{"piano":{"sandbox":"false","aid":"u28R38WdMo","rid":"R7EKS5F","offerId":"OF3HQTHR122A","offerTemplateId":"OTQ347EHGCHM"}}

‘We really have to work for it’: Germany edge ahead at Blenheim CCI3*

Playlist 18 Videos 'I'm avoiding everything by staying in the company of my animal family': meet horse whisperer Santi Serra 02:42 What is 'breath energy' and could it help your riding? 03:48 Switching disciplines: former showjumper in the lead at Blenheim 01:10 ‘We really have to work for it’: Germany edge ahead at Blenheim CCI3* 03:01 Badminton first-timers: Lydia Hannon — ‘I owe this horse everything’ 02:30 Why is Epsom such a challenge? Walk the course with a former Derby winner 05:02 Showjumper Nicole Pavitt: 'I kept falling off, which made me more determined' 03:56 What is day-to-day life like on Piggy French's yard? 04:44 'Squat to exhaustion': meet Alice Oppenheimer 02:43 Harry Meade: ‘Life is about challenges — we don’t know what’s ahead of us' 02:54 Tim Price: the scariest thing I've ever done 01:32 Jonelle Price: I'm a bit of a thrill-seeker really 01:31 Carl Hester and Charlotte Dujardin: A bit of banter 03:15 The Longines FEI Jumping Nations Cup of Great Britain at the Longines Royal International Horse Show 00:36 Watch heavy horses hurtle down the track in Clydesdale race 03:10 Police release hard-hitting film after horse and rider deaths 04:52 Watch football star Michael Owen take a tumble off racehorse 01:28 ‘Like riding after drinking’: why riders must take concussion seriously 10:48

  • A smooth test from Germany’s Julia Krajewski and Chipmunk FRH in the SsangYong Blenheim International Horse Trials CCI3* took the pair firmly into the lead ahead of cross-country.

    The combination, who were among the last to go on the final day of CCI3* dressage, sailed into the top spot on 33.4, despite a small mistake in the second pirouette.

    This puts them more than two penalties ahead of second-placed Pippa Funnell on MGH Grafton Street on 35.7.

    In third is the USA’s Kimberly Severson with Cooley Cross Border, who led for much of the afternoon after a classy performance earned them a score of 37.8 penalties from the judges.

    A total of seven combinations pulled out sub-40 dressage tests, including overnight leaders Kitty King and Vendredi Biats, who now lie in fourth.

    Rio 2016 Olympic team silver medallist Julia was full of praise for “Chip” – a horse she has produced from a four-year-old.

    Julia Krajewski

    Credit: Adam Fanthorpe

    “It is a relief when you produce something [you know is] possible for the horse, so I’m really happy I could do that here,” she said.

    “He has done tests like this before, but he isn’t ‘push a button and end up in the 30s’, we really have to work for it – I’m really happy for the horse, the owner and myself that we could do it here.”

     

    This is the first Blenheim for Julia and the nine-year-old gelding, owned by Dr Hilmer Meyer-Kulenkampff, but the combination have serious international form.

    The pair won Strzegom CCI3* in October last year and have not finished lower than seventh in any of their international starts this year.

    “Like always on the big occasions, it is about getting everything right on the right day and I wished – especially for the owner – that we can produce it here this week, but you never know,” she smiled.

    Julia added she is “excited” to take on Blenheim’s “big and challenging” cross-country track, which she hopes will suit the horse.

    “I think [course designer] David Evans did a really intelligent job in putting all the technical questions somewhere special – he hasn’t put them flat on the ground, they are into the forest or up a hill,” she said.

    “I chose the course because Chipmunk likes to gallop, he tends to get a bit strong when I have to turn really fast and often, so I hope the course will suit him – but he has never done something like this before so we will see.”

    Julia will be among the last riders to go on Saturday, which she cites as “a good thing and a bad thing” in seeing how the course is riding.

    She also stressed that the horse’s wellbeing is her priority, adding she wants to ensure he develops into a good horse in the future.

    “Yes he is a good horse, but for me he is ‘Chip’, the horse I have at home day in, day out, and I want to make sure that he is happy,” she said.

    Don’t miss next week’s issue of Horse & Hound – out Thursday, 21 September, for a full report from Blenheim

    You may like...