Tag Archives: Kelly Layne

Top Entries Compete at 2018 AGDF 11 National Show

David Marcus and Dean Martin. Photo © SusanJStickle.com.

Wellington, FL – March 26, 2018 – The 2018 Adequan® Global Dressage Festival continued with a national horse show on March 24-25 at Equestrian Village at Palm Beach International Equestrian Center, and top entries competed for impressive scores.

Horses procured through Danish Olympian Andreas Helgstrand on opposite sides of the planet converged on the AGDF show grounds to showcase their burgeoning talent.

2012 London Olympic Games rider David Marcus of Canada won Saturday’s grand prix with 69.348% on his own 10-year-old Dimaggio gelding, Dean Martin. This was the horse’s third grand prix and he is undefeated to date.

“I purchased the horse this past summer at Helgstrand’s in Denmark, so it’s a fairly new partnership,” said the Wellington-based rider. “He’d only been there a few days — he’d been trained and competed by a rider from Luxembourg — and I felt he was a really complete horse in general, with a very good work ethic and three really good gaits. He knew the grand prix work, but he wasn’t really a confirmed grand prix horse yet.”

Marcus has spent the summer gelling with the chestnut gelding and consolidating the grand prix work, with help from his husband Nicholas Fyffe and local trainer Oded Shimoni.

“Dean is very green still and needs to build strength, but I was really happy with how hard he tried this weekend,” added Marcus. “Seeing as I’ve had him for such a short time, he was the best he could be for this stage of his training. This was only his second show, and he’s handled both competitions perfectly and feels the same at competitions as he does at home.”

Another Helgstrand horse — this one bought out of Helgstrand’s new sales barn in Wellington — breezed to victory in Saturday’s 17-strong prix st georges class. Australian rider Kelly Layne piloted John McGinty’s gigantic Blue Hors Romanov gelding Brizard to a clear 73.235% win.

“We had been searching for a horse for John for a long time,” said Layne. “He’s 6’4”, so it was hard to find a horse big enough but good enough to be competitive, and Brizard is 18 hands at a minimum, but so light and sensitive to the aids. I worried that the eight-meter circles might be a problem for him, but he’s so supple everywhere that they were easy for him.”

Layne is accustomed to big horses, having competed the tall Udon P.

“Brizard is very experienced in the small tour in Europe, but I took him out for his debut here in Wellington so I can help John better by understanding what the horse is like in competition,” said Layne, whose barn is so close to AGDF that she hacked to and from the venue. “He was wonderful; [he was] on the aids and powerful but waiting for me the whole time. He absolutely did the job exactly as you’d want, and we were thrilled with him. In fact, if anything, he was more sensitive in there than in training, which means I can be very light with my riding.”

Since the sale of Udon P and her other grand prix horse, Layne is relishing the opportunity of having a quality small tour horse, though she will shortly hand over the competitive reins to McGinty.

It was an emotional win for Krystal Shingler (CAN) in Sunday’s grand prix, as this was her first show since the death of her mother less than a month earlier.

Her horse, the 10-year-old Fidelio by Fidertanz, is the first she has trained up to grand prix herself and this was their fourth ever grand prix. They won with 70.543% — the only plus-70% of the class.

“I got him in Germany as a coming five-year-old and he was a bit of a wild child,” recalled Shingler, who is originally from Toronto but is now a Wellington resident. “My trainer Kevin [Kohmann, of Diamante Farms] and I brought him up to the grand prix — though there were times that we nearly got rid of him because he was very difficult and liked to bolt. We soon realized that he’s a worker bee and needs to be busy. He said, ‘No thank you’ to most of the lower level stuff but, as it’s got harder, he feels more and more like it’s where he should be.”

Shingler, who works for the equestrian boutique Show Chic and fits riding and competing around her job, added: “My whole weekend was emotional and I got in my own head a bit because it was my first show without my mum. But I could feel that she was with me on my shoulder the whole time; it felt incredible. I’m just so glad that she got to see our first grand prix in February before she passed away.”

Fidelio — just like David Marcus’s Dean Martin — will now continue his training over the summer with the aim being in the CDI ring at AGDF next winter season.

For more information and results, visit www.globaldressagefestival.com.

Lars Petersen and Mariett Top FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 4*

Lars Petersen and Mariett. Photos © SusanJStickle.com.

Kelly Layne and Udon P Excel in FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 3*; Juan Matute, Jr. Rides to Another Small Tour Victory in FEI Prix St. Georges

Wellington, FL – February 7, 2014 – The 2014 Adequan Global Dressage Festival (AGDF) hosted a full day of fantastic competition at The Stadium at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center (PBIEC) on Friday featuring CDI 4* and 3* competition presented by The Dutta Corp. and Havensafe Farm. The feature class of the day was the “Friday Night Stars” FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 4*, presented by The Dutta Corp., with a win for Lars Petersen (DEN) and Mariett. A FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 3* was held earlier in the day, also presented by the Dutta Corp., with a top ride for Kelly Layne (AUS) aboard Udon P. Juan Matute, Jr. (ESP) and Don Diego Ymas took another win in the FEI Prix St. Georges presented by Havensafe Farm.

AGDF 5 CDI 4*/3* competition, presented by The Dutta Corp. and Havensafe Farm, continues through February 9 at The Stadium at the PBIEC. Saturday’s competition will feature the FEI Intermediaire I, sponsored by Havensafe Farm, in the morning. The afternoon session will highlight the FEI Grand Prix Special 3* and 4* classes, each sponsored by The Dutta Corp.

Denmark’s Lars Petersen and Mariett, owned by Marcia M. Pepper, have been on quite a roll this week at AGDF. The pair topped Friday night’s $80,000 FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 4* with a score of 76.400%. Tina Konyot (USA) and Calecto V placed second with an overall score of 75.500%, and Mikala Munter Gundersen (DEN) guided Janne Rumbough’s My Lady to a 72.825% to place third.

Mariett, a 16-year-old Danish Warmblood mare by Come Back II out of Zendi, was a bit hot for Petersen in Thursday’s Grand Prix class, but the rider noted that she was on her game tonight and felt great.

“I thought she was really good to ride tonight. I was very, very happy,” Petersen stated. “Yesterday she was maybe not so easy to ride, but tonight she was with me. She came down a bit.”

Petersen spoke about Mariett’s sweet demeanor and how she enjoys performing in the impressive atmosphere under the lights at AGDF. “In the stable, she’s like a dog,” he described. “She’s a really sweet horse, all the way around. She’s a little bit more ‘up’ here (than at home). Otherwise it’s the same. The lights, the music, the people. In some ways, that’s also what makes them good, when they come in and they get up a little bit.”

Tina Konyot was happy with her ride aboard Calecto V Friday night after a difficult day on Thursday with the 16-year-old Danish Warmblood stallion (Come Back II out of Bahera). She explained that the pair had many frustrating mistakes in the Grand Prix, but came back better after a little reevaluation and some words of advice from U.S. Dressage Chef d’Equipe Robert Dover.

“I had so many mistakes yesterday. I was a little bit frustrated with it,” Konyot admitted. “One of them I can definitely attribute to myself because I was frustrated with some of the other ones because I didn’t understand why they happened. You always have to concentrate on the moment, and I lost my moment. It was a bad day yesterday. I thank God that Robert is such a huge support behind us. He said to forget about it and concentrate on what the horse can do, and he was so much better than yesterday.”

“He’s not quite as fit as he could be,” Konyot noted. “I’m just getting back into the show program here for the winter. He needs a little bit more fitness level to him, to be a little bit sharper, but overall I was happy with him. It was a great evening. Thank you Tim Dutta for all of this wonderful support, and thank you to everyone.”

Third place finisher, Mikala Munter Gundersen, enjoyed her freestyle with My Lady, a 14-year-old Danish Warmblood mare by Michellino out of Marion.

“She felt really good today as well,” Munter Gundersen stated. “I’m really impressed with the mare. When we got her two years ago, she was terrified. We had to feed her sugar to get her in the ring. We would go and practice during the week and feed her sugar from the tent just to get her over here. Now she walks in there by herself. She loves to go in there and present herself. I’m very thrilled. I think that’s the most important thing, that the horses have fun doing what they are doing. These tests are really hard, and it’s just amazing to have a horse who really wants to do it.”

Judge Lilo Fore spoke about the evening’s fantastic performances and the level of competition that the top three exhibited.

“I was very happy tonight because all three of these top horses showed themselves today really very well,” Fore stated. “Yesterday I was a tad worried there because all three had just a little mistake here and there. They were all a little hot under the collar, but I think tonight they were all really with the rider. When you look at these three horses, all three are amazingly talented. They have three wonderful gaits, they have really super minds. A really good grand prix horse has to be a bit hot because if they’re not, you’re not going to get through a grand prix test.”

“They have to have that special desire to be a little on the explosive side,” Fore continued. “If you can channel that kind of energy and you put it into the movement you need to do, put it under your seat and saddle and into your own riding, it’s an amazing horse to ride. That is the kind of horse which is only able to go to the international circuit. I think they are top horses. It doesn’t matter which country you’re talking about. I think all of us judges agreed totally.”

Tim Dutta, CEO of The Dutta Corp. was on hand for Friday night’s beautiful freestyle performances and spoke about the incredible growth of the AGDF.

“We dreamt about this three and a half years ago over dinner,” Dutta stated. “Dressage were stepchildren to show jumping at that time. (Equestrian Sport Productions CEO) Mark (Bellissimo) said, ‘If I can find commitment from you guys, we will build the finest facility in the world and we will create a circuit second to none.’ The next afternoon, we had raised the first round of funding, and seven months later, we opened.”

“This is incredible,” Dutta praised. “We have great sponsors. This is truly a state-of-the-art, world-class facility. I think it will truly be a global destination for dressage. I think next year we will entice the best of Europe to come for the richest prize money. I hope one day we have Spruce Meadows for dressage in Wellington, Florida. That’s my dream. You have a great corporate sponsor in Adequan who believes in us, who has put a lot of money in the sport. Tonight’s production was incredible.”

Allyn Mann, Director of the Animal Health Division at Luitpold Pharmaceuticals, Inc., was also there for the wonderful night of freestyle performances on behalf of Adequan, and greatly enjoyed the competition.

“This evening was just unbelievable,” Mann acknowledged. “When you bring riders and horses of this caliber to this kind of a venue and look everywhere, the bleachers were full, people standing on the far side three or four deep. The VIP tent was packed. It has exceeded my expectations for what I was looking for. I can’t say enough about it. It is only going to get better, and we are just really blessed to be part of it.”

Kelly Layne and Udon P
Kelly Layne and Udon P

Kelly Layne and Udon P Excel in FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 3*, Presented by The Dutta Corp.

The afternoon’s competition at AGDF featured a FEI Grand Prix Freestyle 3*, presented by The Dutta Corp., with a top finish for Kelly Layne (AUS) riding Whistlejacket Farm LLC’s Udon P, a 13-year-old KWPN gelding by Hierarch, out of Maleida. The pair earned their highest score ever with a 73.625%. Germany’s Kim Jesse and Dirk Haese’s Charming 8 finished second with a score of 70.200%. Susan Dutta (USA) and Currency DC placed third with a 69.925%.

Layne and Udon P finished second in Thursday’s FEI Grand Prix 3*, and the rider explained that her horse felt very relaxed for this afternoon’s freestyle. “He warmed up as calm as he ever has for a competition,” she stated. “He was very concentrated, very focused. He is starting to know his music cues and that is kind of cool. It makes the whole routine feel much smoother and then I can be more harmonious with the horse and really ride to my music. I think that just comes from more experience in the ring.”

Layne was very excited to get the freestyle win and earn her best score yet with Udon P. “It was awesome,” she smiled. “It was certainly exciting to win a CDI in Wellington. I could not be happier with the horse and also with the result. It was my best score absolutely in a grand prix and for the freestyle my best score again today. The horse is steadily improving all of the time. I think it will certainly help with our plans to go to Europe for the summer and campaign for a position on the Australian team (for the World Equestrian Games).”

Layne spoke about Udon’s strengths in his freestyle, noting that this was only his fourth freestyle ever. “For sure the piaffe/passage is very good for him,” she described. “With the choreography, we try to make it so that we can show that off to all of the judges from all of the views, which is important. I think that suits him very well. He is also very strong on the flying changes, and they were very good today.”

“He is 18.1 hands high and he is a bit of a scaredy cat,” Layne said of Udon’s personality. “He kind of clings to me, but he is not super affectionate. He is one of those horses that has to come to you; you can’t go to him. If you go to put your hand to him, he doesn’t know what to do, but if you stand there and he touches you first, then you can touch him anywhere. He has a real character, real personality.”

Second place finisher, Kim Jesse, is back in the ring after some time off from competing with her mount Charming 8, a 16-year-old Rheinlander stallion by Champus out of Lesley S, and was very happy with her ride on Friday.

“He is just two days out from quarantine, so we did not really have enough time for training, but he did a good job,” Jesse noted, going on to describe her horse’s strengths and personality as well. “For a stallion, he is pretty clear in the head and he likes his music. We change it sometimes and now it fits very good. He is always focused and always concentrated on what he is doing and what I want from him. He is a very supple horse. He is always using his body and always loose in the muscles. He has good strength behind. Pirouettes are absolutely his favorite; he loves to do pirouettes.”

“I was out for nearly half a year not riding because I was ill, and now we are just trying to get back together and do some competitions,” Jesse explained. “Today was the first day where we were together again in the ring and had a good feeling together.”

This is Jesse’s first year competing at AGDF and she has liked the stability of showing in one location for an extended period of time.

“I really enjoy it. It is super conditions for the horses,” she stated. “The footing is very good, and the weather is good. In Europe now it is pretty cold and the option to ride so many international competitions in one spot is great. It is a win-win situation. It is absolutely good to ride here with your horses, train them, and ride and compete in one place. It is absolutely amazing.”

Jesse also had the convenience of flying her horses to Florida for the competition through AGDF sponsor, The Dutta Corp. She thanked them for their great service.

“The traveling was great,” she acknowledged. “They picked us up from the airport, and we didn’t have to do anything. It was only one journey. In Europe you have to load the horse every second weekend, so thank you to them.”

Susan Dutta finished third with her horse, Currency DC, a 14-year-old Oldenburg gelding by Clintino, out of Cinderella. Dutta was happy with how her freestyle finished out after having to restart due to a musical problem.

“He was good,” Dutta stated. “We had an unfortunate mishap with the music, and you always wonder how they are going to feel when you have to start again. He is really sensitive, but he handled it so well.”

Dutta is no stranger to the AGDF competition and explained that the venue is very comfortable for her. “I feel really settled as a rider at this horse show and for him, I feel like we are in a rhythm,” Dutta said. “That is the really nice thing of having all of these shows here. You get in a rhythm and you get relaxed and then you start to ride better in the ring. It is so nice. Then you can improve and fix things and get better quality and new feelings.”

“We are so lucky,” she smiled. “This is quite a venue. I compete all over the world, and we have a lovely venue here. It has a lot of atmosphere. You can put it against anything in the world.”

Juan Matute, Jr. Rides to Another Small Tour Victory in FEI Prix St. Georges

Juan Matute, Jr. and Don Diego Ymas
Juan Matute, Jr. and Don Diego Ymas

Juan Matute, Jr. has made the most of his 2014 debut on the small tour with Don Diego Ymas, picking up another first place prize on Friday morning in the FEI Prix St. Georges, presented by Havensafe Farm, during the AGDF 5 CDI 3*/4*.

Matute topped the class with a score of 71.184% aboard his family’s 11-year-old Hanoverian gelding. Second place went to American Christopher Hickey and Ronaldo, an eight-year-old Danish Warmblood gelding owned by Cecelia Stewart. Canadian Brittany Fraser rounded out the top three with a 69.296% with her own All In, a nine-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding.

Matute was not expecting his first year of competing to start with such success. The 16-year-old, who rides for Spain but is based in Wellington, has collected four victories with Don Diego Ymas in three weeks of showing at the AGDF. Friday marked his second FEI Prix St. Georges win with the horse.

“I think Don Diego and I really work together great and fit together,” Matute noted. “He can do the movements perfectly. I don’t think the level was a problem for him, but at a CDI, [you have] big riders and great horses as well, so it was not expected to do so well.”

Matute felt the best part of his test with Don Diego Ymas was their trot work and was understandably pleased with how he and the horse are progressing.

“I thought [the test] was great. I think there’s always stuff to improve on. Show after show, I believe Don Diego and I are creating a strong bond with more confidence in each other. We’re completely partners,” he commented.

He continued, “The trot work was a bit more solid this morning. We had a little bit of mistakes in the canter with the contact. The pirouettes were maybe a little bit too small. The trot work was the highlight today.”

Don Diego Ymas has been in the Matute Family’s barn for years, and the two essentially grew up together. The Matutes purchased Don Diego Ymas when Matute was only nine years old. Now 16, he appreciates knowing the horse inside and out.

“When you build up a horse [from a young age], you get to know each other better. You have more knowledge about him. You know his highlights, his weaknesses, his personality. You know maybe he will spook here, and he might not spook there. It’s a little bit like brothers, when you grow up together,” Matute described.

The youthful Matute beat out veteran dressage competitor Christopher Hickey, but Hickey was happy to have competition from an up-and-coming rider.

“I think it’s super for us to have young riders coming along and riding so exquisitely. He’s a beautiful, elegant rider, and when you see riding like that in the warm up from one of the ‘kids,’ it makes us all proud, but it also makes a beautiful picture,” Hickey detailed.

He continued, “It makes the old guys be like ‘Oh my god, we have to be careful,’ because here are some young people coming along. There’s more than just [Juan] and his sister looking like that at horse shows. I think that’s a huge piece. We all talk about our country getting stronger and getting better. We need these people to come in and come through the ranks and be in the open classes with us and kick our [butt] for us to have to rise to the occasion.”

Hickey was pleased with how his young horse performed in The Stadium, noting the atmosphere was good exposure for Ronaldo. The gelding was quite impressed by the arena’s setting, but Hickey simply chalked it up to a young horse learning his way.

“My horse is not spooky, but today coming around in the first turn he was startled by the surroundings. That doesn’t bother me because he’s young, and he’s never been in this environment before,” Hickey explained.

He continued, “He’s such a big mover, and he has so much elasticity. I feel that those horses sometimes take a little bit longer to develop. He lost his balance and his rhythm in the extended trot which is an expensive mistake, and that will get better with strength and age.”

One of Hickey’s favorite moments of competition happened entirely by coincidence during the jog on Wednesday.

“He followed his mother (in the jog), who is here competing in the grand prix division. When I went into the jog and they announced her name, she jogged literally right before him, which was totally an accident. I thought that was pretty cool that at his first CDI, he jogged after his mother,” Hickey smiled.

Watching Ronaldo’s progress has been especially meaningful for Hickey, who brought the horse up through the ranks after owner Stewart bought him as a four-year-old. Hickey has trained several of his most successful horses from the time they were young, including Regent and Cabana Boy. It’s an experience he relishes.

Historically, he’s been more successful on horses he’s brought up himself. Hickey believes this is a result of the irreplaceable bond created between a horse and rider over such an extended period of time.

“When you purchase horses, you can buy great horses. It’s easy to pick out a lovely moving horse, but you don’t know their true temperament. And when you buy a young horse, it’s such a risk. You have the risk of [whether] this horse will take the work physically and mentally. When you buy a mature horse, you have proof. The horse will take the work. The horse is taking the work. But you don’t have the information you have when you bring them along yourself,” Hickey explained.

Hickey was especially grateful for the support of the sponsors that make the AGDF possible each year.

“The sponsorship here is great. I personally thank my owner every day and the sponsors that get together and help support this show. I hope everybody appreciates what all these people do for us,” Hickey concluded.

Earlier on Friday, Tanya-Strasser-Shostak (CAN) won the FEI Young Rider Team class aboard Action Tyme. The pair earned a 65.921%.

For full show results and more information, please visit www.globaldressagefestival.com.

Competition for the AGDF 5 CDI 3*/4* will continue Saturday morning with the Intermediaire-I, sponsored by Havensafe Farm at 8:30 a.m., followed by the FEI Grand Prix Special 3*, sponsored by The Dutta Corp., at 2:30 p.m. Saturday will wrap up with the FEI Grand Prix Special 4*, also sponsored by The Dutta Corp., at 4:10 p.m.

About the Adequan Global Dressage Festival:

The Adequan Global Dressage Festival (AGDF) is one of the world’s largest international and national dressage circuits featuring 8 FEI Dressage events, including a 5* and the only FEI Nations’ Cup Series CDIO in the Western Hemisphere. The AGDF offers more than $400,000 in prize money for the six international competitions, making it one of the richest circuits in the world. The Stadium at Palm Beach International Equestrian Center facility includes the Van Kampen covered arena (made possible by Kimberly and Frederic Boyer and family) and four outdoor arenas with world-class footing, 200 permanent stalls, and a VIP seating area for the International Arena fully catered for relaxing and having an enjoyable experience.

Please visit
www.globaldressagefestival.com
www.equestriansport.com
or call 561-793-5867 for more information.

Adequan Global Dressage Festival is located at
13500 South Shore Blvd, Wellington, Florida 33414

Lauren Fisher and Laura Cardon for Jennifer Wood Media, Inc.

Jennifer Wood Media, Inc.
Equestrian Public Relations
info@jenniferwoodmedia.com