Showing posts with label Equestrianism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equestrianism. Show all posts

6/28/12

Saudi showjumper Dalma Rushdi Malhas to miss Olympics

By Stephen Moss
Saudi Arabia allows women athletes to compete in London Games, but its likely representative won't come after horse injury

Saudi Dalma Rushdi Malhas
Dalma Rushdi Malhas on Flash Top Hat at the Youth Olympic Games in 2010. Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images
The 20-year-old showjumper who has been touted to become Saudi Arabia's first female competitor in the Olympic Games, will not be coming to London after all.
Under pressure from the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which insists that every country should field female athletes, the Saudi government announced on Sunday its willingness to let women athletes compete.
Dalma Rushdi Malhas, who won bronze in the Youth Olympic Games in Singapore in 2010, was seen as the country's most likely representative. But her mother, Arwa Mutabagani, told the Guardian she would not be able to compete because her horse, Caramell KS, was injured.
"Unfortunately her horse got injured, and there is no chance of her getting to the Olympics this time," said Mutabagani, herself a former showjumper. "You have to have the combination. It would be like a Formula One driver going to the track without their car." Caramell was bought from Sweden for a substantial sum at the end of last year to help Malhas's Olympic bid, but an injury to its back was diagnosed six weeks ago and it will not have recovered in time for the Games.
It would, in any case, have been premature for the IOC to pitch Malhas into Olympic competition. As the Youth Olympic Games, in which she won her bronze, was a relatively underpowered event, she had not reached the qualifying standard, so the IOC would have had to give her a wildcard. Such a manoeuvre, convenient though it would have been in ending the standoff between the Saudi authorities and the IOC, would have proved controversial, with other countries asking why Saudi competitors should receive special treatment.
The equestrian world governing body, the FEI, confirmed that Malhas would not be competing. "However, we understand that the IOC has a number of other female athletes from Saudi Arabia in other sports who are currently under consideration," said its secretary general Ingmar De Vos.
While ruling out her daughter's participation in London, Mutabagani – a key figure in the development of equestrianism in Saudi Arabia and the first female member of the country's Olympic committee – welcomed the Saudi decision to allow women to compete. "It gives an opportunity to women in the country who love sport," she said.
Mutabagani was not allowed to compete alongside men in domestic competition, so had to go abroad where she was registered as a Saudi rider, but never able to compete as part of an official team.
To further her daughter's career, she has spent much of the past decade in Italy, where her daughter trained, and now runs an equestrian centre in the French town of Chantilly.
She describes her daughter as "a talented rider and a fast learner" and says she hopes she will compete at a future Olympics. The Saudis are putting huge efforts into developing showjumping; the men's team is expected to perform well in London But their women – and Malhas is not the only female rider with potential – may have to wait until Rio in 2016 to clear this historic fence.

4/22/12

Omani female jockey eyes the big time

Rising up the ranks, she hopes to see female riders from Gulf countries make their mark in the Dubai World Cup
By M. Satya Narayan, Chief Sports Reporter

Azhar Al Wardi, Omani female jockey Abu Dhabi:
Oman's Azhar Al Wardi is hoping to break into big-time flat racing like her countrywoman Salima Al Taleei. Currently racing as an amateur in the Fegentri Cup and in the HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies World Championship (IFAHR), the 25-year-old has already scored some important wins and among one of her aims is to race on Dubai World Cup night. “ There are some very good lady jockeys in the Fegentri Cup riding as amateurs. In fact it gives us lady riders from the Gulf countries the belief that we can do very well in international races too. ” Azhar, who has taken part in flat races regularly in Oman, has also raced in Turkey, the Netherlands, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, and Australia. Her exploits in a fledgling career were acknowledged as the Oman lady jockey won the Best Jockey award in the newly-instituted HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Darley Awards. Azhar was in Abu Dhabi last week for the announcement of the HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies World Championship (IFAHR). In an exclusive interview with Gulf News, she said lady jockeys in the region were fast catching up with their counterparts from the rest of the world. Following are some excerpts from the interview:
Gulf News: Did you watch the Dubai World Cup race meeting? Azhar Al Wardi: Every year I watch it on TV but this year I was there and watched all the races live. I was so happy that lady jockeys were taking part in the Dubai World Cup meeting. It was great to see them compete against some of the best male jockeys and in one of the world's best set of races.
As a lady jockey yourself, how did you feel when you saw lady jockeys take part in the Dubai World Cup meeting?
Hayley Turner in the sprint race and Chantal Sutherland in the Dubai World Cup looked so cool and confident. Though they did not manage to win, they looked so much part of the great meeting and I wished I was there riding. But I am sure in the future, one of the lady jockeys from the Gulf or Arab region will race on Dubai World Cup night. The HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies World Championship (IFAHR) series is now going to be open for professional lady jockeys too.
How do you see this affecting amateur jockeys like you?
It is a good move and it will be beneficial to us. We can get a lot of experience while racing with the professionals. In fact, it will be like a small competition between the amateur jockeys and the professionals. We will be motivated to do well against the professional lady jockeys. It will give us a chance to show that amateurs can also win when competing against professionals. It will be a good learning experience for us. You have become the first winner of the Best Jockey in the HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Darley Awards which is now going to be an annual affair.
How did you feel winning it?
The award gives me a great feeling. There are some very good lady jockeys in the Fegentri Cup riding as amateurs. In fact it gives us lady riders from the Gulf countries the belief that we can do very well in international races too. We can prove all the doubters wrong that lady jockeys from the Gulf countries lack the skills. In fact, now we are keen to ensure we win races and qualify to race in the HH Shaikh Fatima Bint Mubarak World Championship (IFAHR) race to be held in November in Abu Dhabi.
How many years do you think it will take for lady jockeys from the Gulf countries to catch up with the rest?
I honestly feel there is no gap between us and the lady jockeys from other countries. I have already won seven races in the Fegentri Cup series and I feel that is a good yardstick of our level of skills. So, I am already there racing in the Fegentri Cup series. Fatma Al Manji [from Oman] won the HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies World Championship (IFAHR) race in Houston in March. Shathra [Al Hajjaj of the UAE] I hope will soon join us in the Fegentri Cup. So we are already there.
What do you think are the hurdles you face in what is a male-dominated sport?
We never had many opportunities to race. But since the Shaikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan Global Arabian Racing Festival launched the HH Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak races for lady jockeys last year, now we are getting some opportunities. The more races we take part in, the more experience we will gain and hopefully we will get to race in big meetings like the Dubai World Cup night. Once we do well and prove ourselves in the ladies races, then the connections will begin to take notice of our potential.
Source: http://gulfnews.com/sport/other-sports/omani-female-jockey-eyes-the-big-time-1.1011712