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Danny Warrington

No-one can fix Eventing except the riders

The following article was written by Danny Warrington for The Chronicle of the Horse in 2008. Danny is an American advanced level rider and professional trainer at Warrington Eventing near Fair Hill, USA. He rode in steeplechases for 10 years and was married to international rider Amanda Warrington, who was killed in an Eventing fall in 1997.

I feel like 250,000 people are out there yelling that our sport is bad, and there are about 250 riders saying it’s not the sport that’s the problem, it’s individuals. And we’re whispering and we’re not being heard. Every article you pick up, every outside influence, is saying we need to change the sport – we’ve got to make it safer, we’ve got to do all these things. To me it really isn’t the sport that has to change, it’s the way the sport is being played. You can’t make enough rules to make somebody think.

The first thing we have to do is stop looking to the organizations – the U.S. Eventing Association or the U.S. Equestrian Federation – and stop looking to rule changes and accept personal responsibility. It’s like when you stop at a stop light and the light turns green. Do you just take off, or do you look left and right before you take off to make sure no one else is coming the other way? That’s the kind of personal responsibility that we need to take at this level. At lower levels it’s different. We’re working with the Instructor Certification Program, and everyone’s trying to up the standards at the lower levels. But at the top you’ve gotten there. And you need to have some self-awareness, some self-preservation.

In the races at Saratoga one year, there were rumors the officials wanted to take the second fence off the backside because that’s where most of the falls occur. But then the falls are just going to happen at the next fence, because everybody is making a move there. They can’t keep changing the sport. Riders who aren’t paying attention are going to keep finding ways to fall.

Learning From Tragedy

I lost my wife Amanda at an event 10 years ago. Let’s make her example a teaching tool. She made a mistake. I made a mistake. The sport didn’t make a mistake. By pushing so hard to achieve goals, we’re pushing right past the point. Do you know why Amanda didn’t make the team? Because she didn’t live long enough. Because she pushed so hard to get there that she died in the process. It’s horrible and it’s tragic, but it wasn’t the sport’s fault. Nobody made her run that horse. I never told her not to run the horse. We sat at home and tried to figure out how to make the horse go better instead of saying maybe this horse isn’t an advanced horse. Maybe he’s good at the intermediate level.

When you are team bound, when you are goal driven, you don’t look at life that way until it’s too late. I’m trying to tell people, sometimes it’s better to go home and come back another day. Sometimes it’s better to look at your horse and say, “You know what buddy, I love you but maybe the four-star, or the three-star or even the two-star level is above you,” and not push your horse or yourself past the point you can do. I don’t understand why people think that they have a god-given right to go around Kentucky as fast as they can or as fast as they want to. It’s your job out there to take care of you and your horse first. If you don’t like the course, don’t run. If you think questions aren’t fair, don’t run. Most people do that.

Amanda had five advanced horses – Regal Style, Broadstone Harvest Moon, Exodus and Drizzle was on his way. Berlioz (who she had the fall with) was just trying to catch up with the others. Maybe it’s my fault. Maybe I should have said, “Hey Amanda, you know, the horse really doesn’t want to do it.” But I was 27 years old and she was 28. You don’t think that way. You think, “I need more horses so I can get on the team.” And she would have made the team – Chevalier did go to the Olympics when Bobby Costello took over the ride. It wouldn’t even have taken any more time. But she didn’t get to make the decision because she was too ambitious.

Know When To Call It A Day

You have to be aggressive in this sport. It is x-c; there is an x in front of it. It is an X game. This is an adrenaline sport, and you have to be on the edge. It is tough, it is a thrill. You can’t come out and ride it like it’s the hunters either, but you have to know by the time you get to the upper levels that there is a day when you will have to pull up. It’s part of the game to say, “This is not my day.” and go home. I did it at the Fair Hill CCI*** – my horse had two more stops to go (before being eliminated) and the stops he’d had were not horrible, but my horse said, “You know what, I don’t want to do this.” and I said, “OK, let’s go home before we get hurt.” And I went home and didn’t get hurt.

When you have consistent things telling you that you are having a bad day, you’ve got to make the decision: Do you pull up, or do you want to go home in an ambulance? I’ve got to tell you, pull up! Walk your horse home. There’s no shame in retiring. Go home, school, figure out what’s going on and maybe your horse isn’t a four-star horse. Maybe you’re not a four-star rider. Maybe you’re not a three-star rider. These are the facts you have to face, but don’t kill yourself trying.

Laine Ashker has been going fast since early March (2008 ), in Florida – she’s had the fastest time cross country consistently. And is it my fault, me, Danny Warrington? Is it my fault for not calling up Laine and saying, “If you don’t slow down you’re going to fall?” But she’s winning, she’s qualified, and everything looks good. But how many people besides me see this and don’t say anything? No one says anything. It’s not the sport’s fault because she met the qualifications. It’s not the design of the course because everyone else jumped relatively well around Kentucky this year. It is a four-star – there should be a 50 percent finish rate clean. Not everyone should jump around a four-star clean, otherwise it’s a training level horse trial. But it should be because a rider retires or makes a good decision, not because a rider keeps pushing until they go home in an ambulance.

You’ve got to wake up and say, “You know what, my day is not going good, and I need to pull up. This isn’t working out.” And live to fight another day. It’s not up to your coach or the USEA or USEF to tell you that. Because you should know. By the time you get to that level you should know. Accidents are always going to happen. But, if the horse and rider have the right mindset you’re going to see less of them.

I don’t think you can make rules to stop them. They have to stop themselves. You can’t stop every drunk driver from getting on the road. Not every horse is an advanced horse, and not every rider as an advanced rider. As riders, as horsemen, we need to really understand that. Just because you’re qualified to go doesn’t mean you’re ready to go.

Waylon Roberts had a great round (at Kentucky) and he’s 19. He comes from a horseman’s family. We can’t make rules that say you’ve got to be at least 25 years old to ride around Kentucky, because that’s not fair either. But you have to have a serious amount of experience before you attempt something at that level. So many of these younger riders go out without the mileage to feel if the horse is tired, or understand the difference between tired and off the bridle.

Let’s Help Ourselves

If we, as competitors who love our sport, would shout at what is really wrong with the sport, which is the way some people are playing it, then we might have a chance against people who are trying to shut us down. And instead of whispering about what’s wrong, address it. That’s sort of why I’m coming forward and saying Amanda’s accident had nothing to do with the fence, the day, the footing or lighting or time, or anything but that we were pushing a horse to go advanced that wasn’t really ready and maybe wasn’t an advanced horse.

The reason that I’m talking about Amanda’s fall is that maybe there are others out there who feel that the sport is the problem. And I believe it’s the greatest game on the planet when you play it right. Learn from mistakes you see around you, and don’t expect the organization to do things for you.

Coaches – if you don’t think your kid is ready to go novice, training, preliminary, intermediate or advanced, don’t let them. The word “no” has to come out of your mouth. The words “you’re not ready” have to come out of your mouth. The words “your horse isn’t that quality” have to come out of your mouth. If you lose a customer and he goes to somebody else, if we all agree that we’re not going to do this anymore, maybe we can help ourselves, help our sport, instead of looking at the organizations.

And one more point: I hear people talking about horses that have these issues, like Amy Tryon last year at Kentucky (2007) , or Jonathan Holling’s horse who had an anuerysm at Red Hills. And I want to say to people: If you haven’t had a horse break down underneath you, if you haven’t ridden advanced, maybe this isn’t something you ought to be talking about. Because you don’t have the experience. All you have is an opinion.

Because I’ve had all of those things happen. I lost my wife. I’ve had horses break their legs and break down. Between racing and eventing there’s not a lot that hasn’t happened to me. And don’t judge people until you’ve been in that situation. I mean that in a positive way. I don’t want everybody to have those situations. But listen to the people who have. Don’t push when you shouldn’t push. There’s a day to pull up. There’s a day to go home and there’s a day to fight again.

We don’t have to change the sport. We have to change the way the sport is being played by the players.

2009. Danny Warrington

www.dannywarrington.comwww.equicision.com


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