
Olympian Heath Ryan suspended by Equestrian Australia for allegedly whipping horse
Australian Olympian, Heath Ryan, has been suspended from national and international equestrian competition after a video emerged that appears to show him repeatedly striking a horse with a whip.
Ryan, who represented Australia in dressage at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, acknowledged the video in a post on his Facebook page on Thursday. The 66-year-old defended the incident in his statement as part of a 'rescue mission' in rehabilitating a problem horse.
'The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced,' Ryan said, going on to add that the six-year-old horse, Nico, had been 'dropped off at my place on his way to the knackery' after his former rider had an accident on the horse which resulted in them going to intensive care.
Ryan said the incident was filmed two years ago and added that he '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. 'If I had been thinking of myself I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the knackery. That video was a life or death moment for Nico and of that I was very aware. I felt I genuinely had to try my very hardest to see if Nico would consider other options.'
Ryan said the video was from that first ride, and that over the next few rides Nico 'started to go without the use of excessive driving aids'. The horse was then sold to another Grand Prix dressage rider.
'All of this transpired sincerely with the horse's best interests the sole consideration,' Ryan said. 'Unbelievably it was so successful for everyone except me with the release of this video.
'What can I say. If you think I did that flippantly you are wrong. I hated reaching out in those moments to Nico and asking the hard questions. That was the last place I wanted to be. I have never before ridden a horse that reacted like that and I certainly will never do it again. Was it worth it?? Well not for me however I am very happy for Nico… All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission.'
Ryan was suspended from Equestrian Australia, the national governing body, on Thursday, after it received a formal complaint. The suspension was mirrored by the international sporting organisation, the FEI.
Equestrian Australia said that it was 'extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage'.
Sign up to Australia Sport
Get a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports desk
after newsletter promotion
'Equestrian Australia is aware of footage posted on social media showing a person repeatedly whipping a horse,' it said. 'The person depicted in the video is a member of Equestrian Australia.'
The governing body said a provisional suspension had been imposed pending an investigation by its integrity unit. It also denied claims it had requested the footage be taken down.
'Equestrian Australian takes matters of animal welfare very seriously,' it said.
The suspension comes as the international dressage world is still trying to restore its social licence following another horse whipping scandal involving Great Britain's three-time Olympic champion Charlotte Dujardin, who received a one-year suspension from international competition after video of her whipping a horse was released on the eve of the 2024 Paris Games.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South Wales Guardian
an hour ago
- South Wales Guardian
Charles Leclerc crashes out of Canada first practice as Max Verstappen sets pace
Verstappen, who is a point away from a one-race ban following his collision with Mercedes' George Russell at the recent Spanish Grand Prix, ended the session just 0.039 seconds clear of Williams driver Alex Albon. Carlos Sainz finished third in the other Williams with Russell fourth and Lewis Hamilton fifth. Lando Norris was only seventh while his McLaren team-mate and championship leader Oscar Piastri finished down the order in 14th. 🔴 RED FLAG 🔴 Leclerc into the barriers. He's okay#F1 #CanadianGP — Formula 1 (@F1) June 13, 2025 Verstappen, who heads into this weekend's race 49 points behind Piastri in the standings, produced the quickest time in the opening action of the weekend at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve to lay down an early marker. But Leclerc's preparations for the 10th round of the campaign were dealt a blow when he suffered a heavy accident with just nine laps on the board. The Monegasque crashed into the barrier on the entry to turn four and sustained significant damage to the left-hand side of his Ferrari. The force of the impact sent him sideways and across the other side of the chicane. 'F***,' said Leclerc on the radio. 'Sorry, I am in the wall. My bad. I should have gone straight but I thought I would make the corner and I hit the wall.' Leclerc's Ferrari mechanics will now face a race against time to ensure his car is ready for the concluding practice session of the day which begins at 17:00 local time (22:00 BST). The session was red-flagged for eight minutes as Leclerc's stricken Ferrari was retrieved and repairs to the barriers were completed. As Verstappen launched his Red Bull to the top of the order, Norris appeared to be struggling with the handling of his McLaren and finished 0.458 seconds behind the Dutchman. Piastri, who has won five of the nine rounds so far and leads Norris by 10 points, was even further back, one second off Verstappen's pace. The British team were experimenting with a new front wing and will be expected to improve in the day's second session.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Australia on the ropes in World Test Championship final after Smith injury, Markram ton
Australia 's golden run in global finals is all but over as South Africa close in on a landmark World Test Championship title at Lord's. In a dramatic decider that's had multiple twists a day, a brilliant Aiden Markram century, in an unbroken 143-run stand with hobbling captain Temba Bavuma (65no), means South Africa need just 69 runs with eight wickets in hand on Saturday to seal a famous victory. Set 282 to win, the Proteas piled on 0-119 in the final session on Friday to be 2-213 - already the highest total of the match - by stumps on day three. The first two days were dominated by bowlers as 28 wickets tumbled, but the pitch flattened out during glorious sunny weather in London. Australia's last defeat in an ICC final came back in 2010 when they lost to England in the T20 World Cup decider. Since then, Australia have won two ODI World Cups (2015 and 2023), a T20 trophy, and the 2023 WTC decider against India at The Oval. Since the first World Cup back in 1975, Australia's record in global finals is 8-3. 'We understand the magnitude of the task,' Australia assistant coach Daniel Vettori said, refusing to give up on the seeming 'mission impossible'. 'But it is a task that the group has probably done at times throughout the last three, four, some of them, five, six, even longer years. 'There's an appreciation of how well Bavuma and Markram have batted to put all that pressure back on us. 'To get one of them (before stumps) may have given us that optimism. 'It's going to be a real challenge on Saturday.' Markram's eighth Test century - and only his second outside of South Africa - has him poised to become a true Proteas hero. It would be fitting if Markram (102 no) could lead them to the glory, having captained the Proteas' first under-19 World Cup win in 2014. South Africa's one and only senior ICC title came back in 1998 when they lifted the Champions Trophy. Since then, they have endured numerous painful misses in the latter stages of ODI and T20 World Cups, often against Australia. But the trajectory of this WTC final changed once Smith put down Bavuma when the Proteas skipper was on just two. Wearing a helmet while standing closer in slips than normal, the former Australia captain put down a regulation chance off Mitchell Starc that would have had South Africa at 3-76. Smith immediately left the field in agony, later revealed to be a compound fracture of the little finger on his right hand. The 36-year-old will take no further part in the match and is in serious doubt to play in Australia's upcoming three-Test tour of the West Indies. If South Africa create history, it would equal the second-highest successful chase in a Test at Lord's, tied with England's 282 against New Zealand back in 2004. In 1984, West Indies, in their pomp, successfully chased 342 for the loss of just one wicket against England at the famous ground. Bavuma, who had the pro-South African crowd singing his name, has battled a hamstring injury he suffered when sprinting for a quick single. The 35-year-old received medical attention before and during the tea interval, with the captain even considering not returning after the break, but he batted on while limping as he ran between the wickets. Evergreen quick Starc (2-53) has claimed both of South Africa's second-innings scalps, backing up an important knock on Friday morning. Starting day three of their second innings 8-144, Australia's lower-order lasted 119 minutes and added another 78 in a sign of how much easier batting had become. No.11 Josh Hazlewood (17) hung in there for 53 balls and was the last player out on the stroke of lunch. Starc (58no), batting at No.9, finished as Australia's top-scorer of the innings ahead of wicketkeeper Alex Carey (43). He faced more balls (136) than any other Australia batter during an innings in this Test, even more than Steve Smith's 112 for his 66 on day one. Star Proteas quick Kagiso Rabada (4-59) finished with match figures of 9-110 after he destroyed Australia with 5-51 in the first innings to put his name on the Lord's honour board for a second time. 'It would have been nice to get a 10-for, but I'd rather a win than a 10-for,' Rabada said at lunch. It appears as if he'll get his wish.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Temba Bavuma on the brink of his own Siya Kolisi moment
For years, Temba Bavuma's credentials to play Test cricket were attacked. He was accused of owing his place to the colour of his skin. Now, he stands on the cusp of becoming one of the most significant cricketers in South African history. In the closing stages of day three, chants of 'Oh, Temba Bavuma' filled Lord's. On one level, these were a celebration of what South Africa's captain has already achieved this Test, following up a first-innings 36 – when only one team-mate passed 16 – with a half century, in defiance of a hamstring injury. But, really, the chants were those of delirious anticipation about what lies ahead. On day four at Lord's, South Africa will need 68 more runs, with eight wickets remaining, to topple Australia and win the 2025 World Test Championship. For Bavuma, this would be a moment of ultimate vindication. Should he lift the Test Championship, it will be Bavuma's very own Siya Kolisi moment: a black captain lifting a world title for the Rainbow Nation. But while Kolisi's triumphs have come with a team already acclaimed as one of the world's elite, Bavuma's would come with a side who have repeatedly been disparaged. To many, the contrast in height between the two captains at the toss – Pat Cummins standing at 6ft 3in, towering a full foot above Bavuma – embodied the contrast between their sides. If South Africa's schedule was gentler than some rivals in the 2023-25 Test Championship cycle, they still earned qualification for the final by winning seven consecutive Tests. Defeating Australia, the gold standard for the bulk of Test history, would bring catharsis for the Proteas, after their traumatic history in knockout matches. Victory would be all the sweeter after South Africa faced a first-innings deficit of 74 runs and then a target of 282 to win. Thanks to Bavuma's enterprise and a sparkling century from Aiden Markram, marked by pristine driving, that total is now in sight. MAGNIFICENT MARKRAM! 🌟 100 up in the WTC final day 3 🏏 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) June 13, 2025 By the time the pair walked off at the close of day three, they had added an unbroken 143 runs at 3.7 runs an over. On a pitch playing far truer than on the opening two days, Australia were reduced to deploying Beau Webster's medium pace with the wicketkeeper standing up to the stumps. From township to country's first black centurion Perhaps it is worth recalling Bavuma's journey to this point. Bavuma grew up in Langa, a township just outside Cape Town, playing street cricket incessantly. His talent then led to him earning a scholarship at one of South Africa's elite schools, the traditional pathway for players into the professional game. 'There were always doubts,' Bavuma recalled recently. 'Am I good enough to be here? Do I deserve this opportunity? I always felt the need to prove myself.' This need remained when Bavuma broke into South African professional cricket, and then the international team. Since readmission, black Africans have made a sterling contribution to South Africa's Test bowling. But black Africans have struggled to establish themselves as top-order batsmen in first-class, never mind the international game. Socio-economic advantages – kit, pitches and sheer practice – are more significant for developing batsmen than bowlers. And so when Bavuma made his Test debut, in 2014, he was tasked with making history. Against England at Cape Town in 2016, 127 years after South Africa's first Test, Bavuma became the first black African to score a century for the country. The moment was heralded as a catalyst for change. Yet it would be another seven years until South Africa's second century by a black African batsman, once again by Bavuma. While black Africans have contributed 39 five-wicket hauls for South Africa since readmission, they have only scored five Test centuries, four from Bavuma's own bat. None has been as significant for his side as Bavuma's undefeated 65 in the World Test Championship final. The innings was forged from skittish beginnings. On two, Bavuma almost played on against Nathan Lyon. Before making another run, Bavuma edged Mitchell Starc firmly to Steve Smith. South Africa should have been 76 for three. Instead, their third-wicket pair remained, and Smith dislocated his little finger, which leaves him a major doubt for Australia's looming tour of the West Indies. From bad to worse for Steve Smith! 🫣 He is forced off with a dislocated finger after dropping a catch 🤕 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) June 13, 2025 Two overs later, Bavuma hurtled through to complete a single for Markram. In the process, he injured his left hamstring – needing treatment on the field, and then further medical assistance at tea. Normally renowned as one of his side's fastest runners, now Bavuma was reduced to grimacing when running between the wickets. Yet he defied his pain to continue to run twos, as Australia spread the field to cut off the supply of boundaries. Bavuma's early jitters were replaced by clinical control: picking the gaps square of the wicket against seam, and slog-sweeping Nathan Lyon and part-timer Travis Head alike. While Markram's century was sumptuous, Bavuma's contribution showed his own understated qualities as a Test batsman. In 25 Tests since his recall in 2020, Bavuma now averages 49.9. Most importantly, South Africa have won eight, and lost none, of Bavuma's nine completed Tests as captain. Should he secure a ninth Test victory as captain, it would complete Bavuma's remarkable ascent: from the Langa township to holding the World Test Championship mace aloft at Lord's.