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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (613) 569-2423 or
www.startinggate.ca
Jimmy Torano and Ralvesther Claim Victory in $10,000 Polo Ralph Lauren Mini Prix
at the Vermont Summer Festival
East Dorset, VT — July 14, 2006
– Jimmy Torano notched another win aboard Ralvesther
at the 2006 Vermont Summer Festival, claiming victory in the
$10,000 Polo Ralph Lauren Mini Prix on Friday, the first in
the series of five Mini Prix events presented by Manchester
Designer Outlets. The $10,000 Polo Ralph Lauren Mini Prix
was the featured Friday class of Week 1, the 'Manchester Summer
Festival' (July 12-16), of the five-week Vermont Summer Festival
at Harold Beebe Farm in East Dorset, Vermont. In addition
to the $3,000 prize money awarded to the Mini Prix winner,
Torano received a $1,000 gift card that can be used at any
Polo Ralph Lauren store nationwide.
Torano rode three horses in the $10,000 Polo
Ralph Lauren Mini Prix, including his own Ormbsy Hill and
Edesa’s Caruso, but it was the talented Ralvesther,
his third mount in the class, that bested the field of 39
horses. Ralvesther is an eight-year-old bay Dutch Warmblood
mare owned by Susan Carr and her 10-year-old daughter, rider
Nikki Carr (SCNC Investments Inc.).
Course Designer Anthony D’Ambrosio designed
the 11-jump, 14-effort Round One track, which included doubles
at Fences 3 and 5, and set the time allowed at 69 seconds.
The class format allowed horses that went clear over the first
round to stay in the ring and immediately tackle the jump-off
course of six fences with the time allowed set at 47 seconds.
Only nine horses managed to go clean in round one before attempting
the jump-off, and Torano and Ralvesther were the fastest clear.
Andrew Welles riding Maestro owned by Peter
Welles and Family, was the eighth rider on the course. He
was able to produce a clean round to advance to the jump-off
where he set the pace with a four-fault jump-off trip in 35.675
seconds, but his lead was short-lived and he finished in sixth
place. Next in the ring, Keri Potter-Pessoa aboard her own
Rockford I, edged into the lead with a double-clear performance,
clocking in at 38.024 seconds, which held for second place.
Torano and Ralvesther, the 11th pair on the roster, moved
into the lead with a double-clear performance and the unbeatable
jump-off time of 33.328 seconds to take the win.
Twenty-two more riders chased Torano and the
swift mare Ralvesther, but none could catch them, though six
more riders managed to advance to the jump-off with two more
riders putting in double-clear performances. Sebastien Kapel
of the Netherlands riding Kaiser de la Cour for Canada's Mill
Creek Stables kept all the jumps up, crossing the timers in
38.850 seconds for third place. Caitlin Venezia riding Q&Q
for Ariane Stiegler also put in a double-clear performance,
breaking the beam in 40.086 to claim fourth place.
“It was tough enough,” Torano said
of the two rounds. “Anthony built a good course, fairly
technical. My horse is a very nice horse – she’s
a little green and she rode a little ratty, and I would have
liked her to ride a little smoother today, but luckily she
has a lot of quality and she is careful, so she jumped very
well in both rounds.”
In the first round, Torano assessed that the
track was challenging right from the start going from 2 to
3AB. “A lot of people really wanted to do five [strides]
because it walked dead-on in five, but with the double vertical
at 3AB, you had to do six to leave them up," said Torano.
"That was difficult.”
On his first mount, Ormbsy Hill, the first
horse on course, Torano did it in six strides and noted that
the rest of the class followed suit. Torano pointed out two
other spots that challenged riders. “You had a rollback
right by the ingate to 4 to 5AB, which was difficult, and
the last line was a very, very steady distance to a plank
on flat cups,” he explained. Torano appreciated the
course designer’s work, saying “He put a lot of
tests out there, it wasn’t just in one place. It was
technical and it was a rider’s course. You had to basically
ride a lot of places.”
In the jump-off round, Torano gave his mare
all the credit for the speedy, clean finish. “That mare
is just very fast. When she’s in the jump-off, I can
really count on her,” Torano stated. “Right off
the bat, from the first fence to the second, I believe I was
the only one who did the inside turn – it was to a skinny
vertical that was very, very difficult to do, but I really
trusted the mare. She came through for me there and that sort
of sealed it. Then I stayed on the pace.” Torano actually
took one more inside turn to the vertical before the final
double. “All in all, she was just really quick everywhere,”
Torano enthused.
Competition Highlights
Heather Dobbs of Sussex, New Jersey, riding Comfortside Farm's
Gulliver clinched the overall win in the Washington International
Horse Show (WIHS) competition today by placing first in the
WIHS Jumper Phase, besting a field of 47 horses. Yesterday
in the WIHS Hunter Phase, Dobbs and Gulliver placed ninth,
while Zazou Hoffman of Santa Monica, California, riding Tonight
owned by North Run and Missy Clark, claimed the win by topping
the field of 49 competitors.
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).
For more information on the 2006 Vermont
Summer Festival, or to request a prize list, please e-mail.
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