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For Immediate Release
Jennifer Ward for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (613) 569-2423 or
www.startinggate.ca
Katie McDaniel's Gamble Pays off with Casino in USEF Show Jumping Talent Search
East Dorset, VT — July 27, 2006
– Katie McDaniel gambled and won, riding Casino to victory
in the USEF Show Jumping Talent Search held Thursday, July
27, during Week 3 of the five-week Vermont Summer Festival
running July 12 to August 13 in East Dorset, Vermont.
A total of 37 competitors contested the first
phase of the competition, which was a show jumping phase.
While most of the other riders took nine strides to the final
fence, McDaniel chose to pick up the pace, hand galloping
to the last fence in eight strides. As a result, she was ranked
in top position when the best 20 competitors were called back
for the second phase of 'testing', the flat phase.
"I thought our jumping phase was pretty
good," said McDaniel, who hails from Campobello, SC,
and turned 18 in April. "I did a nice flowing eight strides
to the last fence in hand gallop. You didn't have to, but
I chose to. I think that set the standard. Plus, the time
allowed to complete the course was tight, so going faster
and leaving out the stride helped."
When McDaniel returned for the flat phase,
admittedly not her strongest, she was determined to hang on
to her first place ranking. She was nervous about Georgia
Lee Tryon, who is her best friend, who was called back in
third place, because "she is a beautiful flat rider.
I am okay, but not outstanding. My horse is perfect, but before
I used to try too hard and be way too stiff. Now I have learned
to loosen up my legs."
Loosening up seemed to be the key to success,
and McDaniel maintained her first place ranking to take the
victory.
"We flatted pretty well, the judge kept
her eye on both me and Georgia Lee," said McDaniel whose
friend finished runner-up. "I tried not to get too stiff,
and my horse behaved perfectly. Casino has the best lengthening
of stride in the canter, his extended canter is fantastic."
While some horse shows hold the flat phase
before the jumping phase, McDaniel prefers when the jumping
is held first, as has been the case at the Vermont Summer
Festival.
"I like when they jump first, because
if they flat first, I get called back lower in the order and
don't have much of a chance to move up," she explains.
"When we jump first, I like to try to put in a really
good round, then hope that I maintain my position or that
they only move me down a bit."
That theory has worked well for McDaniel at
the Vermont Summer Festival, as she has now contested the
USEF Talent Search for three consecutive weeks. The first
week of competition, she was sixth following the jumping phase
and moved down following the flat to finish seventh overall.
During Week 2, she was seventh following the jumping phase
and was then able to maintain her position. Of course, nothing
is better than starting out on top and staying there, as McDaniel
managed to do to capture Week 3's victory riding Casino.
McDaniel has only been partnered with Casino,
a nine-year old Holsteiner gelding, since the second week
of the Lake Placid Horse Show at the beginning of July. That's
when she began leasing Katherine Von Holstein's light bay
with two big white stocking on his hind legs, and a big white
face.
"He's very slow and laid-back about everything,"
said McDaniel. "He's pretty cool, he is very personable.
He is so collected and balanced and he has a really big step.
He jumps fantastic and his ears are always forward! I've always
had difficult horses, horses that run away or spook or stop,
but he is so easy. I love him!"
McDaniel will continue to lease Casino through
the indoor fall show circuit where she is qualified to contest
the USEF Medal, the USET Talent Search, the Washington International
Horse Show Medal, and the Maclay Medal Final. She is particularly
excited about riding in the Maclay Final as, although she
has qualified for the past five years in a row, it will only
be her second time competing. "The first year my trainer
said I was too young, the next year I didn't have a horse,
and the third year I broke my jaw. So last year was the first
year I got to go, and I was respectable, placing in the top
30."
Although she is excited to show in the Maclay
Final to be held at the Syracuse International in November,
October's Washington International Horse Show is McDaniel's
favourite. "I have competed there the last four or five
years, and I have won ribbons every time."
McDaniel trains with Bobby Braswell and Christina
Schlusemeyer of Quiet Hill Farm based in Ocala, FL. Having
trained with them intermittently in the past, McDaniel has
now been with them steady for the past nine months and says,
"I love the Quiet Hill program."
Having been home schooled since eighth grade,
McDaniel graduated in May, saying "the only way I was
allowed to go to show at Devon was if I graduated before then.
"She will now take a semester off before going to Virginia
Intermont College in Bristol, VA, where she plans to major
in Equine Studies. She then plans to become a professional
rider and trainer, a career move that fits in with her family;
her stepfather is a farrier and her mother is a riding instructor.
Not surprisingly, McDaniel has been riding since before she
could walk.
Week 3 marks the last that McDaniel will be
showing at the Vermont Summer Festival as she will be competing
at the North American Young Riders' Championship in Lexington,
VA, from August 2-6. However, McDaniel has greatly enjoyed
her first trip to the Vermont Summer Festival.
"I love it! I wish I had been allowed
to come up here before!" she exclaims. "The town
of Manchester is so cute, and I love all the shopping outlets."
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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