Belgium’s Philippe Le Jeune won the thrilling Rolex Final Four to claim the Jumping World title at the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games™ in Kentucky, USA tonight.  The 50 year old rider was not the favourite going into the competition.  He would have to see off the efforts of the reigning individual Olympic gold medallist Eric Lamaze from Canada, former World and Olympic champion Rodrigo Pessoa from Brazil and the exciting new talent of Abdullah Al Sharbatly from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia who, despite his relative inexperience, scooped silver tonight ahead of Lamaze who took bronze.

But in the end the quiet horsemanship skills of a man whose life is totally devoted to his horses won the day.  It has been said that the best thing you can do on a strange horse is as little as possible, and his ability to allow four of the greatest jumpers in the world to do what they do best, with minimal interference, clinched the supreme accolade.  “I had no difficult moments with any of them,” he said afterwards reflecting on the rides on his rival’s mounts. “I decided to go their way and not to try and make them go my way, and it paid off”.

SURPRISE
Al Sharbatly’s presence in the individual medal-decider took many by surprise, but his short six-week partnership with the fabulous former Italian team horse Seldana di Campalto has instantly blossomed and the mare never put a foot wrong prior to today’s final test.  First into the ring tonight however as the riders kicked off on their own horses, the 27 year old rider gave her what seemed a nervous ride and the final two elements of the last fence on the track, the triple combination, hit the floor for eight faults.  There was a gasp of surprise when Pessoa’s Rebozzo hit the vertical at fence three in an otherwise perfect tour of the eight-fence course, but both Le Jeune and his big, handsome stallion Vigo d’Arsouilles and Lamaze with his Olympic ride Hickstead, kept a clean sheet in this first phase.

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