Broz’s immediate post-round thoughts were, “I am so thankful for Tink. She is an amazing horse and I am very lucky to have her. My coach always does a great job. I am just thankful.”

She had natural footspeed on her side, but throughout the entire round she did exactly what she had to do to be as fast as possible. “I just go out there and do my best,” she said of her speed-round strategy. “The plan was to be really tight in the corners. There were lots of rollbacks. I know by the end of it she’s usually pretty naturally fast and has a big stride, so I just let her go.”

Swail and Casturano, a newer but promising mount for the Irishman, took second, while Kyle King claimed third with Cerolino, owned by Strasburg Morin Inc.

Speed has always been the name of the game for Broz, who took to the jumpers on a small mare early in her career.

“I have always loved speed,” she said. “I was about 12 or 13 when I got my first jumper. I started in the hunters and then equitation. My first jumper was quite small and fast. I think I always knew that jumpers would be something I wanted to do. I told my coach I wanted a jumper and got hooked.”

The partnership with Tinkerbell wasn’t always perfect, but lately it’s been nothing but smooth. “When I first got her I had absolutely no control,” she laughed. “She was wild and my first round on her she was guns-a-blazing. It took some time, and finding the right bit was helpful. She has lots of heart and loves speed.

“She’s naturally very fast and a total dragon in the ring, but she’s the sweetest horse in the barn. She loves her naps. She’s on a [nap] schedule every morning,” Broz said of Tinkerbell.

With a start in the equitation, Broz credits that experience for preparing her to thrive under pressure. Earning countless wins at the top level, Broz is working her way up the DIHP open jumper rider leaderboard, and she took her first CSI3* Grand Prix win last week.

“I think the equitation really helped me with pressure and to always remember to have fun,” she remarked of her strategy for performing well despite the pressure. “That’s the mindset I stay in. Obviously there is more pressure in certain competitions and fun isn’t the first you think of, but you have to remember that you’re here for the horses and because you love it. You trust the plan you make with your coach and the training you do at home.”