Penticton Herald

You can lead a horse to Tokyo, but…

-

A horse that refused to jump dashed the hopes of gold medal contender Annika Schleu in the Olympic modern pentathlon on Friday.

Schleu was in the lead after two of the five events — swimming and fencing — when she encountere­d Saint Boy in the showjumpin­g event. One of the quirks of modern pentathlon is that riders are given randomly assigned horses for the event.

Bonding with them quickly is supposed to be part of the challenge.

Saint Boy, however, showed little interest in jumping the fences and eventually refused to move at all.

“I tried but he did not want to go. I just started crying,” she said. “I did not expect to make him go and that was the reason I was crying ... I felt the horse lacked confidence. But I tried my best.”

Schleu was criticized for repeatedly using the whip in an attempt to get Saint Boy to tackle the course. The German Olympic committee called for modern pentathlon to change its approach “so that horse and rider are protected,” adding that: “The welfare of animals and fair competitio­n conditions for the athletes must be the focus.”

The result left Schleu with zero points from the round and she eventually finished the modern pentathlon in 31st. Six of the 36 competitor­s failed to score in the showjumpin­g, including another who was allocated Saint Boy, Russia’s Gulnaz Gubaydulli­na.

The former world champion was a medal contender after finishing first in the swimming.

The gold medal went to Britain’s Kate French after she held off a challenge from Lithuanian Laura Asadauskai­te in the last event, the laser run, which combines distance running and shooting.

“Amazing. It really hasn’t sunk in yet, it’s incredible,” French said. “I’m so pleased I could do it in Japan, I’ve had such a great experience here. The Japanese have done such a great job putting (the Olympics) on despite the pandemic.”

Asadauskai­te took the silver medal, with bronze for Sarolta Kovacs of Hungary.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Annika Schleu of Germany cries during modern pentathlon at the 2020 Olympics, Friday, in Tokyo.
The Associated Press Annika Schleu of Germany cries during modern pentathlon at the 2020 Olympics, Friday, in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada