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Rolex FEI World Cup tm Jumping

An unbelievable scenario


Frank Rothenberger, the course designer, had announced the difficulty of his course to the press in advance: “As there were sixteen clear rounds in Leipzig, I thought I’d change the standard level and this course is without doubt the most difficult one I’ve constructed this season.” Thus tonight’s winner of this bordelaise World Cup stage is a true champion.
 
The champion we’re speaking of is no other than Marcus Ehning, which doesn’t seem too surprising to many spectators – however, the scenario that brought him this first victory of a World Cup stage was unimaginable.
From the first round on, the competitors didn’t have a single moment of respite: the diabolic course was a trap for a rider’s slightest loss of concentration, faults everywhere. Not one of the twelve obstacles (in fact there were fifteen if one counts the combinations) was spared tonight - they all went down.
If a couple got through the first “crazy diagonal” that sent off to a triple assassin from the vertical (#3) on, the other fences were holding out for them on every corner of the course. The cracks (such as last year’s world n°2 Albert Zoer, 16 points with Sam) as well as the outsiders (like Swiss Daniel Etter, even though winner of the first two stages, also 16 points) fell, one after the other. It wasn’t until the fifteenth contestant that the audience saw a clear round by Ludger Beerbaum’s young disciple, Philippe Weishaupt (25 year-olds). “It’s true, I stressed a bit at the sight of the paddock as I found the course truly difficult, and hearing the results did not necessarily encourage me. In the end, everything went great! For a long time, I was the only one with a clean round. The more I saw the other riders making faults, the happier I got… until Marcus Ehning arrived.”

Ehning had also doubts in the warming up arena: “After having walked the course, I thought I had an idea of what to do, but as I saw the faults accumulate, I progressively changed my initial plans.”
The world’s n°3 had obviously found solutions quite quickly, and so Leconte joined Catoki for a jump-off that none of the two protagonists really enjoyed: “It’s not easy to go second when there had been a fast run with one fault before you. You don’t know whether to risk and go fast as well, or make it a slower but clear round. I started with solution number two, but then I made this mistake that I am solely responsible for. I had to speed up and it just passed, but really just passed”, stated Marcus Ehning with a broad smile on his face.

But apparently starting a two-contestant-jump-off is not much more enjoyable:
“It’s not easy to go first knowing there is only one more competitor to come, especially when this contestant is Marcus Ehning. I should actually be happy to finish second tonight, after this tough course. I can’t help but feeling regret, though, for losing by one hundredth of a second. Do you know what that means, one hundredth of a second on a course of 250 metres? Three and a half centimetres! Marcus has had enough victories, with three and a half centimetres I could have taken this one from him”, concludes young Philippe.

The bordelaise list begins with the top three riders of the World : Dutchman Albert Zoer, brand-new #1, Marcus Ehning from Germany (who likes Bordeaux as he won twice the Grand Prix of Bordeaux international show jumping) and last but not least the #3 from Switzerland, Team European Champion Pius Schwitzer.

This extraordinary list of participants continues with the current European Champion, Frenchman Kevin Staut (World #5). Kevin is definitively the Rookie of the year 2000 and will be at Bordeaux without any pressure and for the pleasure of the bordelaise public. In fact, he is already qualified for the 2010 World Cup final of Geneva being 6th of the provisional World Cup Ranking with 45 points.

Some other French riders are already or almost qualified for Geneva. They will have the chance to collect the mat home. Such is the case of Pénélope Leprévost (4th with 47 points) while Patrice Delaveau is still missing a few points (18th with 29 points).

It’s also the case of the German champion Ludger Beerbaum (5th with 46 points / 40 points are more or less necessary to assure the qualification). Ludger missed the victory a couple of times in the Bordeaux World Cup qualifier. Will this 2010 edition be the good one? Last December, Ludger won the tough final of the Riders Tour with Coupe de Coeur, which proves that the 1992 Olympic Champion is back in the business…

His stable mate and ex-pupil, Marco Kutscher (World #10 and 11th in World Cup rankings with 40 points) will be back in Bordeaux. Last year he won the Grand Prix of Bordeaux international show jumping after being second in the World Cup qualifier (just behind Albert Zoer). Bordeaux is an event, which brings him good luck!

Other formal winners of the Bordeaux World Cup qualifier will be back in the Southwest of France such as Frenchmen Michel Robert and Roger-Yves Bost, Austrian Thomas Frühmann aboard his phenomenal The Sixth Sense, as well as the Brit Michael Whitaker.

Until today, the difficult Bordeaux World Cup qualifier has never been won by a female rider and remains a masculine fortress! Will Jessica Kuerten (World #15 and 2nd of this qualifier in 2005, she just won, for the third time in the row, the WC qualifier of Leipzig) or the Australian blond Edwina Alexander (World #12) beak the ice next February? Unless Pénélope…