<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><strong>The
pressure came on the New Zealand eventers today at the 2010 World Equestrian
Games in Kentucky – and they delivered.</strong></font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Anchor man Andrew Nicholson and Nereo delivered a pure
magic performance, pulling the team up into fourth place overall and himself
into fifth individual.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">It
looked picture-perfect in every way as he guided the 10-year-old chestnut
effortlessly around the 6400m course.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">It
all went exactly as we planned after walking the course,” said a very happy
Nicholson after the ride.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Jonathan Paget (Muriwai) and Clifton Promise rode the
round of their lives to finish in 11<sup>th</sup> place overall on 46.4 in the
individual field.<br><br>- Diana Dobson, Media Liason NZ</font></p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">His
efforts drew plenty of praise from equestrian maestro Mark Todd, who has been
coaching the promising young rider.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">It
was a truly fantastic effort,” said Todd.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Paget
put much of his success back on the 'three wise men' of the New Zealand team –
Todd, Nicholson and eventing chef d'equipe and coach Erik Duvander.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">They've been so helpful to me, and you only need to
look at the improvement from when I rode here alone in April, and now.”</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Paget
thoroughly enjoyed riding the very big and challenging course.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">It
was just amazing,” he said. “It has to be the smoothest ride of my life.”</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Todd
was also very pleased with his horse NZB Grass Valley, who finished the day in
16<sup>th</sup> place overall with 50.1 penalty points.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">He
was brilliant all the way.”</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">The
only change he made was three from home when he felt Grass Valley was a little
tire so he went for the safe option. The horse was still rather inexperienced at
this top level, so his efforts were all the more appreciated.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">On
the team front, Todd said everyone had done just as they were asked.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">Clarke (Johnstone) was a little unlucky having that
stop at 24 (five from home), but Orient Express was tired.”<br>And Caroline
Powell and Mac MacDonald had been extremely solid with their clean and clear
finish.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Duvander was a very happy man, describing Todd as a
genius, Powell just amazing throughout her “rock and roll all the way” ride,
Paget, a great up and coming talent, Nicholson brilliant and Johnstone
unlucky.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western">“<font face="Arial, sans-serif">It
was a real team effort and everyone was out there sticking to the plan and doing
their bit.”</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Great
Britain is leading the teams, sitting on 139.4 from their best three, with hosts
United States second on 143.3, Canada third on 147.5 and New Zealand on 150.8.
It's a big drop back to fifth place Germany on 192.7.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Overnight dressage leader Michael Jung (Germany) on La
Biosthetique-Sam FBW added nothing to his score after a pristine effort over the
cross country course, so leads on 33 heading into the final phase
tomorrow.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">William Fox-Pitt (Great Britain) on Cool Mountain is
sitting second on 42, Rebecca Holder (United States) on Courageous Comet third
on 42.5, Ingrid Klimke (Germany) on FRH Butts Abraxxas in fourth on 42.9 and
Nicholson on 43.5.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">With
a rail costing four faults, the individual gold is most definitely up for grabs,
while the team is a little tougher.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Of
the 79 combinations who started the cross country, 17 were eliminated and two
retired. All left in the field will face a trot-up in the morning, before being
allowed to continue.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">All
roads led to the Kentucky Horse Park this morning as thousands filed in through
the gates to watch the cross country phase of the eventing. Traffic was backed
up for miles and the rather spectacular water jumps had hundreds of people
packed around them hours before the first horse was even due on the
course.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">The
jumps were visual spectaculars themselves, with the first jump sporting 10,000
plants on it.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">There
were four water elements on the course, and plenty of options for riders whose
horses were tiring or they felt daunted by the challenge before them.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">The
whole cross country course was beautifully presented and the weather near
perfect through to the final rider.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Time
allowed on the course was 11 minutes 14 seconds, meaning horses had to truck
along at 570 metres a minute. For every second they were over the time, they
picked up a 0.4 time penalty, with a stop or a run-out earning 20 faults and a
fall instant elimination. Three stops also meant elimination.</font>
</p><br>
<p style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0cm" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">There's no doubt the cross country is the true decider
of the eventing class. There were plenty of falls, eliminations and retirements
– some from top riders. That said, riders made plenty of use of the options
designer Mike Etherington-Smith gave them, meaning they had to think fast and
ride to suit their horses.</font></p>