The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Septuagena­rian Maslin jumps at chance for GB’S Paris defence

➤ Retirement is not an option for legendary riding coach who helped French and Choong claim historic golds in Tokyo

- Modern Pentathlon By Marcus Armytage

Of all the coaches at the Tokyo Olympics, who would have predicted that the most intense scrutiny would fall upon a person responsibl­e for only a fifth of one event?

After the now-infamous meltdown of Annika Schleu, as she tensely and tearfully tried to get an ounce of co-operation out of Saint Boy in the show-jumping round of the modern pentathlon, her riding coach, Kim Raisner, was thrown out for telling her to hit the horse harder and “punching” it.

In contrast, Team GB’S riding coach for the modern pentathlon, in which Kate French and Joe Choong both brought home gold, is a legend. When I was a boy being dragged round the show-jumping circuit in the south mainly as company for my sister, I invariably had four faults in the first round and had to wait half the day for her to compete in a jump-off. Often taking part in the adult classes in the next-door ring was one person who stood out for two reasons other than her great affinity with horses; her unique and unforgetta­ble name, Jabeena Maslin, and her trademark bowler hat – which offered about as much protection as a paper napkin in the event of a fall.

When, in a semi-nod to health and safety, the British Showjumpin­g Associatio­n made chinstraps compulsory, David Broome even tried to instigate a campaign for Maslin to be allowed to keep wearing her distinctiv­e headgear.

“I was taken to Patey’s in London, but none of their hats ever fitted, so I stuck with the bowler,” Maslin, 76, recalls. “But I eventually had to give

it up because it looked so awful with a harness attached.”

Adopted at an early age by a farming family from Wantage, her older sisters’ best friend at school was a South African called Gabeena and when their new sister arrived they changed the G for a J and, thus, she became Jabeena.

“I’ve never met another,” she says. “But the comedian Harry Worth wrote to my parents asking if they minded him calling his daughter Jabeena [he actually named her Jobyna].”

She was already competing at the Royal Windsor Show, meeting the Queen aged five, and represente­d Great Britain on junior and young rider teams. The British pentathlon team first came calling in 1974 at the behest of Capt Jim Fox, one of the founding fathers of the sport here and a part of the three-man team who won gold at Montreal in 1976.

The management, believing riding a random horse drawn from a hat was more down to luck than skill, wanted him to be sent to the local riding school for lessons. He, however, insisted on Maslin and she has been involved one way or another for approachin­g 50 years.

“Back in those days they did not take the riding seriously and treated it as if it’s a lottery, but it’s not,” she explains. “A show jumper is one-onone with a horse, a pentathlet­e has got to be able to ride different horses – it’s tough, they’ve got 20 minutes and a few jumps to get acquainted. They need to have good hands and good energy. It’s like building a house; if the foundation­s aren’t right, it will fall down.”

French, 30, has been having coaching sessions with Maslin pretty much once a week since she was put on the modern pentathlon programme aged 16 and, if it really was a lottery, then French would not consistent­ly keep winning.

Maslin might be pushing for oldest coach at the Olympics but, having helped the team to an unpreceden­ted double gold, she is only just hitting her stride.

Having survived breast cancer and had her knee replaced in 2018 and spent her life “married to horses”, she still mucks out 30 some mornings and retirement is not on her agenda. “They asked me to stay on and I said if I can’t do it, I’ll tell ’em,” she says. “After all, it’s only three years.”

 ??  ?? Unbridled enthusiasm: Jabeena Maslin
Unbridled enthusiasm: Jabeena Maslin

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