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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (613) 569-2423 or
www.startinggate.ca
Canada's Christi McQuaker Wins $3,000 Open
NAL Speed III at the Vermont Summer Festival
Julie Welles and Little Foot Claim Second
Victory in USEF Show Jumping Talent
Search Canadian Tatiana Dzavik Rides Matrix
to Win in USEF Hunter Seat Medal
East Dorset, VT — July 20, 2006
– Christi McQuaker, 34, of Schomberg, Ontario, Canada,
aboard her eight-year-old Belgian mare Ella won Thursday's
$3,000 Open Speed III, a Level 7 class in the North American
League (NAL) Speed Series, at the Vermont Summer Festival
in East Dorset. The action marks day two of the Manchester
Classic Horse Show (July 19-23), the second of five weeks
comprising the 2006 Vermont Summer Festival.
“I’m very happy to win it,”
beamed McQuaker who is showing in Vermont for the first time.
“It’s nice to win a class anywhere but it’s
always nice to win a class in the States because the competition
is always a little tougher.”
Course designer Michel Vaillancourt of Canada
set a track of 11 jumps with doubles at Fences 4 and 9. Knockdowns
resulted in four seconds being added to the rider’s
time in this race against the clock. The Open NAL Speed class
is a qualifier for the NAL Finals, which will be held at the
Pennsylvania National Horse show in Harrisburg this fall.
Leading off the roster, Robert Ross of Wellington,
Florida, aboard Argensohn owned by Romance Farm & Joe
Zada, set the pace with a clean trip in 67.748 seconds, but
as the class progressed, the times got quicker and the lead
changed hands several times, finally putting Ross in sixth
place. Christine McCrea of East Windsor, Connecticut, who
has recently returned from competing in the Samsung Super
League in Europe, was the third rider on course and took over
the lead with Laddidor, posting a clean round in 62.583 seconds,
but it wasn’t fast enough to maintain the top slot and
McCrea ended up fourth.
Alan Korotkin of Wellington, Florida, aboard
Julie Aitken's Rocketman, winners of the $30,000 Battenkill
Grand Prix on Sunday, followed McCrea into the ring and snatched
the lead from her with a rocket-fast fault-free trip in 61.08,
but the win eventually eluded them and they had to settle
for second place.
Two more riders chased Korotkin, but it was
not until McQuaker that the lead changed hands once again.
McQuaker aboard her Ella became the new leaders, clocking
in clean almost a full second faster than Korotkin at 60.354
seconds, a time that would hold up for the win.
The last four riders took aim at the leader,
and though two riders posted clean rounds, they could not
go faster than McQuaker. Tiffany Cornacchio riding Intrepide
D’Elle for SCNC Investments Inc., broke the beam clean
in 62.621 for third place.
"I actually didn’t think I was going
that fast,” reflected McQuaker who has been partnered
with the bay mare for three years. “I wasn’t really
trying to go that fast, I just wanted to be efficient, do
nice snug turns, and be clean. She’s pretty quick anyway
so you don’t really have to try and go that fast. She
jumped really well and we were clean.”
McQuaker reviewed where she shaved fractions
to beat the pacesetters before her. “I left a stride
out in the last line. I don’t know if [Korotkin] did
or not, but I was pretty quick to the last line and down the
last line. Also, from the first jump to the second jump I
was pretty quick. Everywhere else I was just efficient,”
McQuaker explained. She also credited her mare’s skill,
saying, “She jumps way up in the air but she’s
pretty quick to the jumps. She doesn’t waste any time.”
McQuaker and her rider/trainer husband, Mac
McQuaker, brought nine horses to the Vermont Summer Festival,
all belonging to clients except for Ella. “They’ve
all done very well,” McQuaker noted. She plans to compete
Ella in Friday's $10,000 Mini Prix and in the $30,000 Otter
Creek Grand Prix on Sunday, July 23, which just happens to
be her 35th birthday! The McQuakers also brought their three
and a half-year-old daughter Kieley, who competed in the Lead
Line class last Sunday and plans to have another go this coming
Sunday.
McQuaker is pleased with her first visit to
the Vermont Summer Festival. “We’ll be back next
year. I love it! It’s a beautiful horse show and it’s
a great place to come,” she said. “We brought
clients that are on summer holiday and it’s a great
town for them to come to.”
Competition Highlights
Julie Welles and Little Foot Claim Second Victory
in USEF Show Jumping Talent Search
For the second week in a row at the Vermont Summer Festival,
Julie Welles, 18, of West Simsbury, Connecticut, won the USEF
Show Jumping Talent Search. Welles’s mount was again
Little Foot, the eight-year-old bay gelding owned by North
Run and Missy Clark. Welles trains with Missy Clark and Linda
Langmeier. Nikko Ritter of Geneva, Florida, placed second
riding Valvert owned by Annabel Simpson. Zazou Hoffman of
Santa Monica, California, aboard Tonight, also owned by North
Run and Missy Clark, placed third.
The two-phase competition kicked off at 7:30
a.m. with 32 horses entered to compete in the over-fences
class designed by Michel Vaillancourt, which required riders
to jump a course of 10 fences, including a triple, in 64 seconds.
Welles rode Little Foot to a first place finish in this phase.
The top 20 horses were called back to the ring for the equitation
phase, and again Welles placed first on the flat to claim
overall victory in the class.
Welles, who won the 2005 USEF Show Jumping
Talent Search Final, is now one win closer to her goal of
earning her USEF Gold Medal. She needs to win three more USEF
classes to reach the required 20. The medals are presented
annually at the USEF Show Jumping Talent Search Final held
at USET Foundation headquarters in Gladstone, New Jersey.
Toronto's Tatiana Dzavik Rides Matrix to Win
in USEF Hunter Seat Medal
Tatiana Dzavik of Toronto, Canada, aboard Matrix owned by
Green Hills Farm won the USEF Hunter Seat Medal today. Cortie
Wetherill of Devon, Pennsylvania, riding his own Moondance
placed second. Hannah Beresford and Gothic owned by Holly
Hill Farm placed third.
Featuring more than $650,000 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 please e-mail.
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