Cornelissen and Parzival Do the Double in Amsterdam

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Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival (NED) scored a back-to-back double when winning today’s seventh leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage series in Amsterdam. Photo: FEI/DigiShots.

Amsterdam (NED), 21 January 2012 – Adelinde Cornelissen and the 15 year old Jerich Parzival stamped their authority all over the seventh leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 Western European League on home turf in Amsterdam, The Netherlands this afternoon.  With a display of supreme confidence, the defending champions threw down the highest score of the season so far to make it a back-to-back double following their victory in Mechelen, Belgium last month.

But with the maximum 20 points going to the second-place rider, as the previous year’s winners do not collect points during the following season, there was a tremendous battle for the minor placings.  And it was Helen Langehanenberg who came off best in a tussle with German counterpart Isabell Werth who had to settle for third place despite one of the most exciting performances of the day.

LEADERBOARD
Today’s result has moved Langehanenberg into third on the series leaderboard with just two qualifying rounds left to go.  And there is a new leader, as Italy’s Valentina Truppa, who finished fifth this afternoon, has ousted Sweden’s Patrik Kittel from the top of the table.

Cornelissen and Parzival also won yesterday’s preliminary Grand Prix which attracted 22 starters.  But the Dutch duo’s winning score of 80.936 paled into insignificance compared to today’s 87.050 in the Freestyle to Music.  The 15-strong star-studded field really raised their game to present an afternoon of high-quality competition, but none could match the class of Cornelissen and her mighty chestnut gelding.

KEEN BATTLE
There is a keen battle amongst the German contingent for a starting spot at the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Final which will take place in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands next April.  And Nadine Capellmann did her chances no harm with a lovely test that led the way at the halfway stage today.  She left the considerably more-experienced Elvis at home in Aachen, and instead brought out her 11 year old Gribaldi mare, Girasol 7, who produced some lovely work throughout a calm, quiet and happy test that was full of lightness and life to earn a mark of 76.200.

That remained the target score until Truppa, winner at the fifth leg of the Western European League in Frankfurt (GER) in December and at Lipica (SLO) earlier last year, swept into the lead when Ground Jury members Stephen Clarke (GBR), Susie Hoevenaars (AUS), Wim Ernes (NED), Mariette Sanders van Gansewinkel (NED) and Jacques van Daele (BEL) awarded 76.775 for her test with Eremo del Castegno.  But then Dutch star, Edward Gal, really pleased the home crowd with a dramatic performance from the 13 year old mare Sisther de Jeu whose extravagant extended trot and big piaffe helped put 79.875 on the board.

SWAGGERED
Their lead wouldn’t last long, as Cornelissen and Parzival swaggered down the centre line to take command in no uncertain fashion.  Cornelissen insists she can never be sure she can win when she goes into the ring, but admitted this afternoon that Parzival “just keeps getting better and better and better!  He continues to amaze me, he still gets better every day,” she said – alarming news for her opponents ahead of this big Olympic summer.  Isabell Werth refused to be intimidated by the Dutch rider’s score however, and set off with gusto to produce a spectacular test from El Santo NRW.  The bay gelding powered through extended trot, passage and canter pirouette, and Werth’s enormous smile after saluting the judges said it all – 81.625 would definitely ensure she would finish in the frame.

But with those tantalising 20 points still up for grabs, it was Langehanenberg who came closest to Cornelissen’s score as, second-last to go, the 12 year old stallion, Damon Hill NRW, showed his class to put 83.150 on the scoreboard.  “The feeling today was really good – even better than yesterday,” Langehanenberg said afterwards.  “My horse loves to perform in the arena and he really fought for me and I loved it!” said the rider who plans one more Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage outing – at Neumunster, Germany next month – before the Final.

DELIGHTED
Third-placed Werth was delighted too.  “I really enjoyed the ride,” she said. “We had a few little mistakes, but the piaffe improved, although it can be better still.  He (El Santo) becomes more and more powerful and is growing in confidence,” she added.  She is also planning to compete in Neumunster, but is unsure whether she will take El Santo or the veteran, Warum Nicht, to the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Final.  Thinking ahead to the summer’s Olympic Games and which horse she will compete in London she said, “I’m in a comfortable position – I am focusing on improving the two younger horses right now – we will see.”

Cornelissen talked about her test today – “I can’t say he did bad – can I?” she quipped.  “He was a bit spooky in one corner, but you can make your own programme and avoid it.  Of course there are things that can go better, but so far I am satisfied,” she explained.  She is working on a new Freestyle, but is not sure when she will ride it in public for the first time.

PERSPECTIVE
Today’s Judge at C, Wim Ernes from The Netherlands, put the competition into perspective during the post-competition press conference.  “I’m still excited!” he said.  “As judges we had the opportunity to judge riders of such quality – Adelinde’s test has the high degree of difficulty, Helen’s is filled with elegance and her stallion has such super gaits, Isabell put on a super riding performance – I’m really pleased you went to the limit and tried to beat the other ones – you went over the limit really, but that’s what sport is!” he said to Werth.

He commented on the early departure of Sweden’s Minna Telde and the stallion, Santana, who retired when the horse became upset during his test.  “I’m very sad for her,” Mr Ernes said.  “We have to ring the bell after 20 seconds, she had several times of resistance and we tried to give her time to recover.  The horse has only one eye, and I think he heard or saw something.  We were ready to ring the bell but she withdrew at the same moment – at the end she couldn’t go on.” He understood that Parzival also found something in the arena that he didn’t particularly like – Cornelissen said it was “on the short side, at A” and that a number of horses got tense at that part of the arena but that she has learned to ride him through these situations.  “We’re not searching for mistakes,” Wim Ernes pointed out. “We try to see the good things!”

There were plenty of good things to see in the RAI Arena at Amsterdam today, but Cornelissen’s performance was the best of all.  The Dutch rider, whose boyfriend and manager Sjaak van der Lei held onto Parzival as she accepted her prize today from Lelle Henrichsen, Reem Acra Vice President, says that her challenge now is to find the right balance of competition and rest for her super-star over the coming months.  “I may take him to Gothenburg to give him one more run before the Final in April – I’m considering all the options,” she said, “but the Final is very important.  First of all it’s in Holland, and secondly I won last year so I feel I have to compete and defend my title.”

She and her chestnut bundle of abundant energy will certainly be the ones to beat.

For further information on the seventh leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage series at Mechelen, Belgium on 28 December 2011 go to website http://www.jumpingamsterdam.nl/ or contact Press Officer Charlotte Gunnink at Email media@jumpingamsterdam.nl or Tel +31 638 325326.  The next leg of the series takes place in Neumunster, Germany on Sunday 19 February 2012.  For details of the German fixture check out website http://pst-marketing.de/index.php/neumuenster.html or contact Press Officer Andreas Kerstan at Email andreas.kerstan@comtainment.de or Tel +49 4307 827 973.

Result:
1, Jerich Parzival (Adelinde Cornelissen) NED 87.050; 2, Damon Hill NRW (Helen Langehanenberg) GER 83.150; 3, El Santo NRW (Isabell Werth) GER 81.625; 4, Sisther de Jeu (Edward Gal) NED 79.875; 5, Eremo del Castegno (Valentina Truppa) ITA 76.775; 6, Dorina (Siil Helljesen) NOR 76.350; 7, Girasol 7 (Nadine Capellmann) GER 76.200; 8, Hiscox Artemis (Richard Davison) GBR 75.975; 9, Apollo van het Vijverhof (Jeroen Devroe) BEL 75.725; 10, Tango (Hans Peter Minderhoud) NED 73.450; 11, Luxform’s Popeye (Diederik van Silfhout) NED 73.200; 12, Krawall (Jenny Schreven) NED 72.000; 13, Seduc (Anne Troensegaard) DEN 69.975; 14, Uzzo (Patrick van der Meer) NED 68.300; 15, Santana (Minna Telde) SWE Elim.  Detailed result at www.scgvisual.com.

Facts and Figures:
Judging panel for seventh leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 series at Amsterdam, The Netherlands today: At E, Stephen Clarke (GBR); At H, Susie Hoevenaars (AUS); At C, Wim Ernes (NED); At M, Mariette Sanders van Gansewinkel (NED); At B, Jacques van Daele (BEL).
The oldest horse in today’s competition was the bay gelding Krawall, ridden by The Netherlands Jenny Schreven, who celebrates his 20th birthday in 2012.
The youngest horse was last to go in today’s Freestyle to Music – the 10 year old bay mare Dorina, ridden by Norway’s Siril Helljesen.
The Netherlands’ Adelinde Cornelisen and Jerich Parzival won Friday’s preliminary Grand Prix with a score of 80.936.  Helen Langehanenberg and Damon Hill NRW finished second (75.213), and fellow-German Isabell Werth slotted into third with El Santo NRW (73.872).
This was the second win of the current Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage series for today’s winners, and defending champions, Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival who also topped the line-up at Mechelen in Belgium last month.
22 horse-and-rider combinations competed in Friday’s Grand Prix.  15 competed in today’s Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Freestyle to Music.
One horse-and-rider partnership was eliminated in today’s competition – Minna Telde (Sweden) and the 10 year old black stallion, Santana.
Just two qualifying legs remain in the 2011/2012 Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Western European League series – the next leg takes place at Neumunster, Germany on Sunday 19 February and the last qualifier will be held in Gothenburg, Sweden on Saturday 25 February.

Quotes:

Roger Van Iersel, Jumping Amsterdam Sport Director – “I want to than the ladies for being so loyal to Jumping Amsterdam.  As organisers we value that a lot.”

Trond Asmyr, FEI Dressage Director – “The riding today was clearly the highest evel of any of the qualifiers so far this year.  Many, many good performances.  Thank you Amsterdam and all your team for a magnificent show.  From the FEI side and the sponsors and riders – everything seems to be very well.”

Isabell Werth – “I will compete Ernie (El Santo) in neumunster and may decide to go to Gothenburg too but have a training camp right after Gothenburg so it is very busy.”

Isabell Werth – “I am preparing a new Freestyle for Don Johnson, but he’s just 10 and really in development now.  There is a lot for him to do, and it’s a bit too much to do everything together.”

Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 – Standings after Round 7 at Amsterdam, The Netherlands:
1.    Valentina Truppa ITA        –        66
2.    Patrick Kittel SWE            –        65
3.    Helen Langehanenberg GER    –        62
4.    Isabell Werth GER            –        60
5.    Hans Peter Minderhoud NED    –        59
6.    Tinne Wilhelmson-Silfven SWE      –        52
7.    Richard Davison GBR            –        48
8.    Jeroen Devroe BEL            –        43
9.    Nadine Capellmann GER        –        40
10.    Siril Helljesen NOR            –        34
11.    Monica Theodorescu GER        –        32
12.    Catherine Haddad USA        –        26
12.    Edward Gal NED            –        26
12.    Jenny Schreven NED            –        26
15.    Marc Peter Spahn BEL        –        24

FEI World Cup Dressage, the only worldwide series in this discipline, has entered its 26th season. The series, created in 1985, comprises four leagues: Western European, Central European, North American (including Canada) and Pacific (Australia, New Zealand, Asia). Each FEI World Cup Dressage qualifier consists of a Grand Prix test, which in turn is a qualification for the Freestyle to music competition, where league points are accumulated towards places in the Final. Judged on both technical and artistic merit, the FEI World Cup Dressage combines art, sport and partnership between horse and rider at the highest level and consistently proves a winning formula with audiences all over the world.

The complete rules, calendar, updated rankings and results are available here.

The Federation Equestre Internationale (FEI), founded in 1921, is the international body governing equestrian sport recognised by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and includes 133 National Federations. Equestrian sport has been on the Olympic programme since 1912 with three disciplines – Jumping, Dressage and Eventing. In 2012 equestrian sport will celebrate its centenary as an Olympic sport. It is one of the very few sports in which men and women compete on equal terms. It is also the only sport which involves two athletes – horse and rider. The FEI has relentlessly concerned itself with the welfare of the horse, which is paramount and must never be subordinated to competitive or commercial influences.

Media Contacts:
At Amsterdam
Press Officer, Charlotte Gunnink
Email: media@jumpingamsterdam.nl
Tel: +31 638 325 326

At FEI
Grania Willis
Director Press Relations
Email: grania.willis@fei.org
Tel: +41 787 506 142s

Malina Gueorguiev
Manager Media Relations
malina.gueorguiev@fei.org

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