The Olympic Equestrian Review - London 2012 Olympics
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- Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
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An Olympic recap of the equestrian events taking place at Greenwich Park with competitors battling for the gold, silver and bronze medals at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
Equestrian sports featured on the Olympic programme of the Paris Games in 1900, with jumping events, and were then withdrawn until the 1912 Games in Stockholm. Since then, this sport has been on the Olympic programme with remarkable regularity.
Until 1948, only men competed in the events, as the riders had to be officers. This restriction was lifted in 1951, and, since the Helsinki Games in 1952, women have competed with men in the mixed events. They competed first in dressage, then gradually in the other equestrian events.
Find more about Equestrian sports (Dressage, Jumping and Eventing) at www.olympic.org..., www.olympic.org... and www.olympic.org...
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She’s definitely Princess Anne’s daughter
Like mother like daughter...❤❤
You could tell how proud Princess Anne was of her daughter.
One of the most beautiful Olympic venues!
1:16 Harry doesn't look too happy.
He was not the family member at the centre of attention that day, c'mon
So awesome 😎
i like charlotte dujardin well done charlotte dujardin
축하합니다.
Cool
Well I thought ladies were meant to ride side saddle !
The times have changed my dear. :)
why is she screaming? 1:34
Apparently it's to encourage the horse to get up in the air a bit more
I don't really get the horse events. Obviously they have to be fairly fit, but the horse is doing basically everything. Is it about the training?
specialpatrolgroup92 basically the rider has to tell the horse what to do. Like to lengthen or shorten a stride. It is very difficult to ride a horse as well. To stay in the saddle and fight inertia is also very difficult. The horse and rider do equal amounts of work. To the untrained eye it just seems like the horse is doing the work
@@stephaniefrances7447 well thank you for replying, because I really was a bit mystified :)
As someone else said, the rider is guiding the horse every step of the way. Yes, the horses are highly trained and extremely well bred, but it's still the rider's job to set them up to each jump, balance, correct, and guide them. It takes YEARS of training for both horse and rider.