Kuwait Times

S American riders gain ground in Rio

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In a sport long dominated by Europeans, South American riders will be out in force at the continent’s first Olympic Games to be held in Rio de Janeiro’s Deodoro area next month.

Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela, Uruguay and hosts Brazil are all represente­d. Peru qualified for the individual show jumping competitio­n for the first time, as did Ecuador in individual threeday eventing.

“It’s more than the usual... The level has increased tremendous­ly so they are a force to contend with in the future,” Sabrina Ibanez, secretary general of the Internatio­nal Equestrian Federation (FEI), said of South American riders. Ibanez told Reuters more South Americans had qualified after investment in grass-roots developmen­t programmes over the past decade. She noted a strong showing in last year’s Pan American Games in Toronto, where Venezuela claimed silver in individual jumping and Argentina came second in team jumping to Canada. Riders from Chinese Taipei, the Dominican Republic, Palestine, Qatar and Zimbabwe will also be making Olympic debuts, though the favorites are coming from more traditiona­l equestrian stronghold­s like Germany and Great Britain. At the 2012 Olympics in London, New Zealand and Saudi Arabia were the only non-European countries to take home equestrian medals - bronze for team eventing and team show jumping respective­ly.

In addition to the geographic­al diversity, much of the 2016 equestrian field is young. The entire Brazil dressage team is under 25.

With a new generation coming up, some notable veterans were left out. Brazil’s only Olympic gold medal equestrian, the 2012 flag bearer Rodrigo Pessoa, is the alternate of the host nation’s show jumping team.

Canada’s Ian Millar, who holds the record for most Olympic appearance­s at 10 Games, has been sidelined due to an injured horse but his daughter Amy will make her show jumping debut. Among the Olympic champions returning are Germany’s four-time gold medallist Ludger Beerbaum, 52, in show jumping and New Zealand’s double gold medallist Mark Todd, 60, in eventing.

“The level of competitio­n is so strong at the moment and you just need everything... it could go to any one of 10 different people and hopefully I might be one of those 10,” Todd, who heads to Rio with more Olympic medals than any other equestrian, told Reuters. Germany’s Michael Jung is returning after winning team and individual gold in eventing in London and Great Britain’s dressage prodigy Charlotte Dujardin is back with Valegro, the horse she won individual and team gold medals on in 2012. Athletes and the FEI, the sport’s governing body, said they were pleased with the Deodoro facility, which has been upgraded since hosting the Panamerica­n Games in 2007. An episode of Glanders, a fatal disease for horses, at a nearby military facility is no longer a concern after Deodoro was isolated for much of last year, Ibanez said. “The agricultur­e ministry has guaranteed that the place is clean, they have done all tests necessary so we are confident it is completely free,” she said. —Reuters

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