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August 25, 2006 Eventers, Vaulters Take the Stages at Aachen 2006 WEG Vaulting: Compulsories
USA’s Megan Benjamin got off to a beautiful start by winning the compulsories phase with a score of 8.015 on the horse Leonardo that she co-owns, longed by Lasse Kristensen from Denmark. Benjamin also has the honor of being the only American in Aachen competing as both an individual and also a part of the F.A.M.E. team. Benjamin said of her go, “I was actually quite surprised by how well I did, because the women I beat, are the women I look up to. I owe it all to Leonardo and Lasse.” Mary McCormick was the first American to vault and received a score of 6.596. She was aboard Calisto 4 with owner/longeur Betina Gross. Elizabeth Osborn had the middle spot and received a 6.481 aboard Milan 123 with owner/longeur Hannelore Leiser. In January of this year, Devon Maitozo traveled to Europe to search for horses that the U.S vaulters could use at WEG. The competition is going to be tough, with vaulters from 23 countries taking part, including newcomers Columbia. In total, this competition will see 15 teams, 28 individual men and 52 individual women. The Germans will be an ominous force, having won every individual female world championship for the past 20 years, nearly every team world championship and more than half of the individual male world championships. However, anyone who deals with horses knows that anything can happen. The top German woman is coming off of a second knee injury, which could leave the door open for Benjamin or any vaulter who is hungry enough for Gold. Today’s required compulsory movements were the mount, basic seat, flag, mill, scissors, stand and flank. The vaulter needs to hold each move for four strides, no more, no less. The horse has a key role to play in that they need to canter, counter clockwise, fluently in the same 15 meter track. Half of the total score is based on the horse, the other half on the vaulter’s execution of the movements. Some horses reacted to today’s crowd, which cost their vaulters. In team compulsories, each team has six minutes, starting when the first vaulter touches the horse, to complete each of the same seven compulsory exercises, one at a time. The F.A.M.E. team earned a 6.647 in today’s compulsories aboard Grand Gaudino, putting them in fifth place. “Dino” is an 18.3-hand Hanoverian, owned and longed by Dr. Silke Bartel. Two team members also had a little falter when the performed part of the scissors move. “The horse was a little nervous,” said F.A.M.E. team coach Emma Seely. “The vaulters dealt with it well. It wasn’t our best showing, but it wasn’t our worst.” The F.A.M.E. vaulters include Megan Benjamin, Blake Dahlgren, Elizabeth Ioannou, Devon Maitozo, Rosalind Ross, Annalise VanVranken and Katie Richie as the alternate. The music selection that F.A.M.E. vaulted with today was a mix of Middle Eastern music and a piece from Cirque de Soleil. Dino was not the only horse that let his nerves get to him in the raucous arena. The only all-girl teams of Switzerland and The Netherlands also longed on a horse that was less than steady. The Swiss horse tried to gallop out of the arena with the longeur attached and then threw in a few caprioles, barely missing the heads of some of the team vaulters. The Netherlands’ horse cantered rapidly through their performance, constantly looking around, making it very difficult for the vaulters to put in a great performance. On the flip side, the German horse trotted in, completely unphased, by screams that could rival a Super Bowl crowd, and it was obvious why they have won 23 of the last 30 world championships. The music was elegant and classic. Toes were pointed, legs were straight and high. Movements were smooth and effortless. The horse and vaulter were one. But they too had mistakes. They currently have the lead after the team compulsories, with a score of 7.183. The U.S. men started out with a bad draw, going first, third and 19th. Todd Griffiths was the first up with Campina 6 and longeur Andrea Weber. Unfortunately, the horse started out very rattled as he jogged in and ran off the pathway. He was just as upset on the way out. All of that combined meant a score of 6.773 for Griffiths. Chris Littmann was the next American up, vaulting aboard Milan 123, longed by Hannelore Leiser. Their score was 6.993. Kenny Geisler was the last American of the evening and vaulted aboard Campina 6 with Weber as longeur. Their score was a 7.367. Campina, again, was quite excited and would barely stand still for Geisler to salute the ground jury. Matthias Lang of France is currently in the lead after the men’s compulsories with a score of 8.107. Just behind him, in second place, is Kai Vorberg of Germany with a score of 8.096. After tomorrow’s freestyle performances, the top 15 men, top 15 women and top 12 teams will be invited back for the technical and freestyle on Saturday and Sunday. |
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