Mardi 6 mai 2008
De retour en Grande-Bretagne avec son cheval, Mark Todd s'entraîne en vue du CCI*** de Saumur, où il doit obtenir son deuxième résultat qualificatif. Afin de se mettre en jambe il monte galement les chevaux d'Eddie Stibbie en concours.


source :
http://www.horsetalk.co.nz/news/2008/05/006.shtml

http://www.badminton-horse.co.uk/latest_news/event_news/mark_todd.aspx


  
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Mardi 1 avril 2008
La news vient de tomber sur le site internet www.lecomplet.com. Mark Todd a confirmé sa présence lors du CCI*** de Saumur qui a lieu du 15 au 18 mai. Le Maestro tentera de décrocher son deuxième résultat qualificatif et du même coup son billet pour les Jeux Olympiques.

The legend is back !

 
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Mardi 18 mars 2008
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Mardi 18 mars 2008
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Lundi 17 mars 2008

Many marvel at Mark Todd magic (+video)

By JOAN GILCHRIST - Stuff.co.nz | Saturday, 15 March 2008
FIONA GOODALL/Fairfax Media

IN CONTROL: New Zealand Olympic great Mark Todd rides NZB Gandalf over the water jump at the Manukau City Puhinui Three Day Horse Trials three day event. Todd leads to keep his hopes of another Olympiad alive.

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Several thousand spectators watched at the Manukau City Puhinui Three Day Event today, as the Mark Todd magic took hold.

Todd qualifies for Oylmpics

 

People ran back and forth on the course, amateur photographers pushed each other aside, breaths were held as the rider of the 20th Century showed that he’d lost none of his skills to jump a clear cross-country round on NZB Gandalf and take the lead in the three star competition.

More importantly, it was another step towards qualification for selection for the upcoming Olympic Games and after a foot-perfect performance, Todd said that his grey horse would definitely take up the tentative booking to fly to Europe in mid-April to pursue the chance to compete in another Olympiad, 24 years after he won his first gold medal at Los Angeles.

The selectors may have been breathing a sigh of relief, too, with the news – as yet unofficially confirmed – that two of their named squad, Matthew Grayling and NRM Gordon and Bryce Newman and Bates Our Questionnaire are out of contention due to horse problems.

Youngsters not born when Todd won that first gold medal marvelled as the pair ate up the cross-country course – "You can see why he’s the Master" said one 20 year-old competitor who had never seen Todd ride in a major competition at home.

Closest to challenging him is Cambridge-based John Twomey on his and partner Caroline Hooper's extravagant grey Warmblood, Flaunt It, who must, in time, surely become contenders for international selection. Their round wasn't as fluid, but it was effective and while Todd picked up six time penalties for a total of 54.9 over two days, Twomey clocked up 11.2 to sit on 62.9, but it's a margin of only two show jumping fences in tomorrow's final challenge.

If Angela Lloyd felt sad at selling Gandalf to Todd, she had the consolation of a superb round in the one star, novice, class on her young horse Airtight who looks as if he might be a worthy successor.

Interim standings after cross country in the three-star: Mark Todd (Canterbury) Gandalf 1, John Twomey (Waikato) Flaunt It 2; Jonathan
Paget (Auckland), Clifton Promise 3 and Clifton Turtle 4; Petra Eatson (Auckland), Bijou 5. 

NZ Horse & Pony CCI (two-star): Anne-Marie Styles (Auckland) As You Like It 1; Kate Wood (Whangarei), Easy Tiger 2; Claire Tasker, (Auckland)
Specialty 3.

source : http://www.stuff.co.nz/4441334a1823.html

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Lundi 17 mars 2008
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Lundi 17 mars 2008
En remportant le CIC*** de Puhinui, Mark Todd est à mi chemin de la qualif Olympique ! 

Equestrian: Mark Todd wins at Puhinui with Olympics in sight

Sun, 16 Mar 2008 04:56p.m.
video

 

Double Olympic equestrian champion Mark Todd today won the Puhinui three-day event and maintained his hopes of a return to the Olympic Games after an eight-year retirement.  

Todd, riding Gandalf, needed to have fewer than 20 points in the showjumping phase of the horse trials in south Auckland to pass the latest stage of qualification for selection for Beijing in August.
 
He achieved that with plenty to spare, as accumulated just four points with one rail knocked down.
  
Todd and Gandalf now head to Europe, where they need to reach the qualifying standard at a high level three-day event, with the likely option being at Saumur in France next month.

NZPA

source : http://www.tv3.co.nz/News/EquestrianMarkToddwinsatPuhinuiwithOlympicsinsight/tabid/209/articleID/49479/cat/41/Default.aspx

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Lundi 10 mars 2008

Mark Todd still turns heads

Saturday, 08 March 2008
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Mark Todd made it look so easy today.

Mark Todd back in the saddle

 

He and NZB Gandalf won the eventing challenge by a rail at the Horse of the Year Show in Hastings today.

Todd was lying second after the dressage, with John Twomey on Flaunt It in the front.

The dapple grey NZB Gandalf rattled a rail on his way around the course but finished well inside the time allowed with nothing on the ground.

Todd was pleased with how he and NZB Gandalf are starting to work together but was quick to point out that it was too early to say whether the horse had a "wow factor".

Former Olympian Todd's presence at the Kelt Capital show is drawing plenty of excitement.

When he enters a ring, a hush grips the crowd as people crane their necks and jostle for position to get the best view of him.

"The reaction to my coming back to compete is quite amazing," said Todd, who recently decided to come out of retirement and ride again.

"It is fantastic that everyone is getting so much enjoyment but it is still very early days yet."

Eventing New Zealand team manager and high performance director Blyth Tait is pleased with Todd's progress.

"If you could write a script you could say it is going to plan," he said.

Next stop for Todd is next week's Puhinui Three-Day Event in Auckland, where he will continue to chase qualifying scores for the Olympics.

Meanwhile, young Mathew Dickey (New Plymouth) has plenty to celebrate after taking first and third places in the Pony of the Year class.

The head prefect at Spotswood College had two of the three horses in the jump-off.

Reigning Pony of the Year title holder Charlotte Myers (Hawera) and Miss Coruba stumbled after the second fence but quickly regained their footing to fly home clear in 38.53sec.

Dickey then brought out his grey Co Calico and despite a firm rub of one rail, managed to stop the clock clear in 37.83sec.

With only himself to beat, he came back out with the little palomino Wilful, and after stumbling at that second fence, went for a steady clear and came home in 40.45sec.

Wilful had earlier won the Pony Show Hunter of the Year award.

New Zealand couldn't replicate their win from yesterday in the second round of the Tri-Nations today, but still hold a two-point lead going into the final day tomorrow.

It came down to a jump-off once again, this time it was South Africa and New Zealand tied on eight faults apiece, forcing two from each of the four-man teams to jump-off against the clock.

South Africa's Loretta Knowles-Taylor laid down the challenge, going clear in 35.57sec, followed by New Zealand's Anna Trent, who was also clear but slightly slower in 36.19sec. South Africa's Barry Taylor stepped it up even more coming home in 34.17sec, leaving it to reigning Horse of the Year title holder Oliver Edgecombe who couldn't match it, and dropped the last rail.

South Africa won, with New Zealand second and Australia third.

In the Tri Nations dressage, South Africa held on to their lead in the series, but New Zealand managed to move up into second place, leaving Australia third.

The Horse of the Year Show culminates tomorrow with the Bell Tea Olympic Cup being presented to the showjumper of the year, along with a cheque for $120,000.

Twenty-two of the nation's best, including internationals John Whitaker and his niece Ellen Whitaker, have entered.

Both the Whitakers look highly likely to ride for Great Britain in the Olympics this year.

-NZPA

source : http://www.stuff.co.nz/AAMB7/aamsz=275x15_TEXTLINK/4431295a1823.html

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Lundi 10 mars 2008

Mark Todd - making an Olympic come back

Fri, 07 Mar 2008 08:19p.m.
Mark Todd on Gandalf Mark Todd on Gandalf
video
 

 

Mark Todd is making a come back.

And to get back, he has had to go back to the unrelenting grind of training that defined him as a competitor twenty years ago.

Why would a man in his early fifties, with so much success behind him, want to risk it all again?

It has been hard for Mark Todd as he tries to make an Olympic comeback, for a start he is stopped every five minutes for a chat. 

“Obviously I know a lot of people - well quite a lot of people.. not so many of the younger ones,” Todd says.

But they know him and love him.

He is New Zealand’s finest Olympic horseman - voted rider of the 20th century by the International Equestrian Federation.

And at the age of 52 he is back at the Horse of the Year Show in Hastings - a competition that he left behind years ago.

“We're just basically here - it's a learning curve for me and the horse.  Another step on the ladder towards the goal of what we're trying to achieve,” Todd says.

His horse 10-year-old Gandalf is the reason Todd is even contemplating qualifying for the New Zealand team, a decision that caught many by surprise. 

Wife Carolyn had a different view.

“Well initially I thought he was a bit mad.  No!  We'd been talking about it for a while. We like challenges, both of us, so thought it was a good idea. If he wants to do it and feels he can do it then go for it I say,” Carolyn says.

They have only known each other a few weeks, but Todd and Gandalf are slowly coming to an agreement on how things should be done.

Gandalf reminds Mark of old friend Charisma who he won back to back golds with at the 1984 and 88 Olympics.

“He's a really nice horse and really easy horse to do things with. He's like Charisma in that as long as he's got food in front of him he's happy,” says Todd of Gandalf.

And the more they compete, the better they will become.

“I love jumping this horse, he's a really cool jumper and the last weekend at Rotorua  we went round a comp there and I had a big smile on my face all the way round,” Todd says.

“He's 51-years-old is he too old - no way. This guy has more knowledge about horsemanship than any of us could ever imagine and he also still has the skills to apply that knowledge,” says Greg Best.

Best has been involved with New Zealand Equestrian for 12 years.

He is currently the national coach and has been helping Mark adjust after eight years out of competition.

Mark has to work fast.

He has been out so long he wasn't even qualified to ride in a three star event.

Gandalf was one up on him there.

Now he has to ride to a certain standard in two three star events.

The first will be Puhinui next week where Mark will be paying particular attention to the dressage discipline - a weak spot for Gandalf.

“He has got the potential to do  a very good dressage, he's a good jumper, he goes well cross country - so at this stage he's not a wow horse but he's a very workman like horse and i think, hopefully in six months time he will be the sort of horse that could be very competitive at Olympic level,” Todd says.

“I get very nervous unfortunately so that's come back with a vengeance. I wish I could say I’m really relaxed but I’m not, not when it actually starts,” says wife Carolyn.

Carolyn says Mark seems to be his usual cool self and is loving being back in the thick of it.

In fact it is just like the old days when they first started out in the horse truck, touring round the country.

“I'm not putting myself under any pressure.  If it's going to happen, it's going to happen. I wasn't actively looking for a horse and he sort of came my way. I've always believed that good horses find you rather than you find them. So in a way I’m going with the belief that it's meant to happen and we'll just keep hoping,” Todd says.

source : http://www.tv3.co.nz/News/SportsNews/Story/tabid/415/articleID/48617/Default.aspx

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Lundi 25 février 2008
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L'histoire d'un come back...

Courant janvier 2008 Mark Todd annonce son retour à la compétition après 8 années "off". L'objectif : se qualifier pour courir les Jeux Olympiques de Pékin. Ce blog va suivre la folle aventure du cavalier du 20ème siècle !  Une revue de presse en ligne du come back de mister toddy.

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