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Eventing consisted of a dressage test, a cross-country test, and a jumping test. The competitor with the best total score (fewest penalty points) won. Dressage: The eventing competition featured a dressage test. Five judges gave scores. Cross-country: The cross-country test had five phases. Phase A: 7.2 km roads. Time allowed was 30 minutes ...
The team and individual eventing competitions used the same scores. Eventing consisted of a dressage test, a cross-country test, and a jumping test. [1] The total maximum score was 2000 points, with 400 available in dressage, 1300 in cross-country, and 300 in jumping. [6] In the dressage portion, three juries gave scores out of 400; the average ...
Eventing consisted of a dressage test, a cross-country test, and a jumping test respectively. The dressage test was a 12 section test. The maximum time allotted was 13 minutes including deduction points. The maximum score was 400 points, though the results typically listed the difference between the score and that maximum (that is, a score of ...
The eventers complete a 3-star level dressage test, stadium, and cross-country course. 5 teams competed in the eventing competition: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, and the United States. After the dressage test, the United States led with 143.40 penalty points, closely followed by Canada with 159.90 penalties, then host country Brazil with ...
The team and individual eventing competitions used the same scores. Eventing consisted of a dressage test, a cross-country test, and a jumping test. The jumping test had two rounds. After the first jumping round, the teams results were determined. Both jumping rounds counted towards the individual results.
The first round of the individual dressage competition is the same FEI Grand Prix Test used for the team dressage event. The Grand Prix Test consists of a battery of required movements that each rider and horse pair performs. Five judges evaluate the pair, giving marks between 0 and 10 for each element. The judges' scores were averaged to give ...
International Freestyle Dressage tests, organised by the FEI, include Pony Riders, Juniors, Young Riders, Intermediate I, Intermediate A/B and Grand Prix. [9] Most National Federations (i.e. USDF, British Dressage) have their own freestyle levels which usually correspond to their established levels of training.
Eventing consisted of a dressage test, a cross-country test, and a jumping test. The jumping test had two rounds, with only the first used for the team competition. Team eventing final scores were the sum of the three best overall individual scores (adding the three components) from the five-pair teams. [2]