Lexington & KHP


If you’ve been reading this blog for the past year or more (or if you’ve scrolled back through all the many “WEG 2010” posts) … you’ll know that I’ve been watching — and sharing with you — the progress over all that time on the construction of the marathon obstacles.

Other than a couple of references to individual people as they happened to show up in the photos, I’ve concentrated mostly on bits and pieces of the obstacles themselves and not on who’s been building them. So you’ve been left to wonder who built all those beautiful (and beautifully constructed) obstacles, haven’t you?

After the WEG driven dressage last Friday, a few of us photographers — and the course-building crew — gathered for a tour of some of the completed obstacles and a fun photo shoot in their work area.

hamming it up for the photographers and showing off their machinery: the marathon-course-building crew is, left to right, Levi Ryckewart, Aaron Beale, Mick Costello, Aaron Rust, Lenny Courtemanche, Dave Leonard, Isaac Bingham, and Tobiah Bingham

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the builders basically invented the unique shape and construction method for the logs at the Squirrel Grove; left to right: Aaron Rust, Mick Costello, and Aaron Beale

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the Bingham brothers (Tobiah on the left and Isaac on the right, with Lenny Courtemanche between them) created and constructed the decorative “crazy quilt” pattern of smaller branches between the larger logs in Spook Hollow

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Isaac Bingham shows off the widemouth bass he carved (with a chainsaw!) for one of the two water obstacles

Sunday’s awards ceremony for the Driving World Championship at the WEG may have started slowly (ribbons awarded to the top ten places in the marathon phase, then to the top ten places in the cones phase … each followed by a genteel victory lap), but it ended with a big, happy, noisy celebration in honor of the medal winners.

the lineup of winners in the marathon phase …

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and, later, the lineup of winners in the cones phase (that’s Chester Weber, in first place, on the left, and Jim Fairclough, in second place, next to him)

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Chester Weber (USA) on his victory lap after the awards ceremony for the cones phase

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After these two ribbon ceremonies was the official medal ceremony for the individual winners …

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… starting with Tucker Johnson (USA) receiving his individual bronze medal from Richard Nicoll, chair of the FEI Driving Committee …

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… and saluting the crowd

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all three individual medal winners gathered on the top step; left to right: Aidan Connolly (representing Alltech), Tucker Johnson (bronze), Boyd Exell (gold), and Ysbrand Chardon (silver)

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Pony Club members were charged with holding on to the team medals before they were presented to the winners

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after being presented with their silver medals, the U.S. team salutes the crowd; left to right: Jim Fairclough, Chester Weber, and Tucker Johnson

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all the team medal winners salute the cheering crowd; on the ground: various officials and representatives of Alltech, and the Dutch chef d’equipe (in the unmistakable orange), and on the podium: the bronze-medal German team on the left, the gold-medal Dutch team in the center, and the silver-medal U.S. team on the right

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after the official medal ceremony was finished, the music was turned up, and it was time for the victory laps … but first: Chardon ran over to the end of the arena where these Dutch fans were gathered and threw his sunflower bouquet into their midst

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for the first time around the arena on their victory laps, each team trotted past the grandstands, three turnouts abreast (here, the Americans) …

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… and here, the Dutch

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… and then came the final spectacle (I watched the first two teams do this and only caught photos of the Dutch): each team turned down the center line and galloped for the exit gate, galloping through it one turnout at a time …

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… with the music blaring over the loudspeakers and the crowd cheering

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and then the individual gold-medal winner, Boyd Exell, took his own victory lap …

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… and his own dramatic gallop out of the arena

Here are the promised photos from Sunday’s cones phase of this year’s Driving World Championship. These are presented in the order in which they were driven.

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Mike McLennan (driving as an individual for the USA) was the fifth driver to attempt Richard Nicoll’s cones course; he had five balls down but was the first to complete the course within the time allowed; he finished the WEG in nineteenth place overall

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Josh Rector (USA), competing in his first World Championship, finished in sixteenth place overall

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Gavin Robson (AUS) finished in seventeenth place

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representing Poland and having driven this team for only two weeks, Piotr Mazurek was the tenth driver to tackle the cones course; he was the first one with a clear round (although he did have quite a few time penalties); he finished in fourteenth place

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Chester Weber (USA) had to wait for quite a while before driving the cones course, when the electronic timing stopped working; once he was finally able to go, he posted the first double-clear round (no course or time penalties) and won the cones competition

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immediately following his teammate (above), Jim Fairclough posted the second double-clear round of the day; he finished the WEG in ninth place overall

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Sweden’s Fredrick Persson finished the event in eighth place overall

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representing Switzerland, Daniel Wuergler finished in seventh place overall

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Germany’s Christoph Sandmann finished in fourth place individually and was a member of the German team that, in a surprise finish, won the team bronze medal when …

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… Sweden’s Tomas Eriksson went off course and was eliminated, thereby taking his team out of medal contention

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Theo Timmerman (NED) finished in sixth place overall

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even with one ball down, Tucker Johnson secured the silver medal for Team USA and won the individual bronze medal; on his way out of the arena, he stood and saluted the cheering crowd

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Chardon’s three course penalties (one ball down) gave Boyd Exell a bit of a cushion but nonetheless secured the gold medal for the Dutch team

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the last to go, Boyd Exell drove safely through the cones course, recording 3.52 penalties (no balls down, but time faults) … and winning the individual gold medal

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Keep checking the blog each day, as I still have awards-ceremony photos yet to post … and a few other WEG photos and stories to share.

On the final Saturday evening of the WEG, the CAA, Steve Wilson, Laura Lee Brown, and the Hermitage International Training Center hosted an “End of the Marathon!” party for nearly three hundred people — everyone on the CAA’s trip to the WEG, and all the drivers, grooms, etc. I even saw Kentucky’s First Lady Jane Beshear and Alston Kerr, chair of the Kentucky Horse Park Commission.

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During the party, Jill, Colonel Davis (CAA president), and Kate & Katie Whaley presented the awards for the WEG’s Presentation competition, which was sponsored by the CAA. There were ribbons and cash prizes for the first- through tenth-place winners, plus other special awards: a holly whip for first place (donated by Fleck Whips of Germany and presented by Driving Essentials) and commemorative plates for the first-, second-, and third-place winners, each hand painted by artist Graciela Giacosa of Argentina.

Josh Rector (USA) won the tenth-place ribbon in Presentation

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Bill Long (USA) accepts his ninth-place ribbon from Katie Whaley

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Kate Whaley congratulates Werner Ulrich (SUI) on his eighth-place finish

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Gary Stover (USA) receives his seventh-place ribbon

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Cindy O’Reilly, one of only two women competing in the Driving World Championship, was pleased with her sixth-place ribbon

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Daniel Wuergler (SUI) was pleased to finish in fourth place

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U.S. team member Jim Fairclough (center) won the second-place award; with him are Katie Whaley (left) and Colonel Davis (right)

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one of Chester Weber’s grooms accepted the first-place awards on his behalf …

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… including a beautiful four-in-hand holly whip, donated by Fleck Whips of Germany and presented by Driving Essentials (the whip is being presented here by Steve Wilson)

Although I (and lots of others) have been working long hours for three straight weeks, I’m finding it hard to believe that today was the last day of WEG.

The final phase of the Driving World Championship was today as well.

The cones competition was by turns exciting (only four double-clear rounds!) and, well, quiet. When the electronic timing equipment stopped working not once but three times, there wasn’t much to do but wait (with any luck, in the shade) for announcements of how the situation was being handled, and of when the competition would resume.

Immediately after the unscheduled break (after having come into the arena twice already to start his round, and having been sent back out when the timing equipment still didn’t work), Chester Weber posted the very first double-clear round of the day; in other words: no course penalties (no balls down or other problems), and no time penalties.

And immediately after Chester’s beautifully executed round, Jim Fairclough came in with his own stellar drive and posted the second double-clear round of the day. They finished first and second (Chester, then Jim) in the cones prize-giving, followed by Christoph Sandmann (GER) and Daniel Wurgler (SUI) in third and fourth. They had driven the other two double-clear rounds.

Sweden’s Tomas Eriksson (in fifth place heading into the cones phase) had the bad luck to drive backwards through a set of cones near the end of the course, thereby eliminating himself from the competition and his team from the bronze-medal position.

Driving for the U.S., Tucker Johnson was in third place heading into the cones phase. His round (one ball down for three course penalties; no time penalties) guaranteed him at least an individual bronze and guaranteed the USA a team silver.

Standing in second place before the cones phase, Ysbrand Chardon (NED) had one ball down but no time penalties and clinched the team gold medal for the Dutch.

Considering Chardon’s 3 penalties points in the cones phase, Boyd Exell (AUS) knew that he had a bit more breathing room than he’d started with. He won the gold medal with a careful drive through the course (no balls down but 3.52 time penalties) and then finished it off with a flourish, by saluting the crowd and galloping through the exit gate.

From where I had stationed myself to photograph the event, I could hear the cheers from each support team as the drivers exited the course and drove back into the warmup arena. As you would expect, there were several rather excited groups of people back there behind the grandstands, ready to congratulate their medal-winning drivers.

Next, the awards ceremony: prize-giving (ribbons through tenth place) for the marathon, prize-giving for the cones, and two medal ceremonies — one for the individual winners and a second one for the team-medal winners.

The drivers brought their turnouts in for each of these ceremonies, and by the time the team medals were awarded, the flag-waving crowd was more than ready to applaud the teams. During the victory laps, each team drove around the arena three (turnouts) abreast, and as they turned down the center line, they cantered toward the exit, galloping out one by one. It was quite a thrilling spectacle!

No doubt you are wondering where the pictures of all of this might be. In my rather tired state this afternoon (after the end of a long, hot day at the end of a long three weeks), I packed everything up to bring it home so I could do this blog post in the evening.

Camera? Check.

Laptop? Check.

Power cord for computer? Check.

Cable to download the photos from the camera onto the laptop? The one that’s still sitting on my desk at the office? Oh.

The WEG security bubble is still in place, or I would’ve driven back out to the office tonight to get it … I promise. But quickly driving to the office to pick something up is, well, impossible at the moment. So I’m afraid the photos won’t be posted quite yet.

But please do check back to see them … they’re good!

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