Wellington,
FL - The United States Equestrian Team (USET) Foundation has
announced that Darren Chiacchia, Nina Fout, Kim Severson, and
Karen Stives from the Olympic sport of eventing will represent
the USET Foundation in the 2008 Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena,
CA. The four eventing riders will join dressage Olympians Sue
Blinks, Debbie McDonald, Guenter Seidel, and Steffen Peters as
riders in a 12-member squad representing the USET Foundation.
Next to be selected and announced will be the show jumping Olympians,
who will complete the squad of equestrian athletes representing
the Olympic disciplines in the 119th Rose Parade on January 1,
2008.
The
historic Rose Parade, a New Year's Day tradition, features
floral floats, more than 300 horses, and marching bands that
parade for five-and-half miles while nearly one million spectators
line the route to cheer them on. The annual Rose Parade is
broadcast to millions of viewers in 75 countries. The New Year's
Day parade broadcast is scheduled to precede football's Rose
Bowl Game and will start at 8 a.m. (PST)/11 a.m. (EST) on Tuesday,
January 1, 2008.
"We
are so pleased to have these eventing Olympians represent their
sport and the USET Foundation to the millions of people around
the world who watch this exciting parade," said USET Foundation
Executive Director Bonnie Jenkins. "Our eventing riders have
helped establish the U.S. as one of the most accomplished equestrian
teams in the international competition arena. These riders
are exemplary athletes and exceptional ambassadors for all
equestrian sport, as well as the USET Foundation and our country.
We appreciate their generosity and thank them for their participation
in the Rose Parade."
Biographies
for Olympic Eventing Riders, 2008 Rose Parade
Darren
Chiacchia
Darren Chiacchia, 43, of Springfield, NY and Ocala, FL, rode
Windfall II, a Trakehner stallion owned by Tim Holekamp, at the
2004 Athens Olympic Games and helped the U.S. win the Team Bronze
Medal. Chiacchia was the traveling alternate at the 2000 Sydney
Olympic Games. At the 2003 Pan American Games, riding as an Individual,
Chiacchia won the Individual Gold Medal aboard Windfall II. At
the 2007 Pan Ams, Chiacchia again rode as an Individual and placed
4th overall aboard Better I Do It owned by Adrienne Iorio. Chiacchia
represented the U.S. at the 2002 World Championships in Jerez,
Spain, and at the 1995 European Open championships in Pratoni,
Italy. Chiacchia has had consistent success over the years with
top finishes at Rolex, Fair Hill International, and the Foxhall
Cup. Chiacchia and Windfall II won the 2004 Rolex Three Day Event.
Nina
Fout
Nina Fout, 48, of Middleburg, VA, and her own 3 Magic Beans,
a Thoroughbred gelding, helped the U.S. win the Team Bronze Medal
at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games. Fout has been a successful
competitor since her teen years, winning the Peters Trophy at
the 1975 Radnor Three-Day Event when she was just 16 years old,
which also earned her the title of Junior National Champion.
With 3 Magic Beans, Fout represented the U.S. at the most challenging
CCI four-star competitions in the world, including the top three
in Great Britain - Burghley three times (2004, 2001, 1999), Badminton
twice (2003 and 1999), and the Blenheim Horse Trials in 1997.
Fout and 3 Magic Beans also competed at the Rolex Three Day Event
in Kentucky three times (2002, 2001, and 2000) with their most
notable finish, 8th place, in 2002.
Kim
Severson
Kim Severson, 34, of Keene, Virginia, aboard Winsome Adante,
competed in the 2004 Athens Olympic Game where she earned the
Individual Silver Medal and helped the U.S. win the Team Bronze
Medal. Severson and Winsome Adante, an English Thoroughbred gelding
owned by Linda Wachtmeister and Plain Dealing Farm, have won
the eventing world's most challenging competitions during their
phenomenal partnership over the past five years. At the 2002
World Equestrian Games (WEG) in Jerez, Spain, Severson and Winsome
Adante helped the U.S. win Team Gold. Severson has won the prestigious
Rolex Kentucky CCI four times - 1999 with Over the Limit, and
2002, 2004, and 2005 with Winsome Adante. In 2007, Severson and
Winsome Adante won The Fork CIC-W-three-star. Severson was named
the U.S. Eventing Association's Lady Rider of the Year in 2001,
2002, 2004, and 2005.
Karen
Stives
Karen Stives, 57, of Dover, MA, was the first woman to win an
Olympic medal in the sport of eventing - in fact, she won two
medals. Riding Ben Arthur, an Irish-bred gray Thoroughbred owned
by her mother, Lillian Mahoney, Stives won the Individual Silver
Medal and anchored the U.S. squad that won the Team Gold Medal
at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games. Stives successfully represented
the U.S. internationally for many years aboard her own Thoroughbred,
The Saint. Stives was named the U.S. Combined Training Association's
Rider of the Year three times - 1981, 1987, and 1988. After retiring
from international competition, Stives became an international
(FEI) eventing judge, and was chairwoman of the U.S. Equestrian
Team's Three-Day Event Selectors' Committee for 10 years. Stives
was inducted into the U.S. Eventing Association's Hall of Fame
in 2006.
The
non-profit United States Equestrian Team Foundation supports
the competition, training, coaching, travel and educational
needs of America's elite and developing international, high-performance
athletes and horses in partnership with the United States Equestrian
Federation. For more information about the USET Foundation
or to make a donation, please call (908) 234-1251 or visit
the USET Foundation website at www.uset.org.
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