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EQUINETOURISM - WORLDWIDE - 2012 Olympics - London 2012 Olympic Games



The London 2012 Olympics - Equestrian Sports

In 2012 London will host the Olympic Games for the third time. Equestrian Sports will be held in Greenwich Park. This section will carry news, updates and information about the London 2012 Olympic Games and promote Equine Tourism for the UK up to, throughout and following the event. Equestrianism is one of the most popular leisure activities in the UK.

Olympic update on equestrian sports from London 2012
Equestrian stars tour the Greenwich Park Olympic Equestrian Course.

CLICK HERE for the London 2012 Video: http://www.london2012.com/videos/2009/equestrian-stars-tour-greenwich-park.php
Equestrian Timetable for London 2012:

DRESSAGE
Venue: Greenwich Park
Dates: Thursday 2 August – Wednesday 8 August
Gold medals up for grabs: 2
Athletes: 50

EVENTING
Venue: Greenwich Park
Dates: Saturday 28 July – Tuesday 31 July
Gold medals up for grabs: 2
Athletes: 75

JUMPING
Venue: Greenwich Park
Dates: Saturday 4 – Thursday 9 August
Gold medals up for grabs: 2
Athletes: 75


APPLYING FOR TICKETS for The London 2012 Olympics
To register your interest, visit this link:
http://www.tickets.london2012.com/

Ticket prices start from £20 rising to around £150 for show jumping tickets.

The Equestrian Timetable for London 2012:
The London 2012 Olympic equestrian timetable has been announced by the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG). London 2012 is the 100th anniversary of Olympic equestrian sport.

The Olympic Opening Ceremony takes place on 27 July and will be followed by 12 days of equestrian competition, with the world’s best athletes competing for six gold medals in the Olympic disciplines of eventing, dressage and show jumping. The equestrian events all take place at the Greenwich Park venue.

Eventing opens the Olympic equestrian events on 28 July with two days of dressage, followed by cross-country on 30 July and two rounds of show jumping on 31 July to decide the team and individual medals. Dressage as an individual sport starts on 2 August with two days of Grand Prix competition, which forms the first qualifier for both the team and individual. The top seven teams and 11 best-placed individuals go forward to the Grand Prix special on 7 August, which will decide the team medals. The freestyle to music to decide the individual medals takes place on 9 August. The first qualifier show jumping as an individual sport will be on 4 August. The two-round team decider is on 5 and 6 August. Team medals will be presented on 6 August. The two rounds of show jumping to decide the individual champion will be held on 8 August.

LONDON 2012 OLYMPIC GAMES EQUESTRIAN EVENTS TIMETABLE
27 Jul Opening Ceremony
28 Jul Eventing – Individual and team Dressage
29 Jul Eventing – Individual and team Dressage
30 Jul Eventing – Individual and team Cross Country
31 Jul Eventing – Jumping 1st round individual qualifier and team final 2nd round individual final

02 Aug Dressage – Individual and team Grand Prix 1st qualifier
03 Aug Dressage – Individual and team Grand Prix 1st qualifier
04 Aug Jumping – 1st qualifier
05 Aug Jumping – individual 2nd qualifier and team 1st round
06 Aug Jumping – individual 3rd qualifier and 2nd round team final
07 Aug Dressage – Grand Prix special 2nd individual qualifier and team final
08 Aug Jumping - individual round A and individual round B final
09 Aug Dressage - freestyle individual final
12 Aug closing ceremony

Sources: London 2012 and http://jump-mail.blogspot.com/2011/02/london-2012-equestrian-timetable.html

Source: http://www.london2012.com
The history of Equestrian sport dates back over 2,000 years, to when the Greeks introduced Dressage training to prepare their horses for war.

It continued to develop as a military exercise through the Middle Ages, with the Three Day Event - which includes Dressage, Cross Country and Show Jumping tests - designed to reflect the range of challenges horses faced in the army. In its modern form, Equestrian owes much to its inclusion in the Olympic Games, which led to the creation of the Fédération Equestre Internationale (FEI) in 1921. Through its development of international competitions, the FEI has helped to spread the popularity of horse sport outside its traditional army base.

How to play – and win
Equestrian is the only Olympic sport in which men and women compete against each other on equal terms. It is also the only one in which humans and animals compete together. In each of the three Equestrian events – Dressage, Jumping and Eventing – the aim is to create a harmonious partnership between horse and rider.

Dressage
Dressage tests take place in a 60m x 20m ‘all-weather’ (sand-based) arena.
Two competitions run at the same time - the Team medals are decided in one round and the Individual medals over three rounds.
In each round the riders have to perform a Dressage Test, made up of a series of movements to be performed by the horse.
The movements are set in a compulsory order for the first two rounds but, for the third and final round, the rider chooses what he or she will show the judges, and the programme is set to music.
Horse and rider are marked by five judges who will be looking for accuracy of movement, calmness, suppleness and flexibility.

Jumping
Jumping (known as ‘Show Jumping’ in the United Kingdom) takes place in an arena, around a course of approximately 15 fences. Jumping courses are now highly technical, requiring boldness, scope, power, accuracy and control from both horse and rider. The fences are designed so that if the horse hits them as they jump them, part or all of the fence will knock down and the rider will be penalised with ‘faults’. Faults are also awarded if the rider does not complete the course within a set time. The winner is the rider with the fewest faults; if there is a tie, the result is decided by jumping a shortened course as fast as possible without knocking fences down (“against the clock”). The Team medal is decided over three rounds by four riders and the Individual medals over five rounds.

Eventing
The Eventing competition (formerly called the Three Day Event) takes place over four days. Days One and Two are Dressage, Day Three is Cross Country and Day four is Jumping.
The Dressage and Jumping phases are similar to the pure Dressage and Jumping competitions. In the Cross Country event, riders have to complete a course over natural terrain of between 6270m and 7410m. The course contains solid obstacles that test the nerve, boldness, scope and partnership of horse and rider; faults are awarded for run-outs, exceeding the specified time limit and falls of either horse or rider. The rider with the fewest penalties at the end of the competition is the winner, with the Team Medals decided by the best three scores from each nation.

Equestrian at the Games
Equestrian has been part of the Olympic programme since Stockholm 1912, when 62 competitors from ten nations with 70 horses were involved. To begin with, only military officers were allowed to enter the Eventing competition; Dressage and Show Jumping were open to all, but few civilians took part. This changed at the Helsinki 1952 Games - when women also took part for the first time. Today, Equestrian medallists come from a wide range of backgrounds and countries.

Facts about Equestrian
At the Olympic Games, horses must be the same nationality as their riders, and each horse must be at least seven years old.
At Helsinki 1952, Denmark’s Lis Hartel won silver in Dressage, even though her legs were paralysed from polio eight years earlier.
At Rome 1960, Australia’s Bill Roycroft broke his neck in the Cross Country phase of the Team Eventing competition. Knowing that his team could not win the gold unless he continued, he discharged himself from hospital the next day to complete his Show jumping round and help Australia become Olympic champions.
HRH Princess Anne, the daughter of HM Queen Elizabeth II, was a member of the GB Eventing team at the Montreal 1976 Games. Her own daughter, Zara, became European Eventing Champion in 2005, World Eventing Champion in 2006, and hopes to compete at the Beijing 2008 and London 2012 Games.

Jargon buster
Fault: A set number of penalty points for making a mistake.
Schooling area: The warm-up area outside a Show Jumping ring.
Run-out: When a horse gets out of the rider’s control and runs around a fence instead of jumping it.
Half Pass: A forward and sideways Dressage movement where the horse crosses its legs as it moves sideways.
Gallop: The fastest movement of a horse - equivalent to running.

Source: http://www.london2012.com

Ongoing plans to develop equestrian facilities for the London 2012 Olympics

For an update on plans to hold equestrian sports at Greenwich Park please visit:
http://www.london2012.com/news/consultations/greenwich-park.php

Greenwich Park
The London 2012 Organising Committee for the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) is proposing to use areas within Greenwich Park, the National Maritime Museum and the Old Royal Naval College to host Equestrian, Modern Pentathalon and Paralympic Equestrian events at the Games.

Source: http://www.london2012.com

Olympic Tickets 2012 - Information from London 2012 regarding ticket applications
From London 2012:
Successful ticket applicants will be contacted before 24 June.

Second chance sales
There will be another chance to apply for tickets – we are calling this ‘second chance sales’. If you have not been allocated any tickets in the initial process, you will have the first chance to apply for tickets. This will be followed by a further chance for those who were allocated some or all of their ticket requests. Second chance sales will include tickets for lots of great sport including Basketball, Beach Volleyball, Boxing, Canoe Sprint, Cycling (Women’s Mountain Bike), Football, Handball, Hockey, Taekwondo, Volleyball, Weightlifting and Wrestling. So there are plenty of other chances to be part of the greatest show on earth.

Card payments
Visa payments will only be taken for successful applications. If your card has been lost or stolen or there are any issues with collection of payment, we will contact you by 10 June 2011 to arrange an alternative Visa payment.

Cheque and postal order payments
If you are allocated any or all of the tickets you applied for and paid by cheque or postal orders, the full amount of your application will be banked. Applicants due refunds of more than £1,000 will receive their payment via bank transfer by 10 June 2011. Refunds due for all other amounts will be processed within five working days of funds clearing. If you are not allocated any tickets your cheque will be securely destroyed. If you paid by postal order, the full payment will be deposited and you will receive a letter explaining the refund collection process.

Be aware
During this time, please beware of bogus or unauthorised ticket websites claiming to be associated with the 2012 Games. London 2012 will never contact you directly to ask for personal or financial details in relation to your ticketing account, or ask you to reveal your ticketing account password.

Equine Tourism in the UK

For more information about Equine Tourism and equestrian activities in the UK please look at the following sections of www.equinetourism.co.uk - promoting equestrian activities and good horsemanship UK & worldwide:-

Horse Riding Holidays


Accommodation with Stables

Equestrian Centres

Equestrian Events & Shows Listings

Equine Directory

Horse & Pony Breeds

Area and Riding Information

For More information on London 2012

For further information on the London 2012 Olympic Games please visit: http://www.london2012.com

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