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Equestrian events at the 1928 Summer Olympics

Coordinates:52°10′48″N5°13′47″E / 52.1801°N 5.2296°E /52.1801; 5.2296
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromEquestrian at the 1928 Summer Olympics)
Equestrian at the Olympics

Equestrian
at the Games of the IX Olympiad
TheNetherlands won theteam eventing gold medal and are saluting the audience
VenueHilversum
Olympic Stadium
Dates8–12 August 1928
No. of events6
Competitors113 from 20 nations
← 1924
1932 →
Equestrian events at the
1928 Summer Olympics
Dressageindividualteam
Eventingindividualteam
Jumpingindividualteam
Equestrian at the 1928 Summer Olympics on a stamp of the Netherlands

Theequestrian events at the1928 Summer Olympics includeddressage,eventing, andshow jumping. All three disciplines had both individual and team competitions. The competitions were held from 8 to 12 August 1928. Teams were now fielded by three riders, rather than four, the purpose being to reduce pressure on national federations to find that many riders in order to compete for team medals. Riders had to be considered amateurs, which was defined as either an actively serving professional officer, or as a gentleman rider as defined by the rules of that rider's national governing body. A total of 113 entries were present from 20 nations: Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the USA. This was the first appearance forHungary,Japan andArgentina in equestrian events at an Olympics. Additionally, after being shut out from two Olympic competitions,Germany also returned to the Games to win a few medals in the equestrian events.[1]

Horses were stabled inHilversum, a town 30 kilometres (19 mi) fromAmsterdam and the location of the majority of the equestrian competition, with two jumping competitions taking place in theOlympic Stadium in Amsterdam. The equestrian competitions produced an income of over 150,000guilders, out of a total of 1,435,000 guilders income for the entire Games.

Disciplines

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Jumping

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46 riders competed from 16 different nations, including Olympic medalist (1920 gold and 1924 silver) Tommaso Lequio di Assaba on Trebecco, who finished 24th, and Alphonse Gemuseus, the 1924 Games gold medalists, finishing 8th on Lucette after garnering 2 time penalties. Seven riders went clear over the 720 meter, 16-obstacle course, whose obstacles ranged in height from 1.25–1.40 meters, and was considered too easy for an Olympic Games. Three riders went clear in the jump-off, so a second jump-off was held with the obstacles raised to 1.60 meters in height. Gold was given to the one clear round, Capt. Ventura of Czechoslovakia on Eliot. The other two riders had one rail apiece over the second jump-off course, but Pierre Bertran de Balanda's mount Papillon hit the rail with his hind legs garnering only 2 penalties, while Major Kuhn's mount Pepita hit a fence with her front legs, counting as 4 penalty points and thus finishing in bronze-medal position.

Dressage

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29 riders from 12 countries competed in the dressage competition. The test was the same as for the 1924 Olympics, but the 10-minute limit was now raised to 13 minutes, giving the riders much needed time to complete it without losing points for going over the time allowed. Judging created controversy, both due to nationalistic tendencies by judges and the fact that individual judges had differing opinions on what was correct. While there was discussion on how to make it more fair—including dropping the lowest and highest scores, only having one judge from a neutral county, and removing 20 points from each score given to a countryman of each judge—no changes were made until after the judging scandal at the 1956 Games.

Eventing

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46 riders from 17 nations competed in the eventing competition. Dressage saw the time allowed for the test raised from 10 to 11 minutes, and was now counting for 300 total points rather than 200 seen in the last Games, making it have a huge impact on final placings, since the time allowed for all phases of the Endurance was generous. There were 8 eliminations on endurance day (resulting in only 3 of the teams finishing the competition) primarily due to missing flags which were difficult to follow over the flat land. The point system for the Endurance day was kept the same (Phases A, C, and E were each worth 200 points, steeplechase was worth 500 points, and cross-country 700 points), while the show jumping phase was reduced in importance from 400 to 300 points total. The speed on steeplechase was raised from 550 up to 600 meters a minute.

Medal summary

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GamesGoldSilverBronze
Individual dressage
details
 Carl Freiherr von Langen
onDraufgänger (GER)
 Charles Marion
onLinon (FRA)
 Ragnar Olson
onGünstling (SWE)
Team dressage
details
 Germany (GER)
Carl Freiherr von Langen
onDraufgänger
Hermann Linkenbach
onGimpel
Eugen Freiherr von Lotzbeck
onCaracalla
 Sweden (SWE)
Ragnar Olson
onGünstling
Janne Lundblad
onBlackmar
Carl Bonde
onIngo
 Netherlands (NED)
Jan van Reede
onHans
Pierre Versteegh
onHis Excellence
Gerard le Heux
onValérine
Individual eventing
details
 Charles Pahud de Mortanges
onMarcroix (NED)
 Gerard de Kruijff
onVa-T'en (NED)
 Bruno Neumann
onIlja (GER)
Team eventing
details
 Netherlands (NED)
Charles Pahud de Mortanges
onMarcroix
Gerard de Kruijff
onVa-T'en
Adolph van der Voort van Zijp
onSilver Piece
 Norway (NOR)
Bjart Ording
onAnd Over
Arthur Qvist
onHidalgo
Eugen Johansen
onBaby
 Poland (POL)
Michał Antoniewicz
onMoja Miła
Józef Trenkwald
onLwi Pazur
Karol Rómmel
onDoneuse
Individual jumping
details
 František Ventura
andEliot (TCH)
 Pierre Bertran de Balanda
andPapillon (FRA)
 Charles-Gustave Kuhn
andPepita (SUI)
Team jumping
details
 Spain (ESP)
Count of Casa Loja
andZapatazo
Marquess of Trujillos
andZalamero
Julio García Fernández de los Ríos
andRevistade
 Poland (POL)
Kazimierz Gzowski
andMylord
Kazimierz Szosland
andAli
Michał Antoniewicz
andReadgleadt
 Sweden (SWE)
Karl Hansen
andGerold
Carl Björnstjerna
andKornett
Ernst Hallberg
andLoke

Participating nations

[edit]

A total of 113 horse riders from 20 nations competed at the Amsterdam Games:

Medal table

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Netherlands (NED)2114
2 Germany (GER)2013
3 Czechoslovakia (TCH)1001
 Spain (ESP)1001
5 France (FRA)0202
6 Sweden (SWE)0123
7 Poland (POL)0112
8 Norway (NOR)0101
9 Switzerland (SUI)0011
Totals (9 entries)66618

Officials

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Appointment of officials was as follows:[2]

Dressage
  • Netherlands Col. H. van Reigersberg (Ground Jury President)
  • Sweden N. Bonde (Ground Jury Member)
  • Belgium Baron Gaston de Trannoy (Ground Jury Member)
  • Germany Max von Holzing Berstett (Ground Jury Member)
  • France Col. E. Wattel (Ground Jury Member)
Jumping
  • Netherlands Jhr. Karel F. Quarles van Ufford (Ground Jury President)
  • Spain B. Sanchez Mesas (Ground Jury Member)
  • Czechoslovakia J. Eminger (Ground Jury Member)
  • PolandWladyslaw Anders (Ground Jury Member)
  • Italy Francesco Amalfi (Ground Jury Member)
Eventing
  • Netherlands Jhr. Karel F. Quarles van Ufford (Ground Jury President)
  • France Col. P.E. Haentjens (Ground Jury Member)
  • Hungary Gabor Vitez Ujfalussy (Ground Jury Member)
  • Switzerland Col. Guillaume Favre (Ground Jury Member)
  • Norway Capt. Harald Houge (Ground Jury Member)

References

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  1. ^Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen;Mallon, Bill; et al."Equestrianism at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games".Olympics at Sports-Reference.com.Sports Reference LLC. Archived fromthe original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved15 April 2020.
  2. ^"Olympic Games 1928 | FEI.org".

External links

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52°10′48″N5°13′47″E / 52.1801°N 5.2296°E /52.1801; 5.2296

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