| USET
Guerrand-Hermes Trophy Awarded To Buck Davidson
The
USET awarded Bruce O. (Buck) Davidson, Jr. of Unionville,
PA the USET Lionel Guerrand-Hermes Trophy which is presented
each year to a Young Rider who exemplifies the USET's ideals
of sportsmanship and horsemanship.
The
USET's Lionel Guerrand-Hermes Trophy was presented to the
Team in 1983 by Patrick Guerrand-Hermes, head of the equestrian
division of the Paris-based saddlery and fashion company,
in memory of his son Lionel, a talented young rider who was
killed in an automobile accident in 1981 at the age of 18.
Davidson,
son of five-time U.S. Olympic veteran Bruce Davidson, also
won the Team's Markham Trophy three times for being the highest
placing Young Rider in a USET Eventing Championship. He won
at both the Spring and Fall Championships in 1996 and again
at the Spring Championship in 1997. He won the individual
Bronze Medal and was a member of the Silver Medal team at
the 1997 North American Young Riders Championships. In 1996,
Davidson was named the U.S. Combined Training Association's
Young Rider of the Year.
To
date in his young career, Davidson has competed in 183 eventing
competitions on 39 horses. He has competed once at the Radnor
One Star event and four times at the Two Star. He also competed
once at the Essex One Star and twice at the Essex Two Star,
three times at the Fair Hill Three Star and twice at the Kentucky
Three Star. He also competed three times at the Bromont Event
in Canada.
Davidson
was unable to be present at the USET Annual Meeting to receive
his award as he was training in Ireland. The trophy and a
Hermes saddle will be presented to him at the Rolex Kentucky
Event in April.
Previous
winners of the Lionel Guerrand-Hermes Memorial Trophy are:
Alison Firestone (1997); Jonathan Elliot (1996); Megan Johnstone
(1995); Gabriella Salick (1994); Mark Combs (1993); Abigail
Lufkin (1992); McLain Ward (1991); Kim Keenan (1990); Molly
Bliss (1989); Chris Kappler (1988); Susanne Owen (1987); Greg
Best (1986); Holly Mitten (1985); Jeffrey Welles (1984); and
Mark Leone (1983).
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