“I think Designer must have been having a little chat with [my other horse] Seigneur Medicott, who usually does the better test, as he felt great in there,” said an elated Hoy. “I’ve developed a special programme for him in the warm-up because he can get a bit tense. Every time I feel him tighten, I go into rising trot and that helps.”
Hoy reported that she had been working hard with her trainer, Sebastian Langehanenberg, as her 12-year-old Westphalian gelding by Dali X “is not built for dressage”. He had suggested changing from a snaffle bit to a double bridle because having two bits in his mouth seemed to settle the horse.
“I’m feeling very motivated after Rio [where she was training a Russian rider]. Burghley holds a special place in my heart and, although it won’t be a dressage competition, I know Designer can do it.”
Levett, also 53, has been based on Britain for many years and has been getting closer to CCI4* success all the time. He re-routed Improvise to Luhmühlen, where the horse finished 13th, after an early retirement at Badminton in May.
Paul Sims, 31, a relative newcomer to this level, finds himself the best British rider at this stage, having scored his best CCI4* dressage result on the white-faced Glengarnock to lie third on 46.6. This is their third Burghley, having finished 25th last year. Sims admitted to feeling quite confident:
“He’s a reliable cross-country horse, as long as I don’t make any mistakes.”
Burghley first-timer Elisa Wallace’s (USA) campaign got off to a good start when she scored 46.8 on the American Thoroughbred Simply Priceless for fourth place at this stage. “He can be quite tense so it’s been a huge journey to get him to be expressive,” she said.
“When I looked up at the scoreboard and saw the score, I couldn’t believe it.”
Hoy’s main challengers tomorrow look to be New Zealanders Sir Mark Todd (NZB Campino) and Andrew Nicholson (Nereo), who have 10 Burghley wins between them, plus the Dressage leader in Rio, Christopher Burton (AUS) on Nobilis 18 and his team mate Sam Griffiths on the veteran Happy Times.
by Kate Green
Follow the action on www.burghley.tv and with live results on www.burghley-horse.co.uk
Results after first day of Dressage
1 Bettina Hoy/Designer 10 (GER) 34.5
2 Bill Levett/Improvise (AUS) 42.5
3 Paul Sims/Glengarnock (GBR) 46.6
4 Elisa Wallace/Simply Priceless (USA) 46.8
5 Ros Canter/Allstar B (GBR) 47.0
6 Jonelle Price/Classic Moet (NZL) 48.5
=7 Sarah Bullimore/Reve de Rouet (GBR) 49.1
=7 Emily Gilruth/Topwood Beau (GBR) 49.1
9 Andrew Hoy/Rutherglen (AUS) 49.4
10 Tim Price/Bango (NZL) 49.5
FEI Classics™ 2015/2016 Leaderboard (after 5 of 6 events)
1 Michael Jung (GER) 42 points
2 Tim Price (NZL) 18
3 Clarke Johnstone (NZL) 16
4 Astier Nicolas (FRA) 15
5 Shane Rose (AUS) 15
6 Andreas Dibowski (GER) 15
7 Sir Mark Todd (NZL) 13
8 Andreas Ostholt (GER) 12
9 Lauren Kieffer (USA) 12
10 Maxime Livio (FRA) 12