America's
Eventing Bosses Are Proposing Revolutionary New Rules to Make The Sport Less Dangerous.
The
Following Article Appeared in the May 8 Issue of Horse & Hound
Charlotte
White and Nancy Jaffer Report
Proposals
to make American eventing safer have been met with concern from the big names
in British and world eventing.
The United States Equestrian Federation (USEF) sent an open letter to members
suggesting five new rules after two horses died and rider Laine Ashker was critically
injured at Rolex Kentucky three-day event (report May 1).
The
most contentious of the rules said that riders and horses should be suspended
from competition for up to six months and lose their qualification at the level
in which they were competing following a rotational fall.
It
has since been amended to say that ground juries should have the option of banning
riders for up to three months following a horse fall if they believe it was caused
by dangerous riding.
Horse and rider would be eliminated from the competition
after a rider fall and suspended for a month for a horse fall at a jump.
USEF
president David O'Connorsaid," The Suspension is meant to be a deterrent,
to reduce dangerous riding.
"There
are two extremes - the professsional riders who make our courses look easy, beautiful
and fun to watch and then you get the less competant guys doing it by aggression
or being too slow. They are affecting the sport."
USEF riders' rep
Bobby Costello said riders support the rules in principle, but want a review system.
New
Zealand rider and International Equestrian Federstion (FEI) eventing safety sub-committee
member Andrew Nicholson feels the proposal could increase the number of falls.
"If
riders are concerned about getting suspended they are going to ride cautiously.
You should approach the cross-country positively not dangerously, otherwise you
will have accidents," he said.
British
Eventing director of sport Mike Ethrington-Smith, who designed the Kentucky course,
said he sympathised with the Americans' position, but felt the rules were "over
the top".
Referring
to red flags brought in by the FEI last year that allow ground juries to bring
dangerous riders to a halt (news, 30 August 2007), he said, "Rather than
banning riders we need to get officials to use the existing rules to stop riders
on course if they are riding dangerously. I think the Americans need to take a
deep breath before implementing and new rules."
But he defended a
nation's right to make rules contrary to those of the FEI.
Mark Phillips,
who coaches the US Eventing team, believes the USEF should think more about why
accidents happen as opposed to what to do afterwards.
He
added,"A country should be careful about going off on a tangent before the
equestrian community worldwide has properly considered the implications of a proposed
rule change."
The suggested rules will be discussed further in a phone
conference by the US Eventing Authority and USEF and could be enacted on an emergency
basis.
Meanwhile, a safety summit is scheduled in Lexington next month
to harvest ideas from the eventing community.
The FEI did not wish to comment
on the proposed rule changes.
Please
see your Editor's comments of May fourth which agree totally with both Michael
Ethrington-Smith and Mark Phillips, if somewhat more out spokenly!