Head in the games

7 min read

GROOMS’ LOGISTICS

Caring for elite horses is something a world-leading groom takes in their stride, but how do they tackle their day job when their charge is an Olympic competitor? Bethany Stone asks those all-important questions

TO most, a work trip entails an overnight stay in a Premier Inn attached to a conference centre on the outskirts of a town you wouldn’t otherwise visit. To the grooms of the world’s top riders, it can spell a trip to the Olympics.

If you would find yourself questioning your ability to function facing such a responsibility, we’d be there with you. But, testament to their skill and professionalism, grooms never break their stride at a World Championship. How do they do it? Experience and graft rank high, but teamwork, a sense of humour and unrivalled camaraderie are the core tenets.

Team spirit: Peder Fredricson’s groom Alva Svensson hugs Henrik von Eckermann

MANAGING EXPECTATIONS

AS Geoff Billington’s groom Jenny Ellis prepared to travel showjumper It’s Otto to Sydney in 2000, she recalls feeling nothing but dread.

“We’d heard from everyone that went to Atlanta in 1996 that we shouldn’t bother doing an Olympics,” she says. “They weren’t allowed alcohol in, it was Pictures by Peter Nixon, Alamy and FEI/Christophe Tanière too serious and intense. We thought that we were going to prison for six weeks, and didn’t like the idea!”

Jackie Potts with Vinci De La Vigne, ride of Japan’s Kazuma Tomoto, in Tokyo

Soon after arriving at the park, though, Jenny’s fears were quashed.

“I’d hidden two bottles of Scotch in Otto’s travel feed, hoping it wouldn’t be searched – but I didn’t need them!

“We couldn’t have had a better time – they put a tent up just by the stables full of whatever food we wanted and they put parties on for us.”

MAINTAINING ROUTINE

“GENERALLY, when you’re travelling, the aim is to have everything how it is at home,” explains Tilly Hughes, Laura Collett’s groom in Tokyo. With all the disciplines stabled on one yard at that Olympics, the grooms worked together to fashion a routine that suited everyone.

“We spoke to each other, checked what would work and agreed on a feed time so no horse was left out,” explains Francesca Gorni, who groomed there for Tom McEwen. “We’d all come to the yard at the same time to hand-walk and take the horses grazing together. We all became one big family, it was really lovely and a friendly atmosphere.”

For Jenny in 2000, keeping the showjumpers in top condition after such a mammoth trip was the fo