Germany Takes Individual, Team Gold, Britain Silver, New Zealand Bronze in Olympic Eventing

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On his 30th birthday Tuesday, Michael Jung won individual gold and led Germany to team gold to add to his world and European championship titles. Michael and Sam after completing the double gold at the London Games. © 2012 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

LONDON, July 31–Team Germany repeated their 2008 Olympic medal-winning performance when claiming Eventing team and individual gold at the London 2012 Olympic equestrian venue in Greenwich Park Tuesday. Such was their supremacy that they clinched the team title even before their last rider went into the ring, and Michael Jung set a new record in equestrian sport when becoming the first-ever event rider to hold Olympic, European and world titles at the same time. What a way to celebrate his 30th birthday!

The finale brought four days of Eventing sport to a conclusion. After the destination of team gold had been established, the battle for silver and bronze was waged between Great Britain, Sweden and New Zealand, and it was the host nation that was eventually rewarded with silver while the Kiwis claimed the bronze.

It seemed that Sweden might be compensated for being pushed off the team medal podium when Sara Ostholt went into the individual final as sole leader after Germany’s Ingrid Klimke left two fences on the floor in the morning’s team medal decider. But a last-fence error saw the Swede having to settle for silver, while Jung showed his extraordinary class to clinch the gold, with his team-mate Sandra Auffarth securing individual bronze in equally convincing fashion.

Sweden's Sara-Ostholt on Wega looking back in disbelief as a rail starts to fall on the last jump of Olympic individual eventing that if it had stayed up would have won her the gold medal instead of silver. © 2012 Kn Braddick/dressage-news.com

The 12-fence track for the team competition was not over-big, but with plenty of twists and turns, including four roll-backs, and a tight time-allowed of 83 seconds it asked plenty of questions after the previous day’s tough cross-country challenge.

A total of 53 horse-and-rider partnerships lined out, and there were just nine teams still intact, the Belgians going out of contention when Dunkas A and Lilly des Aulnes did not present for the final horse inspection, along with Donatien Schauly’s Ocarina du Chanois for France, and Michelle Mueller’s Amistad for Canada. The U.S. team was reduced to four when Boyd Martin’s Otis Barbotiere was withdrawn in the holding box, along with Wag, the ride of Poland’s Pawel Spisak.

Less than 10 penalty points separated the four leading nations as the action began, and nine time faults for Jonelle Richards on Flintstar did not help the fourth-placed Kiwis, but a clear from Linda Algotsson and La Fair was a great boost for third-placed Sweden.

The excitement was ratcheted up another notch when Britain’s William Fox-Pitt was clear well inside the time with Lionheart, although team-mate Nicola Wilson and Opposition Buzz hit the second fence. Germany kicked off with two down for Peter Thomsen and Barny, but Dirk Schrade and King Artus piled the pressure on both the British and the Swedes with a lovely clear.

Meanwhile Caroline Powell’s living legend, Lenamore, showed that even though he celebrates his 20th birthday on Wednesday, he was born in the Southern Hemisphere, he was definitely none-the-worse for his previous day’s endeavors when almost running away with his rider during the horse inspection and then lowering just the last element of the triple combination on course.

Caroline’s team-mate, Jonathan Paget, gave the Swedes and British some breathing space with one down on Clifton Promise, but when Sweden’s Niklas Lindback and Mr Pooh collected nine faults and Britain’s Zara Phillips and High Kingdom hit the second fence and then added three time penalties to their score line, the Kiwis kept looking stronger all the time.

In the end however, none of the them could match the mighty Germans who, with a single-fence advantage as the competition began, already had gold in their grip when Sandra Auffarth and Opgun Louvo gave an exhibition of jumping and Michael Jung and Sam followed suit.

Olympic individual medalists Michael Jung of Germany and Sam (gold), Sara Ostholt of Sweden and Wega (silver) and Sandra Auffarth also of Germany and Opgun Louvo in their victory gallop at Lndon's Greenwich Park. © 2012 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

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Germany's eventing gold medal team. © 2012 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Swedish medal chances disappeared with a double-error for Ludvig Svnnerstal and Shamwari, despite a clear from Sara Ostholt and the lovely mare Wega. But the Swedes still had individual gold in their sights when the latter’s rival for individual pole position, Germany’s Ingrid Klimke, had two fences down to disappear from the reckoning. Typically sporting, Klimke gave a broad smile and waved to the crowd, knowing she would soon have a team gold medal around her neck, anyway.

It was a super-tight battle between Britain and New Zealand in the closing stages.

Mary King’s round with Imperial Cavalier kept the host nation’s hopes very much alive, but Andrew Nicholson and Nereo matched that with a classy fault-free effort for New Zealand. However, when Nicholson’s fellow-countryman, Mark Todd, collected seven faults with Campino and Britain’s Tina Cook and Miners Frolic picked up just a single time fault, the host nation was assured of silver and the Kiwis of bronze.

German team trainer, Chris Bartle, said afterwards: “I’m delighted, and proud of the tremendous performances of this team. At the beginning of the week I brought them together and asked them to shut their eyes and dream of a gold medal around their necks.” It seems that worked a treat.

Britain’s Tina Cook said: “It was a silver medal won, not a gold medal lost. It was a very strong competition, and we did have a chance of gold today but we could have lost it completely and have gone home with nothing at all. Silver is still very special.”

The Briish crowd that packed the 23,000 seat stadium at London's Greenwich Park thunerously applaued the home team that won eventng silver with a squad that included Zara Phillips with her mother, Princess Anne, looking on as well as her father, Mark Phillips, coach of the U.S. eventing team. The presence of a large number of royals from Britain and other parts to atch Zara compete drew hordes of photographers to the final day of eventing. © 2012 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

One of the biggest surprises of the team event was the fifth-place finish for the Irish who, at this Olympic Games, have produced some quality performances. Despite being reduced to just a three-strong side, they stood firm with Aoife Clark’s clear round from Master Crusoe putting pressure on the Americans and Australians. And when Joseph Murphy matched that with Electric Cruise and Mark Kyle put just 7.20 faults on the board they demoted two giants of the game to show that, in the not-too-distant-future, they may return to being truly competitive in the discipline in which they once excelled.

Clear rounds proved hard to get once again in the Individual final, in which just 24 started when Ingrid Klimke withdrew. Lying 13th, Zara Phillips produced one of nine clean sheets, despite a moment when it seemed she might be unseated after a big jump from High Kingdom over the second fence. Aoife Clark’s second fault-free effort of the day ensured she would improve from 11th place, and when Australia’s Chris Burton on HP Leilani and New Zealand’s Mark Todd both left two on the floor the Irish woman made some serious headway up the leader board.

Going sixth from last, Andrew Nicholson and Nereo looked set for a foot-perfect run until meeting the white planks at fence six on a bad distance, but fifth-place Sandra Auffarth ensured she would stay well in the frame with another of her awe-inspiring rounds from Opgun Louvo.

There was just one fence separating the top four, and less than a fence dividing the top three, but for Britain’s Tina Cook and Mary King it all unravelled in exactly the same places. Both of them hit the opening vertical and then faulted again at the gate two fences later to allow Auffarth to soar up the placings. And when fellow-German, Michael Jung, produced yet another super-smooth tour of the track, the Germans were already holding silver and bronze. 

Sara Ostholt could afford only a single time fault, and seemed destined for the ultimate prize with her mare, Wega, jumping quick and clean all the way. But as she explained afterwards, she made a mistake on the last line of fences.

“She was a little bit strong, but we had to ride quite fast because of the time and I came fast into the triple combination (the penultimate fence). I told her to be careful there, and I also asked her at the last, but I needed more control, she lost a toe and so it happened,” she said. That final oxer meant the difference between Olympic gold and silver, with Michael Jung claiming the title.

The new Olympic eventing champion said he jumped off his horse to see Sara Ostholt go.

“She’s a very good rider, but that was a sad mistake for her in the end,” admitting that he had been expecting to finish second, “but first is better!”

“It was a big dream for me to ride in my first Olympic Games, but every competition is very easy with Sam (his horse), he always does a great job. I had hoped that if it all went perfectly we would have a medal coming to these Olympic Games, but never in my dreams did I think I would take home two gold medals!”