Mill Spring, NC – May 30, 2021 – Erynn Ballard (CAN) claimed first-place results left and right throughout Tryon Spring 4 CSI 2* competition, capping a successful week with a win in the $25,000 Tryon Resort Sunday Classic after also notching wins in Wednesday’s $6,000 Power & Speed Stake CSI *, Thursday’s $37,000 Horseware Ireland Welcome Stake CSI 2*, and Friday’s $6,000 Speed Stake CSI 2*. Saturday evening, Ballard piloted Classic Penny to reserve in the $73,000 Tryon Resort Grand Prix CSI 2*, making Sunday’s win her fourth of the week and fifth podium placing. Last to go in the jump-off, Ballard stopped the jump-off track in a time of 33.74 with Ceitasi, the 2010 Westphalian mare (Caretello B x Cavalier) owned by Ilan Ferder. In reserve, Kristen VanderVeen (USA) and Bull Run’s Divine Fortune, the 2009 Dutch Warmblood mare (Padinus x Caruso 279) owned by Bull Run Jumpers Six LLC, posted a time of 34.335 seconds, while Hector Florentino (DOM) rode Santiago Lambre’s D’Artagnan to third place on a time of 35.429. Ballard also earned fourth aboard Corner Pocket Z, The Z Group’s 2012 Zangersheide gelding (Cornet Obolensky x Lux Z), stopping the timers in 35.524 seconds.
Ballard recapped her incredible week of wins with a strong finish aboard her “old friend,” Ceitasi, who was perfectly slated to go last in the jump-off, she shared:
“I knew I had my ringer last, with Ceitasi. Actually, the order was made for me perfectly. Insider [BH] is eight, and this was his third national Grand Prix, with a solid one [rail] down. He finished in the top ten, which I’m quite proud of. My own horse Vince [Corner Pocket] had a nice clear. I got to ride him first in the jump-off, and then Ceitasi is an old friend. I’ve ridden her more times than most of the horses in the barn, and I’ve shown her all over the place. She has all the experience, so it was kind of nice to have her go last and feel quite comfortable.”
Erynn Ballard and Ceitasi
© Madison Ibach, TIEC
It also never hurts to walk in the ring with three wins and one podium finish under your belt, Ballard admitted. “Also, when you have weeks like this, it’s very easy to be confident. It’s a lot easier to be confident when you’re riding off of wins than when you’re not. We have to remember that it doesn’t happen all the time!”
Ballard’s advantage with Ceitasi came not from tightening a turn or reducing the number of strides between fences, she revealed, but from the extremely fast nature of the short-strided mare. “I thought that I was quite fast on Corner Pocket in the jump-off. I didn’t do six in the last line, which for a big moving horse, that kept him out of the top three,” she analyzed.
“I actually did seven strides on Ceitasi, because she’s the opposite: she’s fast-moving, but shorter across the ground. The seven suited her – when she adds strides, she takes no time, so the seven was still safer. She’s just so fast – they don’t come that fast! She doesn’t need to do fewer strides, and she doesn’t need to turn tighter [to win] because she’s just that fast.”
Ballard will be seen chasing more podium placings throughout the remainder of the tryon Spring Series, but will pick and choose her mounts for the next weeks, she concluded. “This week we came out strong with every horse in every division, and now for two more weeks we will split them up and pick and choose. My best horse right now is Gakhir, and he will come out and do both weeks. I’m certainly very lucky that I have so many horses that we can pick and choose, and that we have a winner at every level.”