Cornelissen and Parzival Are Mighty at Mechelen

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Defending series champions, Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival from The Netherlands, were emphatic winners of the sixth leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 series at Mechelen in Belgium today. Photo: FEI/Dirk Caremans.

Mechelen (BEL), 28 December 2011 – Defending series champions, Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival from The Netherlands, scored an emphatic victory on their seasonal debut at the sixth leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 series in Mechelen, Belgium today.  With a performance that oozed class and confidence, they threw down a score of 85.325 that left them more than five points clear of the runner-up partnership of Patrik Kittel and Watermill Scandic.  But it was the Swedish rider who took maximum points to rocket even further ahead at the top of the leaderboard with just three more legs left to go.

As winner of the 2010/2011 Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage title, Cornelissen is already qualified for the 2011/2012 decider which will take place on her home soil at ‘s-Hertogenbosch next April, and is therefore not entitled to accumulate points in the current season.  Kittel, meanwhile, looks likely to have three horses to choose from going to the final following a highly impressive run of form in recent months.

Germany’s Nadine Capellmann slotted into third today with Elvis, while Dutchman Hans Peter Minderhoud finished fourth with Withney van het Genthof.  Best of the strong Belgian contingent was Jeroen Devroe who steered Apollo van het Vijvershof into fifth.

CONTENDERS
A total of 19 riders lined out for yesterday’s Grand Prix, and all of the seven home-side contenders qualified for today’s Freestyle to Music.  One of the most eye-catching of these was the nine-year-old Gribaldi mare, Vradin, ridden by the relatively unknown 27 year old Simon Missiaen who forged an early lead with a score of 71.900 for a test that was filled with lightness and which was a pleasure to watch.  And, just before the judging break, there was another very satisfying result for fellow-Belgian Vicky Smits-Vanderhasselt, who put a score of 73.925 on the board.  This was the first big outing for the wife of Jumping rider Christophe Vanderhasselt since she gave birth to their son in July of this year.  Vicky was riding the 12 year old bay mare Daianira van de Helle which is part-owned by the Belgian stallion station at Van de Helle which is managed by one of the most popular and sought-after press officers on the international equestrian circuit, Edith de Reys.

However it was Belgium’s Jeroen Devroe and Apollo van het Vijvershof who held sway at the halfway stage, when the pure energy and quality-of-movement of the 11-year-old bay gelding secured a mark of 75.300 to take the lead.

SIMPLY SWAGGERED
Third to go after the break, Cornelissen set the bar considerably higher as Parzival simply swaggered his way through a test that included great piaffe and wonderful canter pirouette.  There was once a time when the intensity of the atmosphere in a ring like the Nekkerhal would have shredded the nerves of this big chestnut gelding, but it seems he has managed to slay all those dragons, and it was quite clear which horse would be wearing the winner’s laurels at the end of the afternoon as Cornelissen leaned forward to kiss Parzival on the neck after a masterful display.  It may well have been the noise-level of the arena that prevented runner-up Kittel from picking up a few more marks however.  “I had some real highlights in my test, but Scandic was a bit hot in the walk and in canter,” the Swedish rider explained afterwards.

Last into the ring was Germany’s Nadine Capellmann who has a spot at the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Final next spring in her sights.  But she knows she faces powerful opposition in the battle for one of just three places available to each country.  She did her chances no harm today however with another convincing performance from the 15 year old Elvis who seems to really enjoy working in time to the music created for The King himself.  “He did a good test,” she said, talking about her horse, “and he feels really good.  A few seasons ago he just didn’t feel so great, but now he feels like he has come back again to his very best,” she pointed out.

Her score of 76.950 gave her a single-point advantage over fourth-placed Hans Peter Minderhoud and the handsome stallion, Withney van het Genthof, for The Netherlands.

NO WORRIES
Cornelissen meanwhile has no worries about getting to the final to defend her title.  “For me, this is really just the start of the season,” explained the rider whose other successes this year have included winning double-gold, in the Grand Prix Special and Freestyle, at the FEI European Championships in Rotterdam as well as the Reem-Acra-sponsored FEI Athlete of the Year Award 2011.  “My main aim for 2012 of course is London (Olympic Games), but I will compete in Amsterdam and at the (Reem Acra) Final.  Parzival felt very good today,” she added.  Amsterdam provides the next port of call for the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage series in three weeks’ time and the home crowd will, no doubt, throng to see their champion on her home turf.

Kittel meanwhile is targeting his home venue at Gothenburg, Sweden in February for his next outing with Watermill Scandic.  And he has something up his sleeve.  “I have a new Freestyle based on Billy Idol – it’s very rocky and very different and I think it’s going to be great!” he warned.

For further information on the sixth leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage series at Mechelen, Belgium on 28 December 2011 go to website http://www.jumping-mechelen.com/nl/home/ or contact Press Officer Edith de Reys, Email edith.dereys@skynet.be or Tel +32 475 659 281.  The next leg of the series takes place in Amsterdam, The Netherlands on Saturday 21 January 2012.  For details of the Dutch fixture check out website www.jumpingamsterdam.nl or contact Press Officer Charlotte Gunnink at Email media@jumpingamsterdam.nl or Tel +31 638 325326.

Result:
1, Jerich Parzival (Adelinde Cornelissen) NED 85.325; 2, Watermill Scandic HBC (Patrik Kittel) SWE 80.050; 3, Elvis VA (Nadine Capellmann) GER 76.950; 4, Withney van het Genthof (Hans Peter Minderhoud) NED 76.850; 5, Apollo van het Vijvershof (Jeroen Devroe) BEL 75.300; 6, Responsible (Helen Langehanenberg) GER 74.000; 7, Daianira van de Helle (Vicky Smits-Vanderhasselt) BEL 73.925; 8, Uzzo (Patrick van Meer) NED 73.175; 9, Le Beau (Philippe Jorissen) BEL 72.350; 10, Vradin (Simon Missiaen) BEL 71.900; 11, Donnerfee (Claudia Fassaert) BEL 70.300; 12, Question de Liberte (Johan Zagers) BEL 68.275; 13, Belissimo NRW (Hayley Beresford) AUS 67.875; 14, Viane Stallone (Inna Logutenkova) UKR 67.250; 15, Fazzino (Julie De Deken) BEL 67.175.  Detailed result at www.scgvisual.com.

Facts and Figures:
The 2011 edition is the 31st anniversary of the horse show at the Nekkerhal in Mechelen, Belgium.
This annual fixture is dedicated to the memory of the late Belgian rider Eric Wauters who, at the Olympic Games in Montreal, Canada in 1976, won team bronze in Jumping alongside Stanny Van Paesschen, Francois Mathy and Edgar-Henri Cuepper.
This was the sixth leg of the Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 series.
The panel of judges for today’s competition consisted of – At E: Wojtek Markowski (POL); At H: Isobel Wessels (GBR); At C: Mariette Withages (BEL); At M: Susanne Baarup (DEN) and At B: Jacques van Daele (BEL).
15 riders from 7 nations – Belgium, Australia, Ukraine, The Netherlands, Germany and Sweden – competed in today’s Freestyle Kur to Music.
The Nekkerhal arena was packed to capacity for today’s competition, with over 7,000 seated spectators and additional numbers filling the non-seated area.

Quotes:
Patrik Kittel – “I know the atmosphere here in Mechelen is difficult, but I forget it every time until I come back!  There is an incredible amount of noise when you come in, and the public is very close to the arena, but then the commentator asks the spectators to be quiet and they are, which is great.  The public here really enjoy their dressage.”

Ground Jury President, Mariette Withages – “I am very happy with how things went today.  The seven Belgians were wonderful – there were 19 starters in the Grand Prix and all of the Belgians qualified for the top-15.”

Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage 2011/2012 – Standings after Round 6 at Mechelen, Belgium:
1.    Patrik Kittel SWE                –    65
2.    Hans Peter Minderhoud NED        –    59
3.    Valentina Truppa ITA             –    53
4.    Tinne Vilhelmson Silfven SWE        –    52
5.    Isabell Werth GER                –    43
6.    Helen Langehanenberg GER        –    42
7.    Richard Davison GBR            –    38
8.    Jeroen Devroe BEL                –    34
9.    Monica Theodorescu GER        –    32
10.    Nadine Capellmann GER            –    29
11.    Catherine Haddad USA            –    26
12.    Marc Peter Spahn BEL            –    24
13.    Sebastien Duperdu FRA            –    23
14.    Christa Laarakers NED            –    22
14.    Siril Helljesen NOR                –    22

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 Mechelen
Press Officer, Edith de Reys
Email: edith.dereys@skynet.be
Tel: +32 475 659 281

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

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

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