logo
Australian equestrian star and Olympian suspended

Australian equestrian star and Olympian suspended

Dressage rider and Olympian Heath Ryan has been suspended by Equestrian Australia after a video appearing to show him whipping a horse surfaced on social media.
In echoes of the incident that resulted in six-times Olympic medallist Charlotte Dujardin being barred from the Paris Games last year, the two-year-old video showed the horse being whipped repeatedly.
"Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage," the governing body said in a statement.
"Equestrian Australia has imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership (which) means they may take no part in competitions or events as competitor or Official or in the organisation of, or participation in, any event under (our) jurisdiction."
The 66-year-old rider will remain suspended until an investigation into the video is completed, Equestrian Australia added.
Ryan, who competed at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, released a lengthy statement on social media defending his actions, saying he had saved the six-year-old horse from being destroyed after it attacked its owner.
"The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced. This horse was dropped off at my place on his way to the knackery," he wrote.
"I felt obliged to the horse to just have a look and see if it was possibly salvageable ... and had never ridden anything like it. I am so sad this was caught on video."
Ryan said the video had been placed online by an "unhappy ex-employee" and posted another which he said showed the horse thriving in a new home.
"If you think I did that flippantly you are wrong. I hated reaching out in those moments to (it) and asking the hard questions," he added.
"All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission."
After last year's Dujardin ban, the global governing body for showjumping and dressage pledged it would be uncompromising in enforcing animal welfare.
"Equestrian Australia takes matters of animal welfare very seriously," the local governing body added in its statement.
Dressage rider and Olympian Heath Ryan has been suspended by Equestrian Australia after a video appearing to show him whipping a horse surfaced on social media.
In echoes of the incident that resulted in six-times Olympic medallist Charlotte Dujardin being barred from the Paris Games last year, the two-year-old video showed the horse being whipped repeatedly.
"Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage," the governing body said in a statement.
"Equestrian Australia has imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership (which) means they may take no part in competitions or events as competitor or Official or in the organisation of, or participation in, any event under (our) jurisdiction."
The 66-year-old rider will remain suspended until an investigation into the video is completed, Equestrian Australia added.
Ryan, who competed at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, released a lengthy statement on social media defending his actions, saying he had saved the six-year-old horse from being destroyed after it attacked its owner.
"The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced. This horse was dropped off at my place on his way to the knackery," he wrote.
"I felt obliged to the horse to just have a look and see if it was possibly salvageable ... and had never ridden anything like it. I am so sad this was caught on video."
Ryan said the video had been placed online by an "unhappy ex-employee" and posted another which he said showed the horse thriving in a new home.
"If you think I did that flippantly you are wrong. I hated reaching out in those moments to (it) and asking the hard questions," he added.
"All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission."
After last year's Dujardin ban, the global governing body for showjumping and dressage pledged it would be uncompromising in enforcing animal welfare.
"Equestrian Australia takes matters of animal welfare very seriously," the local governing body added in its statement.
Dressage rider and Olympian Heath Ryan has been suspended by Equestrian Australia after a video appearing to show him whipping a horse surfaced on social media.
In echoes of the incident that resulted in six-times Olympic medallist Charlotte Dujardin being barred from the Paris Games last year, the two-year-old video showed the horse being whipped repeatedly.
"Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage," the governing body said in a statement.
"Equestrian Australia has imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership (which) means they may take no part in competitions or events as competitor or Official or in the organisation of, or participation in, any event under (our) jurisdiction."
The 66-year-old rider will remain suspended until an investigation into the video is completed, Equestrian Australia added.
Ryan, who competed at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, released a lengthy statement on social media defending his actions, saying he had saved the six-year-old horse from being destroyed after it attacked its owner.
"The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced. This horse was dropped off at my place on his way to the knackery," he wrote.
"I felt obliged to the horse to just have a look and see if it was possibly salvageable ... and had never ridden anything like it. I am so sad this was caught on video."
Ryan said the video had been placed online by an "unhappy ex-employee" and posted another which he said showed the horse thriving in a new home.
"If you think I did that flippantly you are wrong. I hated reaching out in those moments to (it) and asking the hard questions," he added.
"All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission."
After last year's Dujardin ban, the global governing body for showjumping and dressage pledged it would be uncompromising in enforcing animal welfare.
"Equestrian Australia takes matters of animal welfare very seriously," the local governing body added in its statement.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation
Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation

The 10 rookies on Australia's swim team for the world titles are being urged to mine a golden generation's expertise while they can. Dolphins hierarchy have selected a 40-strong team for the world championships in Singapore starting July 27. The team was settled on Saturday night moments after Lani Pallister broke a 10-year-old Commonwealth record in the last race of the selection trials in Adelaide. Pallister won the women's 1500m freestyle in 15 minutes 39.14 seconds, one second inside the previous Commonwealth benchmark set by New Zealander Lauren Boyle in 2015. Pallister was the standout swimmer of the meet, also breaking Ariarne Titmus' Australian record in the 800m freestyle and dipping under four minutes for the first time to win the 400m free. "It has been a good week ... it has shown what I can do," Pallister said. Australia's team is book-ended in age by 16-year-old Sienna Toohey and 31-year-old Cam McEvoy, who will race at an astonishing seventh world championships. Toohey is among the Dolphins' debutants being told by Swimming Australia's head coach Rohan Taylor to pick the brains - and study the methods - of their battle-hardened teammates. Taylor was reluctant to compare the strength of the fresh Dolphins pod to previous teams. "All I can compare is the type of athlete we have on the team - they're just competitive," Taylor told AAP. "They hate losing more than they they like winning, I think. "There's just a certain character; we have got an abundance of them. "What you have with Kaylee (McKeown), Mollie (O'Callaghan), Kyle (Chalmers) is super-competitive and they're infectious to the team. "So while we have them, we want to grow the others to learn how to be like that." Taylor was impressed with how the emerging swimmers thrived under the stress of selection trials. "You can't create that kind of pressure and expectation on someone before it actually happens," he said. "There's one thing to see them progressing ... what is pleasing is the ability to actually deliver. That is really a skill and that's the skill we look for. "Now it's going to an international meet, can you repeat your performances? That is the next step for these guys." Other swimmers securing selection on Saturday night included Paris Olympic 50m freestyle silver medallist Meg Harris. The 23-year-old won the one-lap dash in 24.17 seconds after dropping out of the 100m free following a heat swim. "I did so well last year in the 50, I want to see if I have any more potential in that," Harris said. And Kyle Chalmers' stunning form continued by equalling his personal best in the 50m butterfly, winning in 22.89. Chalmers is unlikely to swim the event at the worlds given it's scheduled on the same day as the 4x100m freestyle relay. "I'm always going to put the team first before my individual races," Chalmers said. "I haven't done any butterfly training just yet so I'm excited to be able to go to that leading into the next Olympics." The 10 rookies on Australia's swim team for the world titles are being urged to mine a golden generation's expertise while they can. Dolphins hierarchy have selected a 40-strong team for the world championships in Singapore starting July 27. The team was settled on Saturday night moments after Lani Pallister broke a 10-year-old Commonwealth record in the last race of the selection trials in Adelaide. Pallister won the women's 1500m freestyle in 15 minutes 39.14 seconds, one second inside the previous Commonwealth benchmark set by New Zealander Lauren Boyle in 2015. Pallister was the standout swimmer of the meet, also breaking Ariarne Titmus' Australian record in the 800m freestyle and dipping under four minutes for the first time to win the 400m free. "It has been a good week ... it has shown what I can do," Pallister said. Australia's team is book-ended in age by 16-year-old Sienna Toohey and 31-year-old Cam McEvoy, who will race at an astonishing seventh world championships. Toohey is among the Dolphins' debutants being told by Swimming Australia's head coach Rohan Taylor to pick the brains - and study the methods - of their battle-hardened teammates. Taylor was reluctant to compare the strength of the fresh Dolphins pod to previous teams. "All I can compare is the type of athlete we have on the team - they're just competitive," Taylor told AAP. "They hate losing more than they they like winning, I think. "There's just a certain character; we have got an abundance of them. "What you have with Kaylee (McKeown), Mollie (O'Callaghan), Kyle (Chalmers) is super-competitive and they're infectious to the team. "So while we have them, we want to grow the others to learn how to be like that." Taylor was impressed with how the emerging swimmers thrived under the stress of selection trials. "You can't create that kind of pressure and expectation on someone before it actually happens," he said. "There's one thing to see them progressing ... what is pleasing is the ability to actually deliver. That is really a skill and that's the skill we look for. "Now it's going to an international meet, can you repeat your performances? That is the next step for these guys." Other swimmers securing selection on Saturday night included Paris Olympic 50m freestyle silver medallist Meg Harris. The 23-year-old won the one-lap dash in 24.17 seconds after dropping out of the 100m free following a heat swim. "I did so well last year in the 50, I want to see if I have any more potential in that," Harris said. And Kyle Chalmers' stunning form continued by equalling his personal best in the 50m butterfly, winning in 22.89. Chalmers is unlikely to swim the event at the worlds given it's scheduled on the same day as the 4x100m freestyle relay. "I'm always going to put the team first before my individual races," Chalmers said. "I haven't done any butterfly training just yet so I'm excited to be able to go to that leading into the next Olympics." The 10 rookies on Australia's swim team for the world titles are being urged to mine a golden generation's expertise while they can. Dolphins hierarchy have selected a 40-strong team for the world championships in Singapore starting July 27. The team was settled on Saturday night moments after Lani Pallister broke a 10-year-old Commonwealth record in the last race of the selection trials in Adelaide. Pallister won the women's 1500m freestyle in 15 minutes 39.14 seconds, one second inside the previous Commonwealth benchmark set by New Zealander Lauren Boyle in 2015. Pallister was the standout swimmer of the meet, also breaking Ariarne Titmus' Australian record in the 800m freestyle and dipping under four minutes for the first time to win the 400m free. "It has been a good week ... it has shown what I can do," Pallister said. Australia's team is book-ended in age by 16-year-old Sienna Toohey and 31-year-old Cam McEvoy, who will race at an astonishing seventh world championships. Toohey is among the Dolphins' debutants being told by Swimming Australia's head coach Rohan Taylor to pick the brains - and study the methods - of their battle-hardened teammates. Taylor was reluctant to compare the strength of the fresh Dolphins pod to previous teams. "All I can compare is the type of athlete we have on the team - they're just competitive," Taylor told AAP. "They hate losing more than they they like winning, I think. "There's just a certain character; we have got an abundance of them. "What you have with Kaylee (McKeown), Mollie (O'Callaghan), Kyle (Chalmers) is super-competitive and they're infectious to the team. "So while we have them, we want to grow the others to learn how to be like that." Taylor was impressed with how the emerging swimmers thrived under the stress of selection trials. "You can't create that kind of pressure and expectation on someone before it actually happens," he said. "There's one thing to see them progressing ... what is pleasing is the ability to actually deliver. That is really a skill and that's the skill we look for. "Now it's going to an international meet, can you repeat your performances? That is the next step for these guys." Other swimmers securing selection on Saturday night included Paris Olympic 50m freestyle silver medallist Meg Harris. The 23-year-old won the one-lap dash in 24.17 seconds after dropping out of the 100m free following a heat swim. "I did so well last year in the 50, I want to see if I have any more potential in that," Harris said. And Kyle Chalmers' stunning form continued by equalling his personal best in the 50m butterfly, winning in 22.89. Chalmers is unlikely to swim the event at the worlds given it's scheduled on the same day as the 4x100m freestyle relay. "I'm always going to put the team first before my individual races," Chalmers said. "I haven't done any butterfly training just yet so I'm excited to be able to go to that leading into the next Olympics."

Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships
Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships

Lani Pallister capped a breakout week at Australia's swimming trials in Adelaide with a fourth personal best, while Shayna Jack fell short of Dolphins selection on the final night of racing ahead of next month's world championships in Singapore. With Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus taking a break from the sport, Pallister emerged from the shadows with a coming-of-age campaign, having moved to train under Dean Boxall at St Peters Western earlier this year. After winning the 400m freestyle in a personal best and smashing the national record in the 800m, Pallister closed out her week with a dominant victory in the 1500m freestyle on Saturday night. Her time of 15:39.14 slashed 10 seconds off her previous best and broke the Commonwealth record held by New Zealand's Lauren Boyle. It marked a rare sweep of lifetime bests in the 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m freestyle. 'It's just nice getting a little bit of progress,' Pallister said on Channel Nine. 'It's one of those events where you can plateau for so long, but it's nice to have a big drop like that. I'm just really stoked with the week that I put together.' Jack, meanwhile, had another uncharacteristic night. The Olympic finalist finished fifth in the women's 50m freestyle, where Meg Harris (24.17 seconds) took top honours. It followed an eighth-place finish in the 100m freestyle earlier in the week. After the highs of Paris and an interrupted preparation, Jack knew she was underdone. But missing selection will still sting for someone who, until recently, was among the first picked.

Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships
Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships

The Age

time3 hours ago

  • The Age

Pallister shines as Jack misses Dolphins cut for world championships

Lani Pallister capped a breakout week at Australia's swimming trials in Adelaide with a fourth personal best, while Shayna Jack fell short of Dolphins selection on the final night of racing ahead of next month's world championships in Singapore. With Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus taking a break from the sport, Pallister emerged from the shadows with a coming-of-age campaign, having moved to train under Dean Boxall at St Peters Western earlier this year. After winning the 400m freestyle in a personal best and smashing the national record in the 800m, Pallister closed out her week with a dominant victory in the 1500m freestyle on Saturday night. Her time of 15:39.14 slashed 10 seconds off her previous best and broke the Commonwealth record held by New Zealand's Lauren Boyle. It marked a rare sweep of lifetime bests in the 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m freestyle. 'It's just nice getting a little bit of progress,' Pallister said on Channel Nine. 'It's one of those events where you can plateau for so long, but it's nice to have a big drop like that. I'm just really stoked with the week that I put together.' Jack, meanwhile, had another uncharacteristic night. The Olympic finalist finished fifth in the women's 50m freestyle, where Meg Harris (24.17 seconds) took top honours. It followed an eighth-place finish in the 100m freestyle earlier in the week. After the highs of Paris and an interrupted preparation, Jack knew she was underdone. But missing selection will still sting for someone who, until recently, was among the first picked.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store