There were huge celebrations when Team Mexico broke a 26-year Nations Cup drought to win the third leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping 2016 series on home ground at the Coapexpan Equestrian Club in Xalapa, Mexico on Friday, April 29th, 2016. In a very close contest, and with a gutsy and impressive performance that included two double-clear rounds, the host nation pinned USA and Canada into joint-runner-up spot and now holds a 10-point lead going into the third and last qualifier of the North and Central America and Caribbean League in five weeks time. With only three teams in action it was a short and snappy affair, but once again the much-loved Nations Cup format produced spell-binding sport. As the winners at the opening leg in Ocala (USA) two months ago, it was Team USA that started as firm favourites. But the home side just proved too good for the rest, with all four riders giving everything they had to post the first Nations Cup victory for their country since the Mexican flag was last raised in triumph in New York (USA) back in 1990. The clincher was a last-to-go double-clear from Antonio Chedraui and La Bamba, an 11-year-old mare named after the legendary folk song that originated in the region of Veracruz. After today’s magical result, La Bamba is definitely in the air in Xalapa tonight. Full of Praise Brazilian course designer, Guilherme Nogueira Jorge, was full of praise for the spectacular venue with its beautiful grass arena. “It is a dream come true to come to Xalapa. Everything here is fantastic; the jumps, the atmosphere, the whole lot,” he said. His 12-fence track made good use of the open ring, and horses and riders coped brilliantly with humid conditions and 32 degrees celsius heat. The penultimate Longines triple combination might have been expected to present the greatest test on the track, but faults were spread evenly across the course, and Canada and Mexico were tied for the lead at the halfway stage with just four faults apiece, while Team USA was already lagging behind with eight on the board. As round two began, the Americans continued to look vulnerable when pathfinders Jonathan McCrea and Aristoteles V once again left a pole on the floor. But Ali Wolff and her spectacular stallion, Quirie, steadied the ship with a clear before Jonathan’s wife, Christine McCrea who had the highest score of the first round when posting 12 with Dynamo, reduced that to just four the second time out. Meanwhile the Canadians began to lose their grip with a mistake from Yann Candele and Showgirl at the last element of the Longines triple combination, a five-fault tally for Tiffany Foster who added a time fault after hitting the 1.60m vertical at fence five with Southwind VDL, and four more from Elizabeth Gingras whose mare, Floreen SFN, clipped the oxer at fence 10. A Real Chance In contrast, a second pathfinding clear from Nicolas Pizarro and Temascaltepec put Mexico in with a real chance, although it was impossible to know how things would play out when second-line rider Juan Jose Zandejas Salgado and the hard-pulling grey, Tino la Chapelle, hit the second fence and then Federico Fernandez and Guru were the only combination throughout the day to put a foot in the 3.8m-wide open water. As the last-line riders all took their second turn, USA’s Richard Spooner posted another fantastic clear from the handsome 11-year-old, Big Red, to leave his country with a final tally of 12, and when 2008 Olympic gold medallist, Eric Lamaze, did likewise with Coco Bongo then Canada finished on level pegging. So it all came down to the last man into the ring, and he had pressure coming from every direction. Antonio Cedraui’s father created the Coapexpan complex, so the 49-year-old athlete was competing on his home turf but with a huge weight of expectation on his shoulders. He could afford a few time faults, but a fence down and it would be a three-way tie for first place. Nervous “I was nervous going in there!” he admitted afterwards, but all that was evident to onlookers as he steered his lovely mare home was pure grit and determination. The arena fell silent as he negotiated the course, but there was an ear-splitting roar of delight when he broke the beam to record the historic victory. Quite an achievement for a man who calls himself an amateur, despite a career record that includes two Olympic Games, two World Equestrian Games and five Pan-American Games along with team silver from the Pan Americans in Santo Domingo (DOM) back in 2003.
“We really pulled together as a team, and we are so proud to fly the flag of Mexico!”
There were huge celebrations when Team Mexico broke a 26-year Nations Cup drought to win the third leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping 2016 series on home ground at the Coapexpan Equestrian Club in Xalapa, Mexico on Friday, April 29th, 2016. In a very close contest, and with a gutsy and impressive performance that included two double-clear rounds, the host nation pinned USA and Canada into joint-runner-up spot and now holds a 10-point lead going into the third and last qualifier of the North and Central America and Caribbean League in five weeks time. With only three teams in action it was a short and snappy affair, but once again the much-loved Nations Cup format produced spell-binding sport. As the winners at the opening leg in Ocala (USA) two months ago, it was Team USA that started as firm favourites. But the home side just proved too good for the rest, with all four riders giving everything they had to post the first Nations Cup victory for their country since the Mexican flag was last raised in triumph in New York (USA) back in 1990. The clincher was a last-to-go double-clear from Antonio Chedraui and La Bamba, an 11-year-old mare named after the legendary folk song that originated in the region of Veracruz. After today’s magical result, La Bamba is definitely in the air in Xalapa tonight. Full of Praise Brazilian course designer, Guilherme Nogueira Jorge, was full of praise for the spectacular venue with its beautiful grass arena. “It is a dream come true to come to Xalapa. Everything here is fantastic; the jumps, the atmosphere, the whole lot,” he said. His 12-fence track made good use of the open ring, and horses and riders coped brilliantly with humid conditions and 32 degrees celsius heat. The penultimate Longines triple combination might have been expected to present the greatest test on the track, but faults were spread evenly across the course, and Canada and Mexico were tied for the lead at the halfway stage with just four faults apiece, while Team USA was already lagging behind with eight on the board. As round two began, the Americans continued to look vulnerable when pathfinders Jonathan McCrea and Aristoteles V once again left a pole on the floor. But Ali Wolff and her spectacular stallion, Quirie, steadied the ship with a clear before Jonathan’s wife, Christine McCrea who had the highest score of the first round when posting 12 with Dynamo, reduced that to just four the second time out. Meanwhile the Canadians began to lose their grip with a mistake from Yann Candele and Showgirl at the last element of the Longines triple combination, a five-fault tally for Tiffany Foster who added a time fault after hitting the 1.60m vertical at fence five with Southwind VDL, and four more from Elizabeth Gingras whose mare, Floreen SFN, clipped the oxer at fence 10. A Real Chance In contrast, a second pathfinding clear from Nicolas Pizarro and Temascaltepec put Mexico in with a real chance, although it was impossible to know how things would play out when second-line rider Juan Jose Zandejas Salgado and the hard-pulling grey, Tino la Chapelle, hit the second fence and then Federico Fernandez and Guru were the only combination throughout the day to put a foot in the 3.8m-wide open water. As the last-line riders all took their second turn, USA’s Richard Spooner posted another fantastic clear from the handsome 11-year-old, Big Red, to leave his country with a final tally of 12, and when 2008 Olympic gold medallist, Eric Lamaze, did likewise with Coco Bongo then Canada finished on level pegging. So it all came down to the last man into the ring, and he had pressure coming from every direction. Antonio Cedraui’s father created the Coapexpan complex, so the 49-year-old athlete was competing on his home turf but with a huge weight of expectation on his shoulders. He could afford a few time faults, but a fence down and it would be a three-way tie for first place. Nervous “I was nervous going in there!” he admitted afterwards, but all that was evident to onlookers as he steered his lovely mare home was pure grit and determination. The arena fell silent as he negotiated the course, but there was an ear-splitting roar of delight when he broke the beam to record the historic victory. Quite an achievement for a man who calls himself an amateur, despite a career record that includes two Olympic Games, two World Equestrian Games and five Pan-American Games along with team silver from the Pan Americans in Santo Domingo (DOM) back in 2003.
“We really pulled together as a team, and we are so proud to fly the flag of Mexico!”