Darren
Chiacchia and Windfall II Victorious at Rolex
Kentucky Three Day Event
by
Jennifer Ward, Photo by Charles Mann
Lexington,
Kentucky - Darren Chiacchia of Buffalo, NY,
emerged victorious at the Rolex Kentucky Three
Day Event held April 21-25 in Lexington, Kentucky.
Competing
in the Bayer Modified Four Star division
open only to horse/rider combinations already
qualified for the 2004 Olympic Games in
Athens, Greece, Chiacchia earned the victory
with a total score of 45.2 penalty points
and ensured his position as one of the United
States Equestrian Team's top hopefuls for
the Olympics.
"The horse has an amazing record, he's
been prepared well and I think I've prepared
myself well," noted Chiacchia of his
chances of being selected to the Olympic
Team with Windfall II, an 11-year-old black
Trakehner stallion owned by Timothy Holekamp.
"I think that Windfall has answered
all of the questions, but it still up to
the Selectors. We've positioned ourselves
well, and Windfall has proven that he is
a horse that you can count on for a world-class
performance in all three phases."
Similar
to a triathlon, three day eventing is an
equestrian sport where horse/rider combinations
compete in three distinct phases - dressage,
cross-country and stadium jumping, held
over three consecutive days. The reigning
2003 Pan American Champions, Chiacchia and
Windfall II opened the competition with
a score of 40 penalty points in the dressage
phase. Over Saturday's challenging cross-country
phase, Chiacchia added just 1.2 time penalties
to an otherwise perfect performance when,
by three seconds, he exceeded the prescribed
ten-minute time allowed to complete the
test set by 2000 Olympic course designer,
Michael Etherington-Smith of Great Britain.
"I
am just thrilled with this horse,"
praised Chiacchia of the stallion that was
imported from Germany in 2000. "People
doubted whether he could jump around a course
like this, but I never doubted him for a
minute! He just ate it up! I am very proud
of my horse."
In Sunday's
final phase, stadium jumping, heavy rain
did not damper Chiacchia's competitive spirit
as he guided Windfall II around a technical
course, leaving every rail in its place
until the final fence fell, adding four
penalties to his score. With a final three-day
total of 45.2 penalty points, Chiacchia
clinched the win ahead of two-time Olympic
gold medallist for Australia, Phillip Dutton,
who incurred 49.6 penalties to finish as
runner-up.
Earlier
this season, Chiacchia and Windfall II topped
a 58-horse starting field to claim victory
in the CIC*** World Cup Qualifier division
at Red Hills Horse Trials in Tallahassee,
FL, before winning an advanced division
at Popular Place Horse Trials in Hamilton,
GA, the following weekend.
In 2003,
the pair topped a 90-horse starting field
to win the 2003 United States Equestrian
Team (USET) Three-Star Spring Championship
title before earning the Individual Gold
Medal at the Pan American Championships.
At year's end, Windfall II garnered numerous
accolades, including being named the United
States Eventing Association (USEA)'s Horse
of the Year as well as topping the World
Breeding Federation's year-end rankings.
In 2000,
Chiacchia was the traveling alternate for
the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia,
before successfully representing the United
States at the 2002 World Equestrian Games
in Jerez, Spain.
Chiacchia,
who operates Independence Farm, divides
the year between his training facilities
in Ocala, FL, and Springville, NY, just
outside of Buffalo. In addition to operating
one of the country's top breeding, training
and sales barns, Chiacchia is committed
to the improvement of the sport and volunteers
his expertise as the Chair of the USEA's
Events Rating Task Force, the USEA's Area
Rider Representative Committee and is also
actively involved with the USEA's Instructors
Certification Program (ICP). As one of four
ICP-certified instructors and faculty members,
Chiacchia has been extremely successful
working with the next generation of three
day eventing riders, coaching talented junior
and young riders to numerous victories. |