilatro
on her own Cleo, clocking in at 39.385 seconds, but the duo
ended up in fourth place. Next in the order was defending
champion of this class and the 2004 Show Jumping Hall of Fame
title holder, Danielle Torano aboard Lojana, who took over
the lead with a clean trip in 33.318, but they had to settle
for second place today. Slater was next to go and edged Torano
out of the lead, crossing the timers in the unbeatable time
of 33.222. Two more riders chased Slater, and only Kenzie
Snyder aboard her own Aquarius was able to go clear, but with
a time of 35.636 seconds, she had to settle for third.
“We had a really good cut to the Liverpool/Fence
two combination,” explained Slater. “I guess that’s
where we were actually able to beat Danielle because otherwise
we’d never be able to beat Danielle. I did the four
strides between [fences] one and two in the first round because
Shindig is better not waiting and we did it again that way
in the jump-off. Basically I try to leave strides out with
him, which suits me because I tend to not see short spots.”
Slater noted that luck played a part in her
win today also. “We got to the two fence quite long
and he went like a champ. Everything that was supposed to
happen did. Occasionally it works like it’s supposed
to!” she laughed.
Shindig is a 13-year-old Dutch warmblood gelding
that Slater has owned for five years. “He’s a
good-guy horse,” she said, and noted that at home she
does very little schooling over jumps with him and never rides
circles. “We spend a lot of time trotting around the
fields. We go out six times a week.”
In addition to her career as a show jumper,
Slater grew up foxhunting in New Jersey where her mother was
Master of Hounds in a local club. She later rode racehorses
and steeplechasers. Former US Show Jumping Team Coach Frank
Chapot was Slater’s coach as a junior and she won the
Medal Finals at Harrisburg in 1971. Laura Chapot is Slater’s
goddaughter and also her current trainer whenever they are
at the same show.
Slater brought three horses to Vermont this
week to compete. “I didn’t bring any clients.
I’m just doing this for my own entertainment. I’m
highly spoiled as they say,” she remarked with a laugh.
Slater’s sense of fun is reflected in her farm’s
unique name. “Fat Chance Farm – it’s a bit
of fun and fun is worth it. The logo is a pig because horses
behave like pigs sometimes and in the horse business there’s
a fat chance you’re ever going to make any money!”
she laughed, and added, “It’s nice to chuckle
because we’re almost too serious.”
$5,000 Low Junior/Amateur-Owner Jumper Classic
For the second week in a row, Michael Kennedy riding his own
Marco claimed victory in the $5,000 Low Junior/A-O Jumper
Classic, besting a field of 29 entries. Riders jumped a course
of 11 fences in the first round, and 11 riders managed to
clear that track and move on to the six-fence tiebreaker.
In the jump-off, eight of the 11 riders clocked in clean,
with Kennedy and Marco posting the fastest time, 30.111 seconds,
for the win.
Going first in the order, Julia Capalino aboard
her own Natasja set the pace at 30.136 seconds, but finished
in second place. Joy Slater attempted to take the lead with
Olivier owned by her Fat Chance Farm, but her time of 31.184
was only good enough for fourth. Ariane Stiegler and her Q
En Q went for a clear round in a steady 34.838, which earned
her the seventh place ribbon. Dominique Mungin aboard Colani
for Sand Castle Farm went next and loped the course clean
in 35.174 to finish eighth. Alden Conner in the irons on his
NZ Sheer Effect picked up the pace and tried to catch the
leaders, but clocked in at 31.034 for third. Jacqueline Attwood-Dupont
chased the time aboard Let’s Dance Jil owned by Hillary
Schlusemeyer, but crossed the timers in 31.244, placing her
fifth. Kennedy and Marco were next in the ring and blazed
around the course in 30.11 seconds, which proved to be unbeatable.
The last rider in the jump-off, Heather Dobbs riding her own
Cobretti, took a shot at the win, going clean in 32.320, but
had to settle for sixth place. Kennedy and Marco claimed $1,500
for the win today.
$1,000 Low Children’s/Adult Jumper Classic
Hannah Maloy aboard her own Sylvia won the $1,000 Low Children’s/Adult
Jumper Classic topping a field of 28 entries. Riders jumped
a first round of 12 fences, with 12 riders going fault-free
to qualify for the jump-off. Only five riders were able to
clear the short course and notch double-clear performances,
taking the top four slots in the results. Maloy and Sylvia
clocked in at 32.597 for the win. Gareth Evans riding Donner
for owner Blythe Masters placed second with a time of 33.93.
Jessica Vollor aboard Caeli for owner Bobbi Jo Newberry was
third, crossing the timers in 34.777. Ila Addanki riding Simply
Baroque for Stepping Stone Farm was fourth with her time of
35.943
The Vermont Summer Festival features the Show
Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper Classic Series. The Show Jumping
Hall of Fame and Museum at Busch Gardens in Tampa, Florida,
was established to promote the sport of show jumping and to
immortalize the legends of the men, women, and horses who
have made great contributions to the sport. The Show Jumping
Hall of Fame also conducts the Show Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper
Classic Series at nearly 100 horse shows across the country.
The series kicked off in February and continues through November,
culminating in a Year-End Championship to be held at the National
Horse Show in Wellington, Florida.
Today’s $30,000 Otter Creek Grand Prix wrapped up the
Manchester Classic Horse Show, the second week of the five-week
Vermont Summer Festival. Hunter/jumper competition continues
next week with the Valley Classic Horse Show, July 27-31.
Show jumping action at the Vermont Summer Festival takes place
Wednesday through Sunday through August 14th at the Harold
Beebe Farm in East Dorset, Vermont.
Vermont Summer Festival
Tickets are $5 Adults, $3 Seniors, and $2 Children, with 100%
of the gate proceeds donated to the Manchester Rotary Club
to help fund their philanthropic initiatives. Gates open at
8:00am and the Sunday Grand Prix starts at 2:00pm.
JULY 13-17 – Manchester Summer Festival
JULY 20-24 – Manchester Classic Horse Show
JULY 27-31 – Valley Classic Horse Show
AUGUST 3-7 – Manchester & the Mountains Horse Show
AUGUST 10-14 – Vermont Summer Celebration
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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