| Dorothy
Crowell Wins USET Four Star Championship at Rolex Kentucky Three-Day
Event Presented by Bayer
Lexington, KY-April 30, 1998
Hometown
favorite Dorothy Trapp Crowell of Lexington, KY and her horse,
Molokai, won the inaugural United States Equestrian Team Four
Star Championship as the highest placed American at the Rolex
Kentucky Three-Day Event Presented by Bayer.
Crowell
jumped from eleventh place after the dressage phase to second
place after the only penalty-free cross-country ride of the
competition. She entered the final show jumping phase tied
for second with 1996 Olympic team Gold Medalist Phillip Dutton
of Australia, trailing five-time U.S. Olympian and fifteen-time
USCTA Rider of the Year, Bruce Davidson of Unionville, PA.
Davidson entered Sunday's concluding stadium jumping phase
in first place on Squelch with a score of 55.6. However, 15
jumping penalties dropped him to seventh place, just behind
his son Buck who finished sixth on Trans Amaflirt who scored
68.2.
Eventual
winner of the four-star event Nick Larkin of New Zealand and
his mount, Red, jumped into the final show jumping phase in
fourth place with 59.8 points. Their clear show jumping round
ensured them of a victory lap. Crowell's Molokai had one rail
down for five penalties and a final score of 61.4 to award
her the USET Championship and second place overall in the
event. Finishing third were Dutton and his horse True Blue
Girdwood with a score of 61.4. Although he held the same score
as Crowell, her penalty-free ride in Saturday's cross-country
phase gave her the edge. Olympian Ian Stark of Great Britain
was fourth on Saucy Brown with 61.6 penalties.
USET
veteran and 1996 Olympic team Silver Medalist Karen O'Connor
of The Plains, VA was fifth with her horse, Biko, with 66.2
penalty points. O'Connor accomplished this feat despite a
fall in the cross-country phase of the event which left her
with a cracked sternum, broken ribs, and a bruised thigh.
Crowell announced
during the event that this would be Molokai's last international
competition prior to entering semi-retirement. "I wanted
to prove to everyone what a great horse he is one last time,"
Crowell explained. "I knew if I didn't mess up that Mo
could win it." Molokai is now fifteen years old and Crowell
intends to "let him make his own decisions about where
he wants to live and what he wants to do. He has earned it!"
The
long journey to Crowell's capturing the USET Championship
began in 1978, the year of the historic Three-Day World Championships
at the Kentucky Horse Park. "It all began here for me
in 1978. I came as a spectator and just fell in love with
the sport. After such a long history of riding at this park,
it means a lot for Mo and me to win the USET Championship
in my hometown." In the three-star competition, Tiffani
Loudon, 22, of Columbia, SC won the Rolex/USET Three-Day Event
Spring Championship, Presented by Bayer, on her horse Makabi
with a score of 63.4. Loudon had one rail down in the show
jumping phase of the competition to narrowly edge 1991 Pan
American Games Bronze Medalist Abigail Lufkin of Middleburg,
VA and Jacob Two Two who finished second with 64.0.
Beale
Morris of Middleburg, VA and Pathfinder led going into the
final show jumping phase, but had three rails down to finish
in third with 70.0. The USET's Markham Trophy for the highest
placed Young Rider was awarded to Jodi Platto of Middleburg,
VA and her horse Unkown Legend. Platto won the Markham Trophy
last fall at the Cosequin/USET Fall Championship at the Fair
Hill International.
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