Equestrian at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Individual jumping

Individual jumping
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
Pierre Durand Jr. on Jappeloup (1991)
VenueSeoul Olympic Stadium
Date26 September–2 October
Competitors74 from 24 nations
Winning total1.25 faults
Medalists
Pierre Durand Jr.
 France
Greg Best
 United States
Karsten Huck
 West Germany

The individual show jumping at the 1988 Summer Olympics took place between 26 September and 2 October at the Seoul Olympic Stadium.[1] It featured a significant change to the competition format from prior years. The event was open to men and women. There were 74 competitors from 24 nations.[2] Each nation could have up to 4 riders, up from 3 in previous years (though only a maximum of 3 could advance to the final).[2] The event was won by Pierre Durand Jr. of France, the nation's first victory in individual jumping since 1964 and fourth overall—most of any nation, moving out of a tie with Italy at three. Silver went to Greg Best of the United States, with bronze to Karsten Huck of West Germany.

Background

This was the 18th appearance of the event, which had first been held at the 1900 Summer Olympics and has been held at every Summer Olympics at which equestrian sports have been featured (that is, excluding 1896, 1904, and 1908). It is the oldest event on the current programme, the only one that was held in 1900.[2] The team and individual events remained separated, as they had been starting in 1968.

Five of the top 10 riders from the 1984 Games returned: gold medalist Joseph Fargis of the United States, fourth-place finisher Mario Deslauriers of Canada, sixth-place finisher Luis Álvarez de Cervera of Spain, seventh-place finisher Frédéric Cottier of France, and tenth-place finisher Luis Astolfi of Spain. The field was considered open, with top riders (including 1986 World Champion Gail Greenough of Canada and 1987 World Cup winner Katharine Burdsall of the United States) not competing.[2]

Colombia and Liechtenstein each made their debut in the event. France competed for the 16th time, most of any nation.

Competition format

The competition underwent a significant format change, adding a two-round qualifying round before the two-round final. The course was 770 metres long, with jumps up to 1.60 metres high, a 2.00 metre oxer, and a 4.60 metre water jump.

In the qualifying round, each pair performed in two rounds. There was no elimination between the two rounds of the qualifying. Positive scoring, rather than the fault system, was used for the qualifying round. The total score for the two rounds in qualifying was used to determined advancement to the final. A maximum of 50% of the pairs could advance (37 of the 74 starters), with each nation limited to three riders advancing.

The final also consisted of two rounds. This time, however, there was a cut between the two rounds; only the top 20 advanced from the first round of the final to the second. Both rounds of the final used the typical fault system of scoring. The combined score for both rounds determined the placement. A jump-off would be used if necessary to break ties for medal positions; other ties would not be broken.[2]

Schedule

All times are Korea Standard Time adjusted for daylight savings (UTC+10)

Date Time Round
Monday, 26 September 198810:00Qualifying round 1
Qualifying round 2
Sunday, 2 October 19888:00Final round 1
Final round 2

Results

Bourdy (France), Brinkmann (West Germany), and Pyrah (Great Britain) did not advance due to the limit of three pairs per nation. Bourdy was tied for 8th in the qualifying round; Cottier and Durand had lower scores than him but advanced instead. Durand, 18th overall and 4th among French riders in qualifying, ran both rounds of the final without any jumping penalties and finished with a total of 1.25 faults from time to win the gold medal. Huck had led the first round of the final, with a completely clean run (0 faults) to Durand's 0.25 time faults, and went last in the second round of the final knowing that Durand had reached the 1.25 total. Huck nearly made the second round clean as well, but hit the next-to-last rail to receive 4 faults—tied with Best for second, who had had 4 in the first round but was clean in the second. In the jump-off, both Huck and Best had 4 faults again; the silver medal went to the American based on time in the jump-off.[2]

RankRiderHorseNationQualifyingFinalJump-off
Round 1Round 2Total Round 1Round 2Total FaultsTime
Pierre Durand Jr.Jappeloup France 59.5050.50110.00 0.251.001.25 N/A
Greg BestGem Twist United States 69.5063.50133.00 4.000.004.00 4.0045.70
Karsten HuckNepornuk 8 West Germany 48.0070.00118.00 0.004.004.00 4.0054.75
4Anne KursinskiStarman United States 69.5052.00121.50 4.004.008.00 N/A
David BroomeCountryman Great Britain 48.0041.0089.00 4.004.008.00
6Jaime AzcárragaChin Chin Mexico 58.0060.00118.00 4.004.258.25
7Jan TopsDoreen Netherlands 55.0045.00100.00 8.004.0012.00
Nick SkeltonApollo Great Britain 41.5056.0097.50 4.008.0012.00
Joe FargisMill Pearl United States 69.5063.50133.00 4.008.0012.00
Franke SloothaakWalzerkonig 19 West Germany 48.0056.00104.00 4.008.0012.00
Markus FuchsShandor II Switzerland 22.5045.0067.50 4.008.0012.00
Thomas FuchsDollar Girl Switzerland 63.5070.00133.50 4.008.0012.00
Jos LansinkFelix Netherlands 43.5072.00115.50 4.008.0012.00
14Joe TúriVital Great Britain 34.5063.5098.00 4.258.0012.25
15Ian MillarBig Ben Canada 69.5056.00125.50 0.7512.2513.00
16Rob EhrensSunrise Netherlands 69.5056.00125.50 8.008.0016.00
Michel RobertLa Fayette France 63.5073.50137.00 4.0012.0016.00
18Juan GarcíaTirol Spain 61.5029.0090.50 8.008.2516.25
19Dirk HafemeisterOrchidee 76 West Germany 69.5070.00139.50 4.0014.0018.00
20Jack DoyleHardly Ireland 30.5050.5081.00 8.0024.7532.75
21Lisa CarlsenKahlua Canada 69.5073.50143.00 4.00ELEL
22Gerry MullinsGlendalough Ireland 55.0027.0082.00 8.50Did not advance
Pedro SánchezNuit Des Tourelle Spain 59.5029.0088.50 8.50Did not advance
24Vitor TeixeiraGoing Brazil 46.0067.50113.50 8.75Did not advance
25André JohannpeterHeartbreaker Brazil 29.0039.0068.00 9.50Did not advance
26Jean-Claude Van GeenberghePiquet Belgium 69.5063.50133.00 12.00Did not advance
Mark ToddBago New Zealand 55.0033.0088.00 12.00Did not advance
28George SannaSchnaps Australia 37.0049.0086.00 13.25Did not advance
29Rodney BrownSlinky Australia 55.0040.0095.00 13.50Did not advance
30Mario DeslauriersBox Car Willie Canada 61.5056.00117.50 15.75Did not advance
31Frédéric CottierFlambeauc France 50.0061.00111.00 16.00Did not advance
32Philippe GuerdatLanciano II Switzerland 25.5048.0073.50 23.75Did not advance
33Manuel da CostaJalisco B Portugal 69.5025.0094.50 24.00Did not advance
Luis Álvarez de CerveraMirage Mexicain Spain 40.0033.0073.00 24.00Did not advance
35Boris BoorMonaco F Austria 41.5045.0086.50 24.75Did not advance
36Manuel TorresZalme Colombia 32.0035.5067.50 35.75Did not advance
37Hugo SimonGipsy Lady Austria 34.5066.00100.50 DNFDid not advance
38Hubert BourdyMorgat France 69.5056.00125.50 Did not advance
39Wolfgang BrinkmannPedro West Germany 39.0067.50106.50 Did not advance
40Malcolm PyrahAnglezarke Great Britain 52.0026.0078.00 Did not advance
41Wout-Jan van der SchansTreffer Netherlands 51.0015.0066.00 Did not advance
42Yoshihiro NakanoEl Lute Japan 34.5029.0063.50 Did not advance
43Luis AstolfiCoreven Steepers Spain 17.0045.0062.00 Did not advance
44Thomas BatlinerFoxstone Liechtenstein 45.0017.0062.00 Did not advance
45Kim Seung-hwanForever South Korea 30.5031.0061.50 Did not advance
46Anatoly TimoshenkoPinguin Soviet Union 18.0042.0060.00 Did not advance
Ove HansenSancerre Norway 38.0022.0060.00 Did not advance
48Maurice BeatsonJeferson Junior New Zealand 43.5016.0059.50 Did not advance
49John AndersonFarmer Canada 0.0056.0056.00 Did not advance
50Juan Carlos GarcíaBuenos Aires Colombia 12.0038.0050.00 Did not advance
51Shuichi TokiPurplex Japan 25.5023.0048.50 Did not advance
52Ryuzo OkunoChallenger No. 1 Japan 10.0037.0047.00 Did not advance
53Jeff McVeanWhisper Grey Australia 0.0045.0045.00 Did not advance
54Gerardo TazzerPeregrine Mexico 22.5021.0043.50 Did not advance
55Harvey WilsonCrosby New Zealand 22.5019.5042.00 Did not advance
56Lisa JacquinFor The Moment United States 16.0024.0040.00 Did not advance
57Nam Gwan-UOpal South Korea 3.0035.5038.50 Did not advance
58André Salah SakakiniTric Trac 2 Egypt 0.0033.0033.00 Did not advance
59Alberto CarmonaThe Dubliner Venezuela 11.0018.0029.00 Did not advance
60Takao SawaiMilkyway Japan 8.0019.5027.50 Did not advance
61Alejandro OrózcoEros Mexico 15.000.0015.00 Did not advance
62Mun Hyeon-jinAmadeus South Korea 0.0014.0014.00 Did not advance
63Mun Eun-jinMakmillion South Korea 9.000.009.00 Did not advance
64Gregory McDermottMr. Shrimpton Australia 55.00DNS Did not advance
65Alberto RiveraRey A Mexico 34.50DNS Did not advance
66Paulo StewartPlaton Brazil 27.50DNS Did not advance
67Walter GabathulerJogger Switzerland 22.50DNS Did not advance
68Paul DarraghFor Sure Ireland 19.50DNS Did not advance
John LedinghamKilcoltrim Ireland 19.50DNS Did not advance
70John CottleUps & Downs New Zealand 13.50DNS Did not advance
71Raimundas UdrakisDekoratsia Soviet Union 7.00DNS Did not advance
72Christina JohannpeterSociete Brazil 6.00DNS Did not advance
73Vyacheslav ChukanovZritel Soviet Union 5.00DNS Did not advance
74Sergejs ŠakurovsFinal Soviet Union 4.00DNS Did not advance

References

  1. Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Equestrianism at the 1988 Seoul Equestrian Games: Mixed Jumping, Individual". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  2. "Jumping, Individual, Open". Olympedia. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
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