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Saturday, April 20, 2024

Germany's Daniel Deusser tops a winning streak with a victory in the $500,000 Grand Prix at WEF

WELLINGTON, Fla.--Topping off an astonishing winning streak at the Winter Equestrian Festival, world number three rider Daniel Deusser of Germany won the $500,000 Rolex Grand Prix CSI5* with Scuderia 1918 Tobago Z.

Daniel Deusser on Scuderia SportfotDaniel Deusser on Scuderia (Photo by Sportfot)Forty of the best riders in the world took to the grass Derby Field at Equestrian Village on a picture-perfect day for the featured class of the circuit with eight clean to qualify for the jump-off.

As the last to go in the jump-off, Deusser had the advantage of knowing the time to beat and used it to his advantage, coming in to win by one tenth of a second in 36.40 seconds.

This was Deusser’s seventh win at WEF, his fourth CSI5* class victory, and his third grand prix win, having captured the $214,000 Grand Prix CSI4* with Killer Queen VDM and the $214,000 Grand Prix CSIO4* with Scuderia 1918 Tobago Z.

“Tobago has been my best horse for years,” said Deusser of the 13-year-old Zangersheide stallion by Tangelo Vd Zuuthoeve x Mr Blue. “He has won many grand prix classes, and also he really likes big grass arenas. He was in very, very good shape already the last couple of weeks here. That doesn’t necessarily mean he wins today, but he kept his form and he performed great. It was a little bit in my favor today that I had to start second to last in the first round and last in the jump-off. I knew exactly what I had to do. And in the end, I have to say once it works out and the horse jumps how he jumps, it was not too difficult.”

 

AFTER AN injury in late 2019, “Toby” only came back to competition at the end of the year in 2020.

Daniel Bluman on Gemma SportfotDaniel Bluman on Gemma (Photo by Sportfot)“He actually came back better than before,” said Deusser. “These couple of weeks here at WEF have given the horse a lot of strength again. Hopefully he stays exactly in that form, and I’m really looking forward to a great rest of season.”

Deusser echoed the feelings of his fellow competitors about having the opportunity to compete during challenging times.

“We are in a very lucky position that we are able to ride here,” he said. “Maybe for me it’s a little bit more, also for Harrie (Smolders). Coming from Europe, we know in the moment with the current situation of COVID how difficult it is to organize events, how difficult it is for the sport, and also how difficult life in Europe is in the moment. A big congratulations and also a big thank you to the organization and also to the sponsor that we are allowed to ride here.”

The first double clear in the jump-off came from Harrie Smolders of the Netherlands on Bingo du Parc. who set the time to beat at 36.74 seconds, which would hold up for third place.

A third-place finish was an impressive performance for Bingo du Parc, showing in only his third five-star competition with Smolders.

“Today he did a fantastic job,” said Smolders. “It was a serious test for him, a big class. I think we have seen several horse-and-rider combinations that we will see back in the Tokyo Olympics. I still feel some places where I can improve, so hopefully in the future I can come close or beat the gentleman (Deusser) in front of me. But I am very pleased with the performance of my horse and I am looking forward to the future.”

Coming in just two-tenths of a second faster, Daniel Bluman of Israel lowered the leading time to 36.54 seconds riding Gemma W, whose clean round would land him in second place.

“I think there were definitely a couple places I could have been faster in the jump-off, but realistically I know that whatever I did, McLain Ward and Daniel Deusser were going to follow just as fast, or faster,” said Bluman. “My strategy was to put a good time, do the right strides that I wanted to do and be smooth, and then put enough pressure that they have to take risks.

“I’m not going to say that I’m surprised that Daniel beat me,” he said. “He is a little bit of a pain for us when he shows up, because he is just on a different level. You have to say it how it is; we have to keep working to be able to ride the way that he rides. I am extremely happy with the result anyway. I thought Gemma was amazing.”

Bluman has been riding Gemma W for five years and but recognized her talent from the start.

“This is the first year jumping the five-star level,” he said. “I always believed in her from the beginning to be a very, very special horse, so I honestly wasn’t surprised to see her perform the way she did. She has performed this whole season and every step that she has done since a young horse has been like this. We have been patient, and it has paid off.”

“I think the field was great, and I thought having the Rolex Grand Prix here was a great decision by the management team,” said Bluman, who had previously won the $500,000 Grand Prix in 2012.. “I’m looking forward to being able to win this class in the next 10 years at least one time.”

With the fastest time of the jump-off in 34.94 seconds, two-time Olympic team gold medalist McLain Ward was by far the speediest on Contagious, but a costly rail in the ‘b’ element of the Rolex double combination dropped him to fourth place.

Returning first in the jump-off was Santiago Lambre of Mexico on Chacco Blue II, who finished with one rail for sixth place.

An eight-fault performance followed from Yuri Mansur of Brazil) on Vitiki, which ended in eighth place.

Swiss rider Beat Mändli on Dsarie had eight faults in the second round as well to finish in seventh place.

It was a heart-breaking four-fault effort for Jessica Springsteen of Colts Neck, N.J., who challenged for the lead but had a rail at the final Rolex oxer, ending up in fifth place with Don Juan van de Donkhoeve.



 

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