Equestrian_at_the_1968_Summer_Olympics_–_Individual_jumping

Equestrian at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Individual jumping

Equestrian at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Individual jumping

Equestrian at the Olympics


Quick Facts Individual jumping at the Games of the XIX Olympiad, Venue ...

The individual show jumping at the 1968 Summer Olympics took place on 23 October. The event was open to men and women.[1] There were 42 competitors from 15 nations.[2] Each nation was limited to three riders. The event was won by William Steinkraus of the United States, the nation's first medal in individual jumping. Marion Coakes of Great Britain was the first female rider to win a medal in individual jumping, taking silver. Great Britain also earned its third consecutive bronze medal in the event, with David Broome earning his second (after 1960) to become the fifth person to win multiple medals in the event.

Background

This was the 13th appearance of the event, which had first been held at the 1900 Summer Olympics and has been held at every Summer Olympics at which equestrian sports have been featured (that is, excluding 1896, 1904, and 1908). It is the oldest event on the current programme, the only one that was held in 1900.[2] The team and individual results were once again separated; they had been combined from 1924 to 1956, separate in 1960, and combined again in 1964.

Six of the top 10 riders from the 1964 competition returned: two-time (1952 and 1964) gold medalist Pierre Jonquères d'Oriola of France, fourth-place finisher John Fahey of Australia, fifth-place finisher Nelson Pessoa of Brazil, seventh-place finisher Frank Chapot of the United States, ninth-place finisher Piero D'Inzeo of Italy, and tenth-place finisher Max Hauri of Switzerland. Also returning was D'Inzeo's brother Raimondo D'Inzeo. Raimondo had won the 1960 gold and 1956 silver medals; Piero had won the 1960 silver and 1956 bronze medals. The brothers were competing in their sixth Olympics; they would be the first to reach eight Games. Jonquères d'Oriola was competing in his fifth. Hans Günter Winkler, who had competed three times for the United Team of Germany and won gold in 1956, was also in Mexico City and now competing for West Germany. The reigning World Champion, who had also earned Olympic bronze in 1960, was David Broome of Great Britain. Thus, the field included the last four Olympic gold medalists (Jonquères d'Oriola, Winkler, R. D'Inzeo, and Jonquères d'Oriola again) and last six World Champions (Winkler twice, R. D'Inzeo twice, Jonquères d'Oriola, and Broome).

Bolivia, Canada, and West Germany each made their debut in the event. France competed for the 12th time, most of any nation, having missed the individual jumping only in 1932.

Competition format

There were two rounds, as had been the case since 1952, but the format had been tweaked. Instead of two rounds on the same course, now there were two different courses. Moreover, instead of all riders who finished the first round competing again, now only the top 18 riders (or all riders with 8 or fewer faults, if there were more than 18) advanced to the second round. The first course was 750 metres long; the second was a more puissance-styled course of 410 metres. The total score from both rounds determined final rankings. There was a jump-off for the bronze medal, with the time in the jump-off used as a tie-breaker if riders were still tied (as all were). The jump-off course was 370 metres.[2]

Schedule

All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6)

More information Date, Time ...

Results

42 riders competed.[3] Broome's horse Mr. Softee would later appear in the Monty Python's Flying Circus episode "Archaeology Today" "Trailer sketch" in 1970, though Anneli Drummond-Hay was riding the horse rather than Broome. All four of the riders in the jump-off completed the course cleanly, so time was the deciding factor.

More information Rank, Rider ...

References

  1. Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Equestrianism at the 1968 Mexico City Equestrian Games: Mixed Jumping, Individual". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  2. "Jumping, Individual, Open". Olympedia. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  3. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 634.

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