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French Get Off to Flying Start

(Left to right) France’s Donatien Schauly, Eric Vigeanel, Nicolas Touzaint and Maxime Livio with Chef d’Equipe Thierry Touzaint (centre) dominated the opening leg of FEI Nations Cup Eventing 2014 at Fontainebleau (FRA). Photo: Eric Knoll/FEI.

Lausanne (SUI), 24 March 2014 – The French team scored a convincing win on home ground in the opening leg of FEI Nations Cup Eventing 2014 held at Fontainebleau (FRA) over the weekend.

A strong quartet set the standard for the season by leading the Dressage, and was then the only team to produce four clear Cross Country rounds.

Former dual European Champion Nicolas Touzaint finished best of the four in fourth place, followed by Eric Vigeanel in sixth, Maxime Livio, eighth, and Donatien Schauly in 14th.

Last year, France was beaten at Fontainebleau by Germany who, with Great Britain, went on to dominate the series. France finished third on the final leaderboard at the end of the season but, boosted by a team bronze medal at the 2013 FEI European Championships in Malmö (SWE), they look likely to challenge for the top spot this year, especially now that they have the master planner Thierry Touzaint back as team trainer.

In the end, Germany was not able to field a team, so five nations contested this first leg of the FEI Nations Cup Eventing. The Netherlands, a nation that has participated enthusiastically in the series since it began in 2012, was second, with the Dutch rider Elaine Pen and Vira, leading throughout to emerge as individual winners of the competition.

Pen finished on the same score as Italy’s Vittoria Panizzon on the popular grey mare Borough Pennyz, but was closer to the optimum Cross Country time to claim the honours. Second-placed Panizzon led her three-rider team to fourth place. The Italians had been third after Cross Country until Alberto Giugni and Sportsfield Quality picked up 25 penalties in the final Jumping phase, which meant the Italians slipped a place to finish behind Great Britain.

Britain, winners of the FEI Nations Cup Eventing 2013, has a policy of selecting teams for this series from a pool of up-and-coming riders. Izzy Taylor, who made her senior squad début last year, finished best in individual 13th place on Dax van Ternieuwbeke.

The British had been third after Dressage, but lost any chance of improving on this position when Emily Llewellyn had a refusal at Course Designer Pierre Michelet’s influential fourth fence on Greenlawn Sky High and Lucy Wiegersma and Mr Chunky were eliminated at fence 19.

Spain, which finished fourth in the inaugural series in 2012, came fifth at Fontainebleau after two riders were eliminated for Cross Country falls.

Next month, the FEI Nations Cup Eventing moves, for the first time, to Ireland. Cross Country Course Designer Peter Fell will have set a very different style of test on his home turf at Ballindenisk.

Full results on www.worldsporttiming.com.

The FEI’s team Eventing series, the FEI Nations Cup Eventing, is open to all nations fielding one team composed of 3 or 4 riders at each leg, and runs under FEI Eventing rules at CICO and CCIO 3* level with riders accumulating points under a dedicated system detailed here.

Visit the FEI Nations Cup Eventing series hub here for rules, results and Organiser details.

Fontainebleau Media Contact:

Véronique Triffaux
servicedepresse@centaure-production.fr
+33 6 80 03 18 44

FEI Media contacts:

Ruth Grundy
Manager Press Relations
ruth.grundy@fei.org
+41 78 750 61 45

Malina Gueorguiev
Manager Media Relations
Email: malina.gueorguiev@fei.org
Tel: +41 787 506 133

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