|
For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (613) 569-2423 or
www.startinggate.ca
Jimmy Torano and Ralvesther Win Open Jumper
on Opening Day of 2006 Vermont Summer Festival
Mary LeBlanc and Alice Howland Named Hunter
Champions
East Dorset, VT — July 12, 2006
– The 2006 Vermont Summer Festival opened today to relentless
rain but plucky exhibitors participated in five rings of competition
on the first day of Week 1, the 'Manchester Summer Festival',
at Harold Beebe Farm in East Dorset, Vermont.
Despite the heavy downpour, Jimmy Torano of
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, claimed back-to-back wins in the
Grand Prix ring Wednesday afternoon. He won the Open Jumper
Level 6 aboard Sir Neel and came back in the next class to
claim victory with Ralvesther in the featured event, the $2,500
Open Jumper, a New England Horseman’s Council (NEHC)
Rated AA class. Anthony D’Ambrosio of Red Hook, New
York, designed the Grand Prix ring courses.
The heavy rain had evolved to a downright deluge
by the time Torano and Ralvesther jumped their winning round.
“It was raining pretty hard,” Torano acknowledged.
“I actually scratched my other two horses because of
the weather, but this mare has been really solid and I wanted
to get her in the ring once before the Mini Prix and the Grand
Prix on Sunday. She jumped really well.” The eight-year-old
bay Dutch mare owned by the Carr Family is a relatively new
ride for Torano. “She jumped her first Grand Prix in
April at Littlewood and she won that,” Torano said,
recalling the $40,000 Zada Enterprises Grand Prix at the Littlewood
Spring Finale in Wellington, Florida. “I think she’s
a really good mare.”
Course designer D’Ambrosio set a 10-jump
course that included a double at Fences 7 and 10, with a seven-obstacle
jump-off round for the Level 6 class, and let that stand for
the Open Jumper class as well. Horse and rider combinations
jumped round one, and those that were clean immediately jumped
the shorten course. Between the two classes, Torano actually
jumped the same course four times today.
In the Level 6 class, Torano finished first,
second, and third, topping a field of 23 horses. Ten horses
cleared the first round, and seven of those then managed to
go clean in the jump-off, but it was Torano and three horses
he owns with his wife, Danielle, that claimed the top three
slots. Torano aboard Sir Neel won with a jump-off time of
36.743 seconds. Torano placed second aboard Oselli, clocking
in clean at 37.264 seconds. Torano claimed the third place
slot with Edesa’s Caruso with a clear round in 37.568
seconds.
In the Open Jumper class that wrapped up the
Grand Prix action as the day’s finale class, only two
horses managed to clear round one. Robert Kraut riding Providence
was first to go, setting the jump-off time to beat at 37.334
seconds. Kraut’s lead was short-lived, and he had to
settle for second place when Torano and Ralvesther aced the
course in 36.842 seconds. “Luckily with the weather,
they just kept the same course that we had jumped earlier
in the previous class so I knew my way around,” Torano
explained. “From one to two you could leave out a stride,
which I did, and then there were a couple inside turns. I
really trust that mare so I took the inside turns and she
was fast.”
With 153 rounds ridden in five different classes
in the Grand Prix ring today, Dorothy Ammerman, Executive
Director of the show, noted that, for the first time in the
13-year history of the Vermont Summer Festival, competition
in the main ring continued long after the hunter rings finished.
New competitors in Vermont this year include riders from California,
Texas, and Canada. Management has added 240 more stalls to
accommodate the increased entries for the show’s 2006
season.
Two Hunter Champions Named on Opening Day of
Vermont Summer Festival
In a new class at the Vermont Summer Festival, Mary LeBlanc
of Cotuit, Massachusetts, riding Serendipity won the New England
Novice Adult Hunter Championship. LeBlanc placed first and
fourth in the two over fences classes and won the under saddle
class. LeBlanc trains with Patricia Harnois. LeBlanc was thrilled
to receive a $300 gift certificate from Der Dau as part of
her championship reward. The Reserve Champion was Kristin
McCuin aboard Gettysburg.
Alice Howland of Lincoln, Massachusetts, riding
Tolerant won the New England Restricted Children’s Hunter
Championship. Howland placed second and first in the two over
fences classes and then earned second place in the under saddle
class to claim the championship. Howland trains with Joyce
Mersereau. The Reserve Champion was Lisa Chantler riding Nemo.
Featuring more than $600,000 in prize
money, the Vermont Summer Festival includes a $10,000 Mini
Prix each Friday, and, for the first four weeks of competition,
a $30,000 Sunday Grand Prix. The 2006 Vermont Summer Festival
closes with the grand finale, the $50,000 Vermont Summer Celebration
Grand Prix on Sunday, August 13. The Vermont Summer Festival
is also a proud member event of the Show Jumping Hall Of Fame,
the Marshall & Sterling League, and the North American
League (NAL). Enhancements to the show grounds this year include
beautiful new landscaping at every ring and wireless Internet
access throughout the 40-acre show grounds.
For more information on the 2006 Vermont
Summer Festival, or to request a prize list, please e-mail.
Previous ### Next
|