Now, everyone’s attention turns to taking care of the horses for Sunday’s show jumping phase. When asked about their evening recovery, the leading riders shared similar plans.
“We’re going to grab a beer, I think,” McEwen joked. “But really, Dubs came home spectacularly, not a nick on him, and he’s a great jumper. We’ll do our best to put pressure on Tamie for tomorrow. A happy, healthy, fit horse for the next day is the best you can hope for, really.”
“A lot of praying,” Smith said with a laugh. “I mean, he’s already back at the barn and felt good coming through the finish. You hope they feel good in their bodies, especially when they’re 17, but he’s a great horse and we’re taking care of him. We have no plans but to do what we do and hope the world is helping us get over the jumps clean tomorrow.”
In the Dubarry of Ireland Nations Team Challenge, Team USA (Tamie Smith/Mai Baum, Will Coleman/Chin Tonic, Boyd Martin/Tsetserleg TSF, and Phillip Dutton/Z) moved into the top spot with a score of 95.5. The combined team of Germany, France and Canada (Sandra Auffarth/Viamant Du Matz, Alina Dibowski/Barbados 26, Maxime Livio/Carouzo Bois Marotin, and Jessica Phoenix/Wabbit) stands second with 107.3. Team Great Britain (Yasmin Ingham/Banzai Du Loir, Tom McEwen/JL Dublin, Kristy Chabert/Classic VI, and David Doel/Galileo Nieuwmoed) stands third on 125.5.
In the Cosequin® Lexington CCI4*-S, speed was the name of the game, with only three double-clear rounds from the 49 starters. Canada’s Karl Slezak vaulted from seventh place to the top of the leaderboard aboard Hot Bobo with one of those double-clear rounds to go into the final phase with a score of 29.3. Smith on Solaguayre California moved up one place into second, despite adding 2.4 time to her score to stand on 30.0. She is narrowly ahead of the now third-place pair of Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Be Cool, who added 5.6 time penalties to finish the second phase with a score of 31.1.
Slezak was thrilled with “Bobo” at her first appearance on a big stage. “My horse has had some issues in the past as a young horse being green and spooky on cross country,” he said. “This is the first time she’s ever seen a crowd, and I was unsure how she’d handle it until the warmup. In the warmup, she was spot-on, so I felt very confident going out of the start box.”