Camille Carier Bergeron Records First Senior CDI Big Tour Victory with Talented Mare in AGDF 8

Last Updated on March 3, 2024 by adminahb

Camille Carier Bergeron & Finnländerin © SusanJStickle.com

An ecstatic Camille Carier Bergeron punched the air in delight at the end of her test in the Mission Control Grand Prix Special CDI3* during Week 8 of the Adequan® Global Dressage Festival (AGDF) in Wellington, FL. She was right to celebrate as her score of 71.511%, with Finnländerin, shot to the top of the leaderboard and never left, handing the 23-year-old Canadian her first senior big tour CDI victory.

The class boasted 15 athletes representing eight nations, and it was Canada who filled two of the top three slots. In a class where mares had the edge, Australia’s Jemma Heran took the runner-up spot, riding her own elegant 15-year-old San Amour, daughter Saphira Royal 2, to a new personal best score of 70.575%.

Third place, Denielle Gallagher, rode her own and Ellen Lazarus’s charming 12-year-old buckskin gelding to another personal best of 69.915%. Come Back De Massa, a Lusitano by Galopin De La Font, only began international grand prixs in the fall of 2023 and is gaining confidence with each show, laying down two personal bests in AGDF 8 alone.

Carier Bergeron and Finnländerin finished fourth in Thursday’s qualifying grand prix, but achieved her goal of riding a mistake-free test on Saturday to claim the blue ribbon on her own and her father Gilles Bergeron’s 14-year-old Finnländerin. She bought the horse from Madeleine and Nico Witte-Vrees in 2022, and she has already competed at the grand prix level for two seasons. The French-bred chestnut mare is by Fidertanz and out of the Donnerhall mare Ferna, who is a full sister to the Olympic stallion, Blue Hors Don Schufro.

“She gave me such a good feeling today,” said Carier Bergeron, who trains with Brittany Fraser-Beaulieu. “This is only our second show together, so we’re still getting to know one another. My goal for today was just to go clean, because I knew that if we could, we’d have a good score. This horse doesn’t have one weakness. Everything is good; all three gaits, plus the changes and the passage, are really big and she’s so consistent.

“She goes in there and really fights for me. On the last centerline she gives me more; the last piaffe is always the best and in the last passage, the higher she can hike her legs, the better. It’s my first win on the big tour ever and it feels unreal — it’s a really special moment for me and she’s one cool horse to ride,” she added. 

For more information and results, visit https://gdf.coth.com.

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