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Canadian Equestrian Team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Athletes representing Canada in international equestrian competition
Canadian Equestrian Team
The 1948 Mann Logo
Founded1840 (1840)
ColoursRed and White  

TheCanadian Equestrian Team orCET (French:Équipe équestre canadienne orEEC) collectively describes the athletes that representCanada at the highest levels of internationalequestrian competition, specifically at the World Championship,Olympic, andParalympic levels.

There many differentequestrian disciplines, with separate and overlapping international governing bodies, responsible for different international championship series. Because of this, the termCanadian Equestrian Team has been used by many equestrian sport organizations since 1840 to describe their most senior teams competing for Canada internationally in a variety of disciplines and in a variety of systems.

When greater precision is needed, a specific team is referred to by its discipline or by the event at which it competes: e.g., the athletes riding for Canada injumping at the Olympic Games are referred to variously as the "Canadian Equestrian Team", the "Canadian Jumping Team", the "Canadian Olympic Equestrian Team", and the "Canadian Olympic Jumping Team".[1]

History

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Origins

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An officer of the Queen's Light Dragoons, during the period of Capt Walter Jones

The earliest recorded Canadian Equestrian Team competed at the 1840 Montreal Steeplechase, the first internationalsteeplechase competition in North America. Captain Thomas Walter Jones[2][3] of the Queen's Light Dragoons[4][5][6]was the sole CET rider, and representedThe Canadas against riders from British regiments.[7] The event was won by Colonel Whyte of Britain's7th Hussars.[8]

Canada's first national equestrian championship, the "Dominion Equestrian Championship", was held in 1895 in Toronto, in the disciplines of steeplechase,hunt seat equitation, and jumping, with entries from both men and women.[9] Although the victors were the first group of athletes to be described as the Canadian Equestrian Team, they did not go on to compete together internationally.

Military Age

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In the first half of the twentieth century, international equestrian sport was dominated by military riders. In Canada, theCanadian Militia was recognized by the federal government as the country's first national equestrian federation, and began the process of building the first institutional CET.

The first CET that was organized as a formal multi-athlete team to compete together at an international event, was a group of jumpers, selected by the Canadian Militia for the 1909 Military Tournament at theOlympia London International Horse Show. The riders were: Lt Wood Leonard (London Field Battery); Lt Frank Proctor (Governor General's Body Guard); and Capt Douglas Young (Royal Canadian Dragoons). They finished in fourth place. This team was, however, considered a representative of the Canadian military and not of Canada itself, because it competed only against other military teams.[10]

The first group of athletes who were regarded as representatives of all Canadian equestrians (both civilian and military) and who competed together against other national equestrian teams, was selected by the Canadian Militia to compete in Prix des Nations jumping at the 1926Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto. The team was composed of Maj R S Timmis, Lt Elliott, and Capt Stuart Bate. All three riders were from the Royal Canadian Dragoons, the only Canadian cavalry regiment to retain horses after the First World War. The team won first place, defeating national teams from Belgium, Britain, France, and the United States.[11]

The team went on to compete successfully against other international opponents in New York, Boston, and London.[10]

Growth

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After the end of the Second World War, the Canadian Army began phasing out its financial support for equestrian sport. Today, theCanadian Armed Forces exercises responsibility for the CET only at theCISMMilitary World Games.[12]

Pete Knight, the CET's first World Champion

The shrinking role of the eastern-Canada based military coincided with a burst of CET activity in western-Canada.Pete Knight became the CET's first World Champion in 1932, as theRAA World ChampionBronc Rider. He would repeat the feat in 1933, 1935, and 1936, and was popularly known as the CET's "King of the Cowboys".[13]

The end of centralized control of the CET also caused a series of inter-related civilian groups to come in and out of being, as equestrian sport began a period of significant but disorganized growth across Canada.

In 1948, Major General CC Mann founded the Canadian Equestrian Society (CES), in an effort to create a single organizing focus for Canada'seventing and jumping teams. Although the CES lasted only two years, it put in place many of the factors that would continue to define the CET to the present.

The CES initiated planning for Canada's Olympic equestrian debut at the1952 Helsinki Games, it created the maple leaf and horseshoe team emblem, and it popularized the term "Canadian Equestrian Team". Critically, when Major General Mann dissolved the CES in 1950, he placed its material and intellectual assets in the public domain. This enabled others to complete the process of building Canada's first Olympic equestrian team, made the Mann logo the most widely used emblem for Canada's international equestrians across all disciplines and all organizations, and made "Canadian Equestrian Team" a unifying term over a fragmented and constantly changing horse sport system.[11]

Olympic Debut

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After the end of the CES, the Canadian Horse Shows Association (CHSA) provided bridging funding to CET athletes, until Major LJ McGuinness founded the Canadian Olympic Equestrian Team (COET) in 1951, to manage Canada's first participation in the Olympic equestrian events. The COET was largely run by the athletes themselves and their immediate supporters: Major McGuinness also captained and rode for the Canadian eventing team at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics.[14]

It was not until 1959 that a formal Canadian Olympic Equestrian Committee (COEC) corporation was created, with RH Rough serving as its first Executive Director. Since then, there has been a steady expansion in the number and the scale of professional organizations responsible for different CET disciplines.

The CET won its first Olympic medal in1956, a team bronze in eventing. It won its first Olympic gold medal in1968, a team gold in jumping.[14] It won its first team World Championship in 1970, by its team at theFEI Jumping World Championship.

Achievements

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Eric Lamaze and Hickstead at the 2008 Summer Olympics

The CET achieved its greatest success to date in 2010, when Canada was frequently described as one of the top three equestrian nations.[15]

At that time, CET athletes simultaneously held six separate World, Olympic, and Paralympic championships: the FEIReining World Championship (Duane Latimer and Hang Ten Surprise);[16] the FEITent Pegging World Championship (Akaash Maharaj and Gagan);[17] thePRCASteer Wrestling World Championship (Lee Graves);[18] the WCJAJousting World Championship (Shane Adams and Dragon);[19] theIOC Jumping Olympic Championship (Eric Lamaze andHickstead);[20] and theIPCDressage II Freestyle Paralympic Championship (Lauren Barwick and Maile).[21]

World, Olympic, and Paralympic Champions

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YearChampionshipAthletesGoverning Body
2009Steer Wrestling World ChampionshipLee Graves (various)PRCA
2008Paralympic Dressage II FreestyleLauren Barwick (Maile)IPC
2008Olympic JumpingEric Lamaze (Hickstead)IOC
2008Tent Pegging World ChampionshipAkaash Maharaj (Gagan)FEI
2006Reining World ChampionshipDuane Latimer (Hang Ten Surprise)FEI
1994Steer Wrestling World ChampionshipBlaine Pederson (various)PRCA
1986Jumping World ChampionshipGail Greenough (Mr T)FEI
1978Eventing World ChampionshipElizabeth Ashton (Sunrise), Juliet Bishop (Sumatra), Mark Ishoy (Law and Order),Cathy Wedge (Abracadabra)FEI
1970Jumping World ChampionshipJames Day (Canadian Club), Moffat Dunlap (Argyll),Jim Elder (Shoeman),Thomas Gayford (Big Dee)FEI
1968Olympic JumpingJames Day (Canadian Club),Jim Elder (The Immigrant),Thomas Gayford (Big Dee)IOC
1933Bareback Riding World ChampionshipNate Waldron (unrecorded)RAA
1932, 1933, 1935, 1936Saddle Bronc World ChampionshipPete Knight (various)RAA

CET Governing Bodies

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As of 2013 there are fifteen independent national governing bodies in Canada governing CET athletes in international competitions. The three largest areEquine Canada for the Olympic and Paralympic teams, the Canadian Professional Rodeo Association forrodeo andwestern riding teams, and Polo Canada for the Canadianpolo team.

References

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  1. ^"PADY, Walter James Obituary".The Globe and Mail. 11 August 2010. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  2. ^ROYAL CANADIAN HUSSARS - Histoire - Commandants
  3. ^McCord Museum of McGill University : The Queen's Light Dragoons, a militia cavalry unit, was raised in 1837. The Dragoons saw active service during the Rebellions of 1837-1838, and during the next decade were often called out by the government to quell election riots. The unit was disbanded in 1849. The commander of the Dragoons was Thomas Walter Jones a Montréal born doctor who had received his medical training at Edinburgh.
  4. ^ROYAL CANADIAN HUSSARS - Historical Summary: "Queen's Light Dragoon - This light cavalry squadron was raised in Montreal by Captain Thomas Walter Jones in early December 1837. Forty-five volunteers from the unit were part of General Colborne's column at Saint-Eustache on 14 December 1837. Colborne kept the unit under arms throughout the remainder of the Rebellions, and they were presented with a guidon in April 1838. From 1839 until 1849, the Dragoons were stationed on the American frontier to intercept deserters. In 1849, when riots broke out in Montreal after the passage of the Rebellion Losses Bill, a detachment of the Queen’s Light Dragoons protected Governor General Lord Elgin from injury at the hands of stone-throwing rioters."
  5. ^Le Royal Montreal Cavalry: un régiment de volontaires en 1837-1838
  6. ^"When Lord Elgin came to the city on 30 April to receive an address of confidence from the assembly, he was personally escorted to and from Government House by Captain Jones and sixty three armed troopers of the Queen's Light Dragoons" inBritish Garrison in Montreal 1832-1854 by Elinor Senior, Phd Thesis, McGill University, March 1976, page 349
  7. ^Cooper, John Irwin (1953).The History of the Montreal Hunt 1826-1953. Montreal: Montreal Hunt.
  8. ^"Steeplechase in Montreal".American Turf Register, Baltimore. December 1840.
  9. ^Schrodt, Barbara."Equestrian Sports".The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica - Dominion Institute. Archived fromthe original on July 30, 2012. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  10. ^abDebbie, Gamble-Arsenault (2004).Legendary Show Jumpers: The Incredible Stories of Great Canadian Horses. Altitude Publishing.ISBN 978-1551539805.
  11. ^abMay, Zita Barbara (1975).Canada's International Equestrians. Toronto: Burns & MacEarchern Limited.
  12. ^"International Sports".Canadian Forces. Canadian Forces Sport. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  13. ^"Pete Knight: Canada's Cowboy King".Crossfield Pete Knight Days. Crossfield Rodeo Society. Archived fromthe original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  14. ^ab"Oh Canada".Equine Canada Magazine. June–July 2012.
  15. ^"The Articles of Chivalry".Equine Canada Magazine. March 2010.
  16. ^"Duane Latimer: Canada's Reining Royalty".HorseJournals.com. Horse Community Journals Inc. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  17. ^"UNICEF Team Canada Triumphs".HorseLife Magazine. March 2008.
  18. ^"Pro Rodeo Steer Wrestling World Champions 1929-200".World of Rodeo. World of Rodeo. Archived fromthe original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  19. ^"Shane Adams".Knights of Valour. Knights of Valour. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  20. ^"Eric Lamaze".Athlete Biographies. Canadian Olympic Committee. Retrieved22 October 2013.
  21. ^Barwick, Lauren."How I Got To Be Where I Am Now".Parelli Central Blog. Parelli Natural Horsemanship. Archived fromthe original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved23 October 2013.

External links

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