HEARTBREAK and success are the bedrocks of every interesting sporting story – and US event rider Jennie Brannigan has seen both in her 36 years. She’s been a champion young rider, been listed for senior teams, and finished in the placings at five-star, including 12th at Burghley last year. She’s also flown around the world to events and fallen, lost horses in tragic circumstances and been suspended from the sport for a year.
She looks back on the autumn of 2021 as a turning point in her career. She’d been chosen as the anchorman for the US team at the Nations Cup final at Boekelo with FE Lifestyle. The first team rider had fallen, so she needed to go clear – or “clean”, as Americans say. And she did.
Validation from one of her mentors, former US performance director Erik Duvander, followed: “He said, ‘This is who you actually are – all that other s***, all those other things that happened, really aren’t you.’”
That was a pivotal moment, soon followed by her best-ever five-star result, fourth at Maryland with Stella Artois. But really, Jennie adds, it was about finding her maturity.
“I still love winning, but instead of being obsessed with it, I became a better horseman,” she says. “I started rating what each horse can do and not being a psycho if I didn’t win. I think a lot of people go through that phase if they win a lot when they are young.
“Now I want to have these horses in my career for a long time. I want to go to top events with my horses in good health. I want to be a horseman, not just someone who wins events. That’s equally important to me. I think you can do both… I’m going to try to do both.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 21, 2024-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 21, 2024-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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