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Eric Lamaze and Coco Bongo Win $34,000 Cargill Cup at Spruce Meadows ‘Canada One’

Eric Lamaze of CAN riding Coco Bongo. Photo © Spruce Meadows Media Services.

Calgary, AB, Canada – June 25, 2015 – Following a week-long break from competition, Spruce Meadows’ Summer Series continues this week with its ‘Canada One’ CSI 4* Tournament. International competition began on Thursday with three contests featured in the Meadows on the Green. Eric Lamaze (CAN) won the highlight $34,000 Cargill Cup 1.50m in the afternoon. Rodrigo Lambre (BRA) and Eric Navet (FRA) topped the two $34,000 Friends of the Meadows 1.45m competitions earlier in the day.

The ‘Canada One’ Tournament features over $431,000 in prize money with top horses and riders from around the world competing in eight FEI sanctioned events through Sunday, June 28. The weekend’s headlining events are the $34,000 WestJet Cup, the $34,000 Duncan Ross Cup, the $34,000 CIBC Cup, the $34,000 West Canadian Cup, and the $126,000 Imperial Challenge.

Peter Grant (CAN) is the international course designer in the Meadows on the Green for this week’s ‘Canada One’ Tournament. In Thursday’s $34,000 Cargill Cup 1.50m, Grant saw 27 entries, with nine advancing to the jump-off and five double clear rounds.

Eric Lamaze and Artisan Farms LLC’s Coco Bongo led the way in 43.67 seconds. Paulo Santana (ESA) and Taloubet finished second in 44.31 seconds. Shane Sweetnam (IRL) and Spy Coast Farm LLC’s Chaqui Z took the third place prize in 44.54 seconds. Nicola Philippaerts (BEL) guided Frans Lens’s Bisquet Balou to fourth place in 46.16 seconds, and Nina Fagerstrom (FIN) jumped into fifth place aboard Finca Horses, Inc.’s Flower in a time of 48.61.

Coco Bongo, a ten-year-old Rheinlander stallion (Caretino x Calido), was originally purchased as a mount for Artisan Farms’ young rider Caitlin Ziegler. Ziegler showed the horse throughout 2014, but when he started to show his quality, it was decided that Lamaze should take the horse to the next level. The rider began competing Coco Bongo this winter and gives the stallion high praise.

“I like him because he really tries to leave the fences up,” Lamaze remarked. “He is very careful and he is very scopey. He is not always predictable; sometimes he will back up to something that you are not expecting him to, but I am getting to learn a lot about him here. I think by the time he leaves Spruce Meadows he is for sure going to be a better horse.”

“It is lovely to ride a horse with that quality,” Lamaze continued. “With all of these skinny fences and planks, your odds improve a lot when you have a horse this careful, and he is careful every time out. He is a horse that consistently tries to leave the rails up and he is a horse that has the scope to do big things.”

Coco Bongo was competing with Great Britain’s Daniel Neilson before Artisan Farms bought him. He then jumped at the 1.45m level with Ziegler last summer.

“We thought it was a lovely horse for Caitlin, but right from the very beginning he showed way more quality than we expected,” Lamaze noted. “I felt he needed to do some bigger classes, so we made a switch. I really like him.”

Coco Bongo has had some good results since starting with Lamaze, but the rider is taking his time to develop the horse a little more.

“I have a lot of respect for how careful he is, so I do not want to risk taking it too fast,” Lamaze explained. “The jump-off two weeks ago was the first time that I really asked him to go fast, so I learned that he can actually move fast. That is why I am picking these 1.50m competitions, to try to get into these jump-offs and ask him to go quick. He is so careful that I am always a little bit timid to really send him fast in the 1.60m or the 1.55m. This is a great height for him to learn to be quick. Today I went faster than I even thought he could go, so I was happy.”

Lambre and Navet Get Wins at ‘Canada One’

Two separate $34,000 Friends of the Meadows 1.45m speed competitions were held Thursday morning at Spruce Meadows with wins for Rodrigo Lambre (BRA) and Eric Navet (FRA).

In the first competition of the morning, Rodrigo Lambre and Mario Onate’s Melbourne emerged victorious. Lambre and the nine-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare (Verdi x Zeus) completed the fastest clear round with a time of 59.35 seconds out of 50 starters. Fifteen clear rounds were accomplished in total.

Meagan Nusz (USA) and Amalaya Investments’ Leoville 2 finished second in 59.84 seconds. Mario Deslauriers (USA) guided Lisa Deslauriers’ Scout de la Cense to third place honors in 60.23 seconds. Juan Manuel Luzardo (URY) and Mauricio Guerra Colorado’s Stan placed fourth in a time of 60.36.

“She is young,” Lambre said of Melbourne. “We bought her in the Eurocommerce auction. This is only the second week that she has done 1.45m in her life, so she is moving up. She is fast and I am really glad that I won my first class with her. Of course it is always tough to win here, but I got lucky. She is a really nice mare and I hope she keeps winning like that.”

“My track was pretty fast,” Lambre said of his round. “I did not see many riders trying to go as fast as usual here today, which helped me a lot. Most of the ones that tried had rails. It was a delicate course. I liked my track actually. I think I had a good plan and it worked out.”

The second 1.45m competition saw a win for Eric Navet aboard Signe Ostby’s ASB Conquistador. Navet and the 14-year-old Belgian Warmblood stallion (Clinton x Heartbreaker) blazed an early clear track in 55.03 seconds to win out of 53 entries.

Adam Prudent (FRA) finished second aboard his own Vasco with a time of 55.21 seconds. Todd Minikus (USA) jumped into third aboard Matthew De Grande’s Cordonas in 55.42 seconds, and Abigail McArdle (USA) guided David McArdle’s Cosma 20 to the fourth place prize in 56.02 seconds.

Navet’s student, Karl Cook, usually rides ASB Conquistador, but it was decided that Navet should take over the ride for a while.

“I have fun showing him,” Navet smiled. “He has a lot of experience now. He is a very competitive and very fast horse.”

“He has been doing very well,” the rider detailed. “I was second the first week in the International Ring in a good competition that Rich Fellers won. The horse has been jumping very well, so I am very happy that he could win today. He likes to compete. He is a horse with a lot of blood and I have really had fun riding him.”

Commenting on his winning round, Navet explained, “My goal was to try to win obviously because this horse was ready to win. He is not a younger horse that you are just showing for experience. I went in the ring for a win. I followed the track that I walked and I just tried not to interfere with the strides and let him go and turn to win in the turns. He did the rest; I just had to follow him.”

The ‘Canada One’ Tournament continues on Friday with the $34,000 WestJet Cup 1.45m and the $34,000 Duncan Ross Cup 1.50m.

For a complete tournament schedule and full results, please visit www.sprucemeadows.com.

Lauren Fisher for Jennifer Wood Media, Inc.

Jennifer Wood Media, Inc.
info@jenniferwoodmedia.com

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