Eventing

Eventing top stories
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Features
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Features
Olympian Ginny Elliot’s tips to stop your horse’s cross-country spooks and nail a fast round – and her own reactive horse who turned a corner to become a champion
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Features
‘I fell for King William instantly’: how love at first sight for Mary King grew into one of the greatest eventing partnerships of all time
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Features
The highest-placed British horse, top grooms, and cake: check out who won the Burghley special prizes
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Features
‘Riders need to know their horses well’: watch Kitty King walk key fences on the Blenheim European Championships cross-country course
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Opinion
William Fox-Pitt asks ‘can we maintain Burghley entries?’
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Features
Take a first look at Kitty King walking the Blenheim European Championships cross-country course
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Horse and rider training
‘Help! My horse is running out at skinnies’ Olympic eventer Ginny Elliot’s tips on how to stay between the flags
Eventing opinion from H&H columnists
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H&H’s Pippa Roome: ‘British Eventing’s national championships at Hartpury are great for riders, but how can we draw the public in?’
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Piggy March: ‘I wanted to put Halo on the map – and I was delighted it came off’
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Andrew Nicholson: ‘Aachen’s cross-country was a clever taste of next year’s worlds’
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Piggy March: ‘Harry Meade deserves to be world number one’
Tack and clothing
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Air jackets vs body protectors: what’s the difference, and which should you wear?
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20 jump saddles you’ll want to ride in
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Body protectors vs back protectors: what’s the difference – and which one do you need?
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12 pairs of boots ready to go out on the cross-country course
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11 stylish pairs of men’s competition breeches to suit all budgets
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15 of the best competition breeches to wear in the saddle this season
Training tips
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How to get your horse fit like world number one event rider Harry Meade
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13 expert tips from Pippa Funnell including take your time, steer with your eyes, and repeat, repeat, repeat
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How Alex Bragg’s training exercise uses turns to master straightness while jumping
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Improve your horse’s rideability and straightness with Harry Meade’s three-fence jumping exercise
All about eventing
Eventing is a three-phase equestrian sport in which a horse and rider combination compete in dressage, showjumping and cross-country. The same combination have to compete in all three phases – a rider can’t substitute a different horse for any part of the competition. The sport is designed to be a test of all-round horsemanship of the rider and the adaptability and training of the horse across the different sports. Scores are given as penalties and the horse and rider with the lowest penalties after all three phases of an event are the winners. Events, also known as horse trials, are typically referred to as one-day or three-day events, despite the fact a competition can actually be held over one, two, three or four days. Eventing in Britain is overseen by the sport’s governing body British Eventing with competition starting over jumps of 80cm in height, called BE80(T) and increases in height up to advanced level over showjumps with a maximum height of 1.25m and cross-country fences set at 1.20m. There are also international eventing competitions run under FEI rules from one- to five-star level.