Frederic Wandres and Bluetooth Switch On the Power to Win CDI5* Grand Prix at AGDF

Last Updated on March 14, 2024 by adminahb

Frederic Wandres & Bluetooth OLD © SusanJStickle.com

A high quality five-star grand prix class set the stage for top-drawer action on Wednesday, with winners Frederic Wandres (GER) and Bluetooth OLD making their 76.196% season debut to much acclaim in the CDI5* FEI Grand Prix, sponsored by Douglas Elliman Real Estate. It was a German one-two, with the 23-year-old Felicitas Hendricks piloting Drombusch OLD (by Destano) to second with 71.283%, and Kevin Kohmann finishing best of the US riders in third, clocking up 70.826% on Diamante Farms’ 15-year-old Dünensee (by Dancier). It was tight at the top as less than one percentage point covered the third to seventh place finishers.

It was the opening day of week 10, five-star week, of the 2024 Adequan® Global Dressage Festival (AGDF) in Wellington, FL. This CDI5* show is one of the brightest jewels on Florida’s extensive dressage calendar, and the only CDI5* held in the Americas.

The CDI5* FEI Grand Prix, sponsored by Douglas Elliman Real Estate — which acts as a qualifier for the Grand Prix Special the Grand Prix Freestyle classes, both being held on Friday evening — took place under lights at the neighboring Wellington International venue, in the enormous main stadium International Arena. The facility, a stone’s throw from dressage’s usual venue, is the permanent home of the Winter Equestrian Festival (WEF), which hosts 13 weeks of hunter and jumper shows.

Wandres, 36, was trending close to the 80% mark in the first half of the test, but a mistake in the one-time changes — which carry a double marking coefficient and were awarded fours and fives from all the judges — dragged the final score below his and Bluetooth’s career high of 77.888%, set at the European Championships in September 2023. Despite the one mistake, Wandres’ performance on his employer Hof Kasselmann’s 14-year-old Oldenburg gelding (by Bordeaux x Riccione) got the unanimous nod from all five judges for its harmonious, powerful, and relaxed presentation, despite five months away from the competition arena.

“I had a super expensive mistake, the one-tempi mistake, but the rest of the test felt pretty flawless and super nice,” said Wandres, who trains with his partner Lars Ligus, and also with the German team coach Monica Theodorescu, who was in Wellington to watch the pair ahead of the selection process for the Paris Olympic Games this summer. “Bluetooth had a winter break and came back into the arena fresh and allowed me to ride him in a super harmonious way. I’m a little bit angry with myself for the mistake — it was my mistake, not his — but it’s okay; we are in the beginning of the season for him.

“He had a hard summer last year showing very consistently, so he earned himself a break from the show scene,” he explained of the decision to delay the start to the horse’s 2024 competition season in order to have him at peak fitness for the Games. “He’s really enjoyed the sun here, and we took time to invest into the small details, and I think that worked tonight. The mistake is something I can fix, and I’m looking personally more for other things, like presenting to the judges in a super harmonious way, in a good frame, with a happy horse, and always light in the contact.”

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

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