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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (613) 569-2423 or
www.startinggate.ca
Abigail Crowell and Bennington Claim Victory in Show Circuit Magazine Children's Medal for Week 2 at the 2006 Vermont Summer Festival
East Dorset, VT — July 22, 2006
– Abigail “Abby” Crowell, entered the ring
ranked third in the National Standings for the Show Circuit
Magazine National Children’s Medal, and will maintain
her status as one of the top riders in the country as she
claimed victory in Saturday’s Show Circuit Magazine
Children’s Medal class at the Vermont Summer Festival.
The competition was one of Saturday’s featured classes
during Week 2 (July 19-23) of the five-week Vermont Summer
Festival in East Dorset, Vermont.
Crowell, 16, of East Dennis, Massachusetts,
riding her own Bennington, topped a field of 39 horses in
the three-foot equitation class. Crowell was very pleased
with the win. “It feels really good, I’m happy
and excited,” she enthused. This fall, the top 30 qualified
riders in the series will compete in the Show Circuit Magazine
National Children’s Medal Final at the Capital Challenge
Horse Show in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.
Judge Jerre Frankhouser officiated over the
class. All 39 competitors jumped a first round course of eight
fences and were scored numerically on their performances.
The highest scoring riders were very close – Sarah Flink
earned a score of 82 points, Crowell scored 81, Samantha Smith
earned 80, and Colleen Lewis notched 79.
These four highest-scoring riders were called
back to ride a test to determine the class winner. For the
test, riders were asked to canter to Fence 1, halt and face
the road, back up three steps, counter canter to Fence 2,
trot Fence 3, canter Fence 4, and return to the line.
Crowell aboard Bennington, who went into the
test in second place, emerged the winner of the Show Circuit
Magazine Children’s Medal class. Samantha Smith of Wakefield,
Rhode Island, riding Carmichael placed second. Sarah Flink
of Charlestown, Massachusetts, aboard Aracona Z was third.
Colleen Lewis of West Chester, Pennsylvania, on Captain Nemo
placed fourth.
Crowell, an 11th grader at Cape Cod Academy,
rides with Holly Hill Show Stables in Hanover, Massachusetts.
The 15-year-old trains with Cathy Grady, Phyllis Cervelli
and Caitlin Venezia. Crowell’s mount, Bennington, is
a seven-year-old dark bay Oldenburg gelding that stands 17hh
that she has owned since February.
Crowell admitted that she was apprehensive
going into round one, which provided riders with several long
runs to the jumps. “I get kind of nervous going the
long distances to the jumps because you can change your mind
on the distance,” she said. “But other than that,
I really liked the course because I like doing rollbacks and
bending lines and jumping.”
As the riders are judged on their performances,
not their horses’, Crowell explained why she thought
Judge Frankhouser determined that she was the best rider of
the 39 competitors. “I actually think it was a combination
of my horse and I,” Crowell explained. “When he’s
calm and relaxed I can flow with him. If he wasn’t relaxed,
if he was nervous, then I would be nervous, so it’s
a combination of how we work together.” Crowell was
very pleased with how Bennington performed, attesting, “He
was amazing!”
Crowell also credited her trainer, Venezia,
explaining that they followed their regular plan for competition.
“I will go and jump my jumps in the schooling area,
then she’ll get on him, and then I’ll go in the
ring right off her ride,” Crowell detailed. “So
a big thanks to Caitlyn Venezia!”
For the test, the four riders are told the
pattern only after they line up in the ring, so they do not
have the benefit of their trainer’s coaching and must
plan their own ride. Being the third rider to test was an
advantage for Crowell, as the riders rode in reverse order
of their placing. “I was lucky because I was in second
place, so I got to watch two people go before me. I had time
to think about the route and how I was going to go. There
weren’t too many options. There wasn’t an inside
turn that you could do,” Crowell explained. “It
was pretty much straightforward, so it was nice. It was a
good test. It was challenging, but it rode smooth enough that
you could work through it.”
One of the biggest challenges proved to be
backing up. Going into the test, Sarah Flink, who won this
class last week, was in first place and rode a nice test,
but was unable to perform the three back-up steps, which dropped
her to third place overall. Crowell acknowledged that it was
a difficult movement, saying, “I was a little nervous
about the three steps backing up, but I did the three steps.”
Crowell plans to compete in the Show Circuit
Magazine National Children’s Medal Final in October
at Capital Challenge in Maryland, acknowledging that she is
“pretty high up” in the standings after a previous
victory at Saratoga followed by her win in Vermont.
The Show Circuit Magazine National Children’s
Medal features a yearlong national and regional series of
three-foot equitation classes in which riders accumulate points.
National and Regional standings are maintained. Riders earn
points in every show in which they compete (National points).
They also earn points in each USEF Zone (Regional points).
Regional points are based on the location of the show, and
therefore a rider may earn points in different zones. The
total of all points are National Points. Each USEF Zone has
its own totals. Approximately 30 riders will be invited to
compete in the Show Circuit Magazine National Children’s
Medal Finals at Capital Challenge and will be chosen based
on the high point rider in each of the regional series along
with additional riders working from the top down on the National
Standings list for the qualifying period.
Action continues on Sunday, July 23, at the
Vermont Summer Festival with the week’s final class,
the $30,000 Otter Creek Grand Prix.
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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