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HomeDressageTitle: Alexandre Ayache Claims First National Title at 2025 French Dressage Championships...

Title: Alexandre Ayache Claims First National Title at 2025 French Dressage Championships

Alexandre Ayache became the winner of the 2025 French Championships for senior dressage riders held in Vierzon, France. Scheduled one month earlier than usual, these Nationals took place on 29 May – 1 June 2025.

The equestrian property of the Cambourieu family in Vierzon is the traditional venue for this event.

The Format
The senior Grand Prix riders had to battle it out in three rounds. Twenty-five combinations were entered for the Grand Prix, twenty-three for the Special, and nine in the kur. Of those 25 initial starters, 19 of them had officially declared to take part in the Championship and in the end 16 were ranked. Both Arnaud Serre (Dollar Dream) and Pauline Guillem (Lucky Gold) rode the Grand Prix and then pulled out of the championship. Anne Sophie Serre (Jibraltar de Massa) withdrew before the Grand Prix.

Quite a few prominent French riders were absent from the event, including 2022 champion Pauline Basquin, Olympian Corentin Pottier, his wife Camille Judet-Cheret (pregnant), and Olympian Morgan Barbançon (still suspended). Title defender Pierre Volla won the medium tour with Malcolm X de Massa. His winning Grand Prix horse from 2024 sold to Austria in March. Last year’s silver medal winning pair, Stephanie Brieussel and Fellini Du Soleil, was not entered.

Ayache Wins First Title
Winning his first national title in his career despite having ridden on the French team for almost a decade, Alexandre Ayache rode his second GP horse, Ruling Olivia to the gold medal and the highest step on the podium. With his 11-year old Oldenburg mare (by Olivi x Aletto) he won the Grand Prix with 68.761%, placed second in the Special with 67.255% and aced the freestyle with 74.105%.

"I’m quite happy with the final result, but I’m really angry with myself for my mistake yesterday (in the Special)," said Ayache. "I tried things in the canter that didn’t work. Today, I rode her more like I usually do, and it was immediately better. Now, we’re always happy to win a title; we take it with great pleasure. This is my first."

Ayache praised his mare Olivia. "Winning with Olivia has a special feeling," he said. "She’s a mare I’ve had since she was three, in whom I’ve believed for a very long time. She only started competing a little over a year ago, there are still plenty of things to improve, I’m very proud of her, more than of myself."

Liegard and Roussel on the Podium
The silver medal went to Bertrand Liegard on Claudia Chauchard’s 14-year old KWPN mare Ginger (by Tango x Don Primaire). He was third in the Grand Prix with 66.891%, won the Special with 69.277%, and finished second in the Kur with 73.370%.

The bronze was for Alizee Roussel aboard the 13-year old Oldenburg Bel Amour (by Bretton Woods x Donnerhall). The duo started off with a fourth place in the Grand Prix (65.587%) and in the Special (65.936%).

French team selector Jean Morel was pleased with the Championships. "It was very interesting to be able to see all the combinations," he said. "Our goal was to run the championship over three days, like at major events, to see how the horses behave. We saw some great things, and some pressure too, since the first two kept switching places. Alexandre was looking at Bertrand, Bertrand was looking at him… I found that quite nice. Today, Alexandre presented the test we asked of him, without risk, by riding his new mare forward. Bertrand showed great riding, his horse is a good horse."

Commenting on the general level of the field, Morel said, "Everyone rode much better today with lighter horses. It was a very good thing for the riders but also for the federal staff, that everyone was there at the French championship. (…) The weekend was instructive for everyone. Now we will get to work to maintain our place at the world level."

Results – 2025 French Grand Prix Championships – Vierzon

  1. Alexandre Ayache – Ruling Olivia – 68.761 67.255 74.105 — 210.121
  2. Bertrand Liegard – Ginger – 66.891 69.277 73.370 — 209.538
  3. Alizee Roussel – Bel Amour – 65.587 65.936 72.775 — 204.298
  4. Caroline Godin – Querida De Hus – 65.239 65.298 69.030 — 199.567
  5. Bernard Bosseaux – Rilkadora Z – 65.369 65.723 67.710 — 198.802
  6. Lena Thouvenin – Diamondgio Lth – 64.478 63.745 67.200 — 195.423
  7. Mateo Barsotti – Mystery Boy – 63.283 62.532 67.605 — 193.420
  8. Lana Portejoie – Last Minute – 62.630 63.596 66.180 — 192.406
  9. Jean Philippe Siat – Lovesong – 64.413 61.745 66.025 — 192.183
  10. Marc Boblet – Jordan P – 60.413 64.872 — 125.285
  11. Evelyne Fleck – Domino De Merlieux – 61.043 63.596 — 124.639
  12. Eva Pagnotta – Fantastic Filomena – 61.696 61.511 — 123.207
  13. Jean Charles Perrier – Archibald Haddock – 60.739 61.383 — 122.122
  14. Annabel Delsert – Jackpot P – 60.739 61.298 — 122.037
  15. Livia Gallego – Calypso De Massa – 58.935 60.383 — 119.318
  16. Victoria Saint Cast – El Quaterback Du Coussoul – 57.696 — 57.696
    Anne Sophie Serre – Jibraltar De Massa – Withdrawn
    Arnaud Serre – Dollar Dream – Withdrawn
    Pauline Guillem – Lucky Gold – Withdrawn

Alexandre Ayache clinched his first national title at the 2025 French Championships for senior dressage riders held in Vierzon, France, from May 29 to June 1. The event, which took place a month earlier than usual, featured a competitive format with 25 riders in the Grand Prix, 23 in the Special, and 9 in the freestyle. Notably, several prominent riders, including the previous champion Pauline Basquin and Olympians, were absent, while title defender Pierre Volla won the medium tour.

Ayache rode his 11-year-old Oldenburg mare, Ruling Olivia, to victory, achieving scores of 68.761% in the Grand Prix, 67.255% in the Special, and 74.105% in the freestyle. Despite expressing frustration over a mistake in the Special, he praised Olivia’s performance and their journey together, highlighting the special bond they share since she was three years old.

The silver medal went to Bertrand Liegard on Ginger, while Alizee Roussel took bronze aboard Bel Amour. French team selector Jean Morel expressed satisfaction with the championship’s competitive atmosphere, noting the riders’ performances and the opportunity to evaluate their horses under pressure, which will aid in maintaining France’s standing in the equestrian world.

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Title: Dutch Youth Riders Shine at 2025 Championships in Exloo

Pony rider Esmae Niessen, Children rider Floor Kulik, junior rider Dominique van Dalsen, young rider Yasmin Westerink, and Under 25 rider Kris de Vries became the winners of the 2025 Dutch Youth Riders Championships, which were held for the first time during the CDI Exloo on 29 May – 1 June 2025.

The Dutch equestrian federation made a change this year to separate the Dutch Youth Championships from the senior championships in Ermelo. The Dutch Pony championships were always the odd one out and held at a totally different event, so for the first time all youth divisions were brought under the "roof." The CDI competition in Exloo served as the national Championships as well as a team selection trial for this summer’s European Youth Championships.

Pony Riders: Esmae Niessen
In a tight duel with Britt Kikkert-van der Linde, the 15-year-old Esmae Niessen captured the Dutch Pony Champion’s title thanks to the lead she built up by winning the team championship test in the first round. Aboard the 11-year-old Danish bred Strandgaards Do It My Way (by Dr. Doolittle x Bonansa), she won the first round with 72.000%, placed second in the individual test with 72.207%, and was fourth in the Kur with 74.142%. Her overall totals were the highest for gold.

Niessen is familiar with the highest step of the podium. In 2023, she won the Dutch Children Championship on Dadona Diva. Last year she was a bronze medalist at the 2024 Dutch Pony Championships aboard Le Formidable (by Champion de Luxe x Manfred), who is now showing under Annabel de Bock. Esmae has been competing Do It My Way since 2023. She took over the ride from Danish Smila Seneca Raahede.

The silver went to Britt Kikkert-van der Linde aboard the 18-year-old German Riding pony Nur Für Dich (by Nagano x Via Mala). She was third in round 1 (71.095%), fourth in round 2 (70.630%), and won the Kur (76.150%). Britt’s pony moved to The Netherlands after he had been posted for sale on Eurodressage’s Equimarket.

Esmae’s elder sister Feline Niessen is in her last year on ponies and landed the bronze medal after taking silver last year. Aboard the 12-year-old German pony Diamond Blue (by FS Daddy Cool x FS Golden Moonlight), she scored 69.762%, 72.433%, and 74.208%. Last year’s champion, Isabella Karajkovic on First Hummer, was fourth this time.

Children: Floor Kulik
Floor Kulik, the bronze medal winner of the 2024 Dutch Children Championship on Dutch Dandy DJ, scored the gold medal this year aboard a new horse, Bella Rosa, a 20-year-old Hanoverian mare by Belissimo M x Hohenstein. The experienced mare was previously shown at international Under 25 level in 2014 by former Dutch young rider team member Robin Beekink, who quit international competition sport after May 2014. Kulik and Bella Rosa won the preliminary test with 80.697%, were second in the team test with 80.800%, and won the individual test with 81.852% for the National title.

"Wow wow wow, so proud of Bella," Kulik commented. "She went mega well all days. Dutch champion, I can’t believe it."

Bo Leijten and the 14-year-old Dutch mare Gentle van Wittenstein (by Wittenstein x Krack C) went from an 8th place in 2024 to silver this weekend. She was second twice and won the individual test with scores of 80.036%, 81.500%, and 80.551%. Kate van Lee and the 12-year-old Hanoverian Fernandell MS (by For Compliment x Londonderry) got bronze with 74.982%, 72.150%, and 73.023%.

Junior Riders: Dominique van Dalsen
At junior level, Dominique van Dalsen went on repeat and reclaimed her Dutch Junior Champion’s title of 2024. Aboard the 11-year-old KWPN gelding Just Johnson (by Johnson x Florencio), she won all three rounds with 72.879%, 72.353%, and 75.508%. Dominique is trained by Mark van de Donk.

"Truly can’t believe what happened the last few days. Is it even real?" said the two-time Dutch junior champion. "So incredibly proud of Johnny who always tries his heart out for me."

Britt Kikkert-van der Linde picked up her second medal of the weekend, riding the 11-year-old Jerenzo Texel (by Enzo Ferrari x Jazz) to silver with 71.162%, 67.059%, and 73.067%. Britt won the Dutch Children Championship on Jerenzo Texel last year.

Jessica Nesselaar and the 10-year-old KWPN bred Kiekeboe Odette B (by Feel Good x Ferro) were third in the team and individual test with 70.353% and 69.412%, but dropped to sixth place in the freestyle (70.700%). Her overall total was still good for bronze, a wonderful improvement from her 7th place at the 2024 Nationals.

Young Riders: Yasmin Westerink
In her first year at Young Riders level, Yasmin Westerink and the 13-year-old Oldenburg Amphitryon (by Ampere x Rosario) have been etching her place as the leading Dutch YR lady, winning the Championships with a 3% point advantage. They were second in the team test with 71.863% and in the individual test with 71.863%, but won the Kur on Sunday with 74.658% for gold. Westerink trains with Adelinde Cornelissen. Her horse Amphitryon was trained and competed up to small tour level by Dutch team rider Marieke van der Putten before selling to the Westerink family.

"Thank you Alfie," said Yasmin. "Can’t put in words of how proud I am of him. Never thought we would achieve this in our first season as a young rider."

Young professional Tessa Kole put the heat on with her two horses, Hexagon’s King Robert (by Capri Sonne Jr x Ri-ubiquil) as well as on the just 7-year-old Nachtwacht (by Everdale x Gribaldi), but dropped a stitch in the freestyle to lose gold for silver. With King Robert, she was third in the team test (71.324%), won the individual test (73.480%), but slid down the leaderboard to seventh place in the Kur (71.158%).

Micky Schelstraete and Carol Hweijan Lee’s 9-year-old Oldenburg mare Venicia OLD (by Vivaldi x Don Frederico) got the bronze with increasing scores each day of the competition. They posted 68.824% in the team test (5th), 70.539% in the individual (4th), and 72.192% in the Kur (6th).

Under 25: Kris de Vries
Eleven combinations contested the Under 25 division and 24-year-old Kris de Vries topped the overall leaderboard in a tough battle with Kim Noordijk.

De Vries and her 11-year-old KWPN gelding Jillz La Grande (by Charmeur x Come On) were third in the first round with 70.490%, fourth in the Short Grand Prix with 67.821%, but aced the freestyle with 76.630%, which put them first in the total ranking. Kris, who is a professional rider on her own and for her trainers Anky van Grunsven and Sjef Janssen, rode to Anky’s Tango music.

“I really came to Exloo without any expectations. Of course, I wanted to ride as well as possible, but I didn’t even expect a medal, let alone this. My horse was already going very well at home and we were really on the rise, but I never expected to win,” says De Vries who trains with Anky van Grunsven and Sjef Janssen. “Jillz is a really great horse. He always does his best and goes the extra mile in the test. He belongs to my uncle and aunt and I rode him as a young horse for a while and have been in a combination with him again since September. I am going to enjoy this now. I really came without expectations and therefore do not have a whole plan for what now, but I hope that I can ride in Rotterdam at the next observation competition. This is the first and also the last year that I will ride in the U25.”

Silver went to Kim Noordijk aboard the 11-year-old Joep (by Desperado x Ferro). She won the Inter II with a personal best of 70.931%, was second in the short Grand Prix with 68.761%. She went into the last round as the provisional leader, but her second place in the freestyle with 74.690% put her in the silver position. The bronze medal was for Quinty Vossers about the 12-year-old Inferno (by Everdale x Trento B). They posted 70.833%, 68.547%, and 72.210%.

Lara van Nek and double Olympic horse All at Once (by Ampere x Gribaldi) did not have the hoped-for Championship. After winning at the CDIO Compiegne, they launched themselves as hot favorites. However, in Exloo, they started out with a 5th place and personal best in the Inter II (69.265%), but they were eliminated from the short Grand Prix.

Results – 2025 Dutch Young Riders Championships – Exloo

Pony Riders

  1. Esmae Niessen – Strandgaards Do it my way – 72.000% – 72.207% – 74.142% — 218.349
  2. Britt Kikkert-van der Linde – Nur Fuer Dich – 71.095% – 70.630% – 76.150% — 217.875
  3. Feline Niessen – Diamond Blue – 69.762% – 72.433% – 74.208% — 216.403
  4. Isabella Karajkovic – First Hummer – 70.238 – 68.739% – 74.125% — 213.102
  5. Fabiënne Raijmakers – Wrong Is Right – 69.762% – 68.108% – 74.175% — 212.045
  6. Nika Verbeek – Brasil – 69.095% – 69.505% – 72.875% — 211.475
  7. Vanity Hus – Goldwinshoeve Vuego – 68.286% – 68.694% – 71.125% — 208.105
  8. Felyne Boschloo-Karsijns – Shakira – 68.428% – 68.198% – 70.842% — 207.468
  9. Annabell de Bock – Glückspilz WF – 66.619% – 70.135% – 69.900% — 206.654
  10. Jolien Duijts – Den Östrik’s Sjors – 66.667% – 69.279% – 70.658% — 206.604
  11. Bo Leijten – Heitholms Li Lou – 67.809% – 66.937% – 71.633% — 206.379
  12. Levi Heusinkveld – Tjiesto – 68.381% – 67.342% – 68.600% — 204.323
  13. Jaylee Mom – Showman – 64.953% – 68.018% – 68.342% — 201.313
  14. Jayda Vermeer – Rex – 64.857% – 63.468% – 68.258% — 196.583
  15. Ellen van Pinxteren – Duc De D’Arbanville – 61.286% – 66.306% – 67.008% — 194.600
  16. Annabell de Boc – Le Formidable – 69.238% – 69.414% – 0 — 138.652
  17. Sophie Ter Haar – Londen – 67.000% – 64.865% – 0 — 131.865

Children

  1. Floor Kulik – Bella Rosa – 80.697 – 80.800 – 81.825 — 243.349
  2. Bo Leijten – Gentle van Wittenstein V – 80.036 – 81.500 – 80.551 — 242.087
  3. Kate van Lee – Fernandell MS – 74.982 – 72.150 – 73.023 — 220.155
  4. Marin de Baat – Ladykiller Taonga – 69.197 – 78.050 – 70.556 — 217.803
  5. Annabel Conijn – Veldzicht Kenzo – 69.482 – 67.375 – 72.500 — 209.357
  6. Annelivia Kuijpers – Giorgio – 68.375 – 66.925 – 65.375 — 200.67
  7. Isa Sipkens – Jolly dolly GV – 64.982 – 66.300 – 68.898 — 200.180
  8. Megan van Vliet – Be Special – 63.643 – 69.625% – 62.477 — 195.745
  9. Kate van Lee – Happy Feet – 75.268 – 78.275 – 0 — 153.543
  10. Jolie Soijer – Orano – 66.590 – 65.950 – 0 — 132.540
  11. Veronique Philippus Ibiburga – 67.875 – 64.375 – 0 — 132.250
  12. Annelivia Kuijpers Jason – 64.197 – 64.550 – 0 —- 128.747

Junior Riders

  1. Dominique Van Dalsen – Just Johnson – 72.879% – 72.353% – 75.508% — 220.740
  2. Britt Kikkert-van der Linde – Jerenzo Texel – 71.162% – 67.059% – 73.067% — 211.288
  3. Jessica Nesselaar – Kiekeboe Odette B – 70.353% – 69.412% – 70.700% — 210.465
  4. Sofie Van Rooij – Juan Tango B – 68.485% – 69.265% – 72.617% — 210.367
  5. Mirthe Willig – Just Biantoes – 70.202% – 68.235% – 70.642% — 209.079
  6. Sterre De Boer – Key-West Texel – 66.818% – 68.137% – 70.617% — 205.572
  7. Lynne Van Erp – Lafanory – 68.586% – 69.804% – 66.475% — 204.865
  8. Roos Blaas – Hexagons Kaygo – 65.460% – 68.088% – 71.217% — 204.765
  9. Renske Boekhoud – Lord Lexington – 67.323% – 65.294% – 71.458% — 204.075
  10. Sanne Glissenaa – Turmalin – 64.949% – 65.147% – 67.817% — 197.913
  11. Jilles Timmers – Grease-Tosha – 63.232% – 64.559% – 69.367% — 197.158
  12. Sabrin Bouhtala – King STH – 65.354% – 62.304% – 67.108% — 194.766
  13. Jessica Nesselaar – Indigo – 68.131% – 68.529% – 0 — 136.660
  14. Lynne Van Erp – Montrachet – 67.020% – 65.686% – 0 — 132.706
  15. Sterre De Boer – Marava – 66.566% – 65.490% – 0 — 132.056

Young Riders

  1. Yasmin Westerink – Amphitryon OLD – 71.863% – 71.863% – 74.658% — 218.384
  2. Tessa Kole – Hexagon’s King Robert – 71.324% – 73.480% – 71.158% — 215.962
  3. Micky Schelstraete – Venicia OLD – 68.824% – 70.539% – 72.192% — 211.555
  4. Anniek van Dulst – My First Choice Dutopia – 68.333% – 69.559% – 72.917% — 210.809
  5. Esmee Boers – Montreux – 69.362% – 68.922% – 72.267% — 210.551
  6. Lara van Nek – Darabel – 65.637% – 69.902% – 72.283% — 207.822
  7. Morgan Walraven – Benecia – 65.147% – 68.627% – 72.900% — 206.674
  8. Sanne van der Pols – Sommerwolke J.M. – 68.333% – 66.765% – 70.100% — 205.198
  9. Mick Van der Kort – Mambo – 66.667% – 66.226% – 64.658% — 197.551
  10. Chantal Verdonk – Gregwaard – 63.284% – 65.098% – 68.950% — 197.332
  11. Tessa Kole – Nachtwacht – 73.137% – 71.127% – 0 — 144.264
  12. Micky Schelstraete – Manila Grace van de Osseweide – 67.255% – 67.843% – 0 — 135.098

Under 25

  1. Kris De Vries – Jillz La Grande – 70.490% – 67.821% – 76.630% — 214.941
  2. Kim Noordijk – Joep – 70.931% – 68.761% – 74.690% — 214.382
  3. Quinty Vossers – Inferno – 70.833% – 68.547% – 72.210% — 211.590
  4. Thalia Rockx – Golden Dancer de la Fazenda – 67.794% – 68.803% – 74.085% — 210.682
  5. Milou Dees – Francesco – 66.029% – 67.137% – 72.585% — 205.751
  6. Daphne van Peperstraten – Cupido – 67.500% – 67.180% – 69.270% — 203.950
  7. Lauren Neville – George – 66.324% – 66.752% – 65.855% — 198.931
  8. Thalia Rockx – Koko JR de la Fazenda – 69.902% – 64.872% — 134.774
  9. Eline Anker – Hey you – 64.069% – 64.658% — 128.727
  10. Daphne van Peperstraten – Hotmail V – 60.941% – 66.538% — 127.479
  11. Lara van Nek – All at Once – 69.265% – ELI — 69.265
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Title: Oregon City Equestrian Team Clinches First Place at State Championship

Content:

Oregon City High School equestrian team had another first-place showing at the OHSET State Championship.

During the meet, which was held May 8-11 at the Deschutes County Expo in Redmond, Oregon City swept the Large Team High Point for the fourth year in a row. The Pioneers scored a total of 440 points to take first overall, while Philomath earned second place with 302 points and Canby had 282 points to take third.

The meet included 100 high schools and over 500 athletes competing. Individually, junior Lilly Zuber won in the keyhole category for the third year in a row. She also won the high point for team contributor and reserve high point in timed events.

Those taking top honors in individual events included:

  • Callie Arnold: third working rancher
  • Ava Thomas: third saddleseat, sixth showmanship, seventh in hand trail
  • Lilly Zuber: third figure 8, sixth barrels
  • Chelsea Challenger: 13th keyhole
  • Aubrey Hubel: reserve state champion steer daubing, seventh pole bending
  • Evelyn Grzemkowski: third driving, sixth dressage
  • Mary Jolma: fourth driving
  • Josie Davis: fourth in hand trail, fifth driving
  • Harleigh O’Leary: seventh jumping, 15th figure 8
  • Chloie Strausbaugh: 13th saddleseat
  • Braelee Borden: 12th steer daubing

Top honors in team events included:

  • Reserve state champions team Canadian flags with a time of 34.945 seconds: Lillian Zuber, Callie Arnold, Braelee Borden, Evelyn Grzemkowski
  • Reserve state champions two man birangle with a time of 25.847 seconds: Lilly Zuber, Callie Arnold
  • Bronze medal freestyle drill: Braelee Borden, Sophia Carson, Esther Hoffmann-Miramontes, Evelyn Grzemkowski, Harleigh O’Leary, Chloie Strausbaugh
  • Bronze medal IHOR: Lilly Zuber, Josie Davis, Evelyn Grzemkowski, Mary Jolma
  • Fourth team versatility: Lilly Zuber, Callie Arnold, Ava Thomas, Mary Jolma

Next up will be the Pacific Northwest Invitational Championships June 20-22 in Redmond. The top Washington and top Oregon athletes will face off for the regional competition. Oregon City has 12 athletes qualified for the last meet of the season.

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