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Fresh faces join experience in NZ eventing team

World-ranked Tim and Jonelle Price spearhead New Zealand’s team for the World Eventing Championships in Italy next month.

Husband and Wife Magic - Jonelle Price celebrates with NZL-Tim Price and Ringwood Sky Boy take the Title for the 2018 Burghley Horse Trials.

Tim and Jonelle Price.
Photo: PHOTOSPORT

The No. 2 and 5 ranked eventers are joined by Olympian and former World Champs representative Clarke Johnstone, along with debutants Monica Spencer and Amanda Pottinger.

The event will be a chance to qualify for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Equestrian Sports New Zealand general manager of high performance, Jock Paget, said it is an exciting team to name as they looks toward the Olympics.

“It’s encouraging to have the combination of championship debutants and experienced campaigners such as Tim, Jonelle and Clarke in the team.

“This is our qualifying opportunity for Paris and we are hopeful of contesting the medals. We’ve had a good build-up in terms of training and have invested into more team competition this year – hopefully this pays dividends on the day.”

Two-time Olympian Tim will compete aboard 13-year-old Falco, a German-bred gelding who in 2021 won the 5* at Pau.

Forty-three-year-old Tim has twice ridden at World Championships with an eighth in 2018 at Tryon his best effort.

Jonelle is in on McClaren, a 15-year-old gelding who last year was third in the 5* at Pau.

The 41-year-old rider was New Zealand’s best at the 2014 Caen World Champs when she earned the moniker as the world’s fastest woman with her fourth placing.

She has previously competed at three Olympic Games and two World Championships.

Clarke Johnstone was New Zealand’s best at the Rio Olympic Games with his sixth-placed effort.

The 35-year-old, who rode at the 2010 World Champs, has been named on Menlo Park, a Brit-bred 12-year-old who joined his stable late last year.

Monica Spencer and Artist are just about to board a plan to wing their way to Europe in preparation for the World Champs.

The 35-year-old from Taupo was third in the CCI4*-L at Werribee this year and has previously won at Puhinui.

Rounding out the team is Amanda Pottinger and her 16-year-old New Zealand-bred thoroughbred Just Kidding.

She is following in the footsteps of her mother Tinks who rode at top level for New Zealand and was part of the bronze medal-winning team at the Seoul Olympic Games.

The reserves for the 2022 World Champs are Jesse Campbell aboard Diachello, Samantha Lissington with Ricker Ridge Sooty GNZ, Matthew Grayling on Trudeau, and Dan Jocelyn with Cooley One To Many.

New Zealand has twice won team gold at World Champs – at Stockholm in 1990 and Rome in 1998.

The last time the team was on the podium was 2010 in Kentucky when Andrew Nicholson, Sir Mark Todd, Caroline Powell and Clarke Johnstone won bronze.

Andrew and Nereo also won an individual bronze that year.

Individually, golds have been won by Blyth Tait and Messiah in 1998, Vaughn Jefferis and Bounce in 1994, and Blyth and Ready Teddy in 1998, the same year that Sir Mark and Broadcast News won silver.

New Zealand were seventh at the last Worlds in Tryon in 2018.

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