LCH611
Well-Known Member
But that's only 4 each day? and he does have the benefit of grooms to get each horse ready for him
But that's only 4 each day? and he does have the benefit of grooms to get each horse ready for him
OT is hardworking and very talented. He sees the positive in horses and is grateful for the opportunity to bring the best out of them. People should admire his work ethic and ambition. The only people who ridicule him are those who feel challenged by his success.
I think if anyone can it's Oliver - very good with a tricky horse - however after seeing Lanfranco at Badminton I wish Oliver very good luck![]()
What did he do at badminton??
Ran out at the arrow head brush skinny at the Gatehouse New Pond, and Andrew Hoy went swimming.
Then galloped back down the course and into the crowd. Could have been really nasty.
OT is hardworking and very talented. He sees the positive in horses and is grateful for the opportunity to bring the best out of them. People should admire his work ethic and ambition. The only people who ridicule him are those who feel challenged by his success.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that I'm not sure Oli's strategy of taking on other people's tricky rides is necessarily a good one.
P
While I see your point, OT was second at Badminton last year with Armada, better than Andrew Nicholson managed with him. If OT only manages to get the full potential out of a fraction of the tricky horses he takes on, that's still a way of getting world-class horses that other top riders aren't trying.
OT was a very successful junior SJ'er. I don't think 2nd at Badminton is a shoddy result. OT is perhaps better equipped than some eventers to redress the problem.
I wasn't questioning OT's ability as a SJer, nor did I say that 2nd at Badminton was a shoddy result . . . I was merely questioning the wisdom of taking on an event horse (Armada, specifically) who has visibly struggled in the SJ phase (still does - this year's Badminton SJ round wasn't great) . . . it might pay off, it might not . . . I just wonder why OT, with his obvious talents feels the need to mop up other people's "rejects" . . . ?
P
Well OT doesn't seem to have 4* horses coming out of his ears, so presumably he feels that an inconsistent 4* horse is worth having... clearly occasionally it pays off big time. He's not quite in the position of WFP/AN who can turn down rides on anything not capable of winning gold medals. I can't imagine he's turning down the rides on better horses to concentrate on Armada...
Maybe it makes him happy? He might find a tricky horse more rewarding.
But I read somewhere that he has 51 rides - or is that a fabrication? They can't all be tricky, surely? How much attention can he give all of those - bearing in mind that some may be youngsters, etc. No, he's not in the same position as WFP and AN (or others), but it seems a risky strategy to fill your barn with tricky ones rather than holding out for one or two really good, solid performers - or am I mad? Harry Meade is short of rides at the minute . . . but I get the sense that he's being patient and waiting. Ditto other younger riders . . .
. . . I understand why he's taking the line he is . . . I'm just not 100% sure it's a sound strategy . . . but I'm willing to be proved wrong.
P
. . . I understand why he's taking the line he is . . . I'm just not 100% sure it's a sound strategy . . . but I'm willing to be proved wrong.
P