2011 European Dressage Championship
2011 European Dressage Championship | |
---|---|
Host city | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Date(s) | 21–25 August |
Level | Senior, Under 25 |
Events |
3 Team, GP Special, GP Freestyle |
Records set | 1 |
← 2009 2013 → |
The 2011 European Dressage Championship was held between August 17 and August 21, 2011 in Rotterdam, Netherlands.
It was the 25 edition of the European Dressage Championships, in the 24th time team medals were awarded.
Organization
Before the event
At the 2008 FEI-General Assembly in Buenos Aires, the Netherlands was chosen as the country to host the 2011 European Dressage Championship. Rotterdam, location of the annual Nations Cup horse show in Show Jumping and Dressage, was chosen as the location for the event.[1]
It was the second time in European Dressage Championship history - after 1999 in Arnhem - that the Netherlands was chosen to hold this sports event.
Event and location
The European Dressage Championship was opended in late afternoon on Wednesday August 17. The sport at the Championship had started on Wednesday morning. Parallel to the European Championships, a Youth Horse Show for riders up to 25 years of age and national Dressage competitions was held.
At the end of the event there was a short final ceremony on Sunday (August 21, 2011 at 4:45 pm). Three days after the end of the European Dressage Championship the 2011 CHIO Rotterdam was held - this year without dressage.[2]
The event was held in Kralingen, a district of Rotterdam, on the CHIO area between the Kralingseweg and the park Kralingse Bos.
Competitions
General
As in years 1991, 1993, 2007 and 2009, in 2011 nine medals are awarded at the European Dressage Championship (three for the team competition, three in Grand Prix Spécial (individual) and also three in the Grand Prix Freestyle (individual).
At this European Championship a record number of participants started the Championship competitions. In the Grand Prix de Dressage 64 riders and 16 teams start. Each nation can start with a team of three or four riders, each rider with one horse.
Timetable
The first competition was the Team Grand Prix de Dressage. It was held on two days, on Wednesday and on Friday (August 17 and 19). All riders who participate at this Championship had to start in this competition. The results of three riders per team counts for the team result. After the Grand Prix de Dressage the team medals were awarded.
The Friday was a rest day for the horses which compete at the European Championship. The best 30 competitors of the Grand Prix de Dressage start in the Grand Prix Spécial, which was held on the Saturday.
The best 15 riders of the Grand Prix Spécial were allowed to participate in the Grand Prix Freestyle on Sunday. If more than three riders of a team are placed in the top 15 of the Grand Prix Spécial, only the three best-placed riders of this team are allowed to start in the Freestyle competition. In the event this happens the best-placed rider from a team with less than three riders in the top 15 will be moved up to the Grand Prix Freestyle.
Results
Team result
The Team Gold Medal was won for the first time at European Dressage Championships by the British team. Great Britain, who was not credited with the 1963 Championships because of an FEI rule (see: European Dressage Championship), was in the lead after the end of the first day.
26-year-old British rider Charlotte Dujardin laid the foundation for the victory of the British team. Dujardin rode together with her horse Valegro in 2011, her first season on Grand Prix level.[3] With a result of 78.830% the student of Carl Hester was in the lead in the individual ranking after day one.
On the second day Laura Bechtolsheimer and particularly Carl Hester, who led with his horse Uthopia in individual ranking after the Grand Prix de Dressage, can extend their lead in the team result.
On the second rank, with around 12 percent distance, the German team win the silver medal in the team ranking. The bronze medal was won by the Dutch team.
Final result[4]
placing | team | riders and horses | percent |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Great Britain | Emile Faurie Elmegardens Marquis Charlotte Dujardin Valegro Carl Hester Uthopia Laura Bechtolsheimer Mistral Hojris |
238.678 % (70.426 %) 78.830 % 82.568 % 77.280 % |
2 | Germany | Helen Langehanenberg Damon Hill NRW Christoph Koschel Donnperignon Isabell Werth El Santo NRW Matthias Alexander Rath Totilas |
226.110 % (71.079 %) 71.444 % 75.213 % 79.453 % |
3 | Netherlands | Sander Marijnissen Moedwill Hans Peter Minderhoud Nadine Edward Gal Sisther de Jeu Adelinde Cornelissen Parzival |
222.645 % 70.578 % 70.912 % (70.517 %) 81.155 % |
4 | Sweden | Rose Mathisen Bocelli Cecilia Dorselius Lennox Tinne Vilhelmson-Silfvén Favourit Patrik Kittel Scandic |
214.437 % 68.024 & (66.763 %) 69.939 % 76.474 % |
5 | Spain | Beatriz Ferrer-Salat Faberge Claudio Castilla Ruiz Jade de MV Juan Manuel Muñoz Diaz Fuego de Cardenas Jordi Domingo Coll Prestige |
211.580 % 67.842 % (66.900 %) 73.404 % 70.334 % |
Individual result (Grand Prix Spécial)
Final result[5]
placing | rider | horse | percent |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Adelinde Cornelissen | Parzival | 82.113 % |
2 | Carl Hester | Uthopia | 81.682% |
3 | Laura Bechtolsheimer | Mistral Hojris | 79.256% |
4 | Matthias Alexander Rath | Totilas | 77.039% |
5 | Patrik Kittel | Scandic | 76.771% |
6 | Charlotte Dujardin | Valegro | 76.548% |
7 | Isabell Werth | El Santo NRW | 76.533% |
8 | Helen Langehanenberg | Damon Hill NRW | 75.283% |
Individual result (Grand Prix Freestlye)
Final result[6]
placing | rider | horse | percent |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Adelinde Cornelissen | Parzival | 88.839% |
2 | Carl Hester | Uthopia | 84.179% |
3 | Patrik Kittel | Scandic | 83.429% |
4 | Laura Bechtolsheimer | Mistral Hojris | 83.018% |
5 | Matthias Alexander Rath | Totilas | 81.696% |
6 | Juan Manuel Muñoz Diaz | Fuego | 80.982% |
7 | Isabell Werth | El Santo NRW | 80.536% |
8 | Helen Langehanenberg | Damon Hill NRW | 80.446% |
More informations
The collection and data communication of the result is performed, as already at the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games, by Dutch company Sport Computer Graphics (SCG).
Before the Grand Prix de Dressage and the Grand Prix Spécial a test rider ("guinea pig") rides to test the systems. This task is performed by Canadian dressage rider Ashley Holzer with her horse Popart.[7]
External links
References
- ↑ News from the 2008 FEI General Assembly in Buenos Aires
- ↑ Programme 2011 CHIO Rotterdam
- ↑ CDI4* Fritzens/Tirol (AUT): Britischer Doppelsieg im Grand Prix (German)
- ↑ result team ranking
- ↑ result individual ranking, Grand Prix Spécial
- ↑ result individual ranking, Grand Prix Spécial
- ↑ EC dressage: Ashley Holzer ‘Guinea Pig’, August 14, 2011