|  To draw your horse at 2024 IHSA Zone 1 Zones you had to enter "Barbieland" where 
                        Barbie's house, Barbie's car, Barbie's plane, her high heel, her birkenstock and, heck, more than one 
                        Barbie was even found (photo courtesy of Megan Martin).
  BARBIELAND: A HORSE DRAW ROOM LIKE NO OTHER  Prior to Zone 1 Zones on April 6th this writer heard that the show would be at the 
                        Mount Holyoke College equestrian center as usual but not hosted by Zone 1, Region 3 
                        which is Mount Holyoke's region.  Instead Zone 1, Region 4 would be the offical host, 
                        and that things would be done slightly differently.  All of the horses would be 
                        brought in from other barns, and the live horse draw would involve a "Barbie" 
                        themed room.  The Barbie film was almost nine months old but was still fresh in the 
                        minds of many, and Endicott College head coach (and former Skidmore College open rider) 
                        Megan Martin can partially take credit for the idea that most definitely livened up the 
                        proceedings.   "My assistant coach, Macayla, and I came up with the Barbie theme idea," says 
                        Martin.  "At the second show of the season (Boston University head coach) Phyllis 
                        Cervelli told us that we would be able to pick a theme and that one team would have to 
                        be in charge of that theme and the draw room.  Mac and I immediately volunteered and we 
                        had the Barbie theme in just a few minutes, haha!  We both loved the movie last year 
                        and it seemed like a fun and simple theme to do because it was so popular recently."   With the concept figured out during the fall most of the work that went into 
                        building the room and perparing it for a horse draw was taken care of in early 2024.  
                        The last thing to prepare was likely the Barbie cookies.  Shaped like Barbie's 
                        head, each cookie had a draw number on the flip side.   
              
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                | (From left to right:) Isabella Karr of the University of Vermont, Emma Eaton-Ayres of the University of Rhode Island, Madeline Ahern of Stonehill 
                        College, Emmalyn Mirarchi of Mount Holyoke College and Abigail Boyer of the University of Connecticut pose in front of the Barbie room prior to being lined up from tallest 
                        to shortest  These five riders competed in the Cacchione Cup Class.  Eaton-Ayres, who placed third in the Cacchione class at Zones and repeated that placing at IHSA 
                        Nationals, wears one of the "My name is...Barbie" badges that were seen early and often around the indoor. |  "The geometrical doors and shapes on the walls, as well as the board with moving 
                        vehicles to determine current placings in the day, were designed and painted entirely 
                        by the Endicott team members.  It was a collaborative effort between my captains, and 
                        Mak and I as to how the room would flow.  I can’t recall who came up with the idea for 
                        cookies, but we put it out to the region to see if anybody would be able to help us 
                        with it, and two of the girls from the (Tufts) team volunteered, and then...baked 
                        and frosted and packaged all of those cookies themselves.  The cowboy hat, Jump 
                        fillers that we raffle off, that sat in the photo area all day, were designed and 
                        built by one team student of mine and her brother."   Finally April 6th came and the room was ready.  "Meeting Stickers" that 
                        said "Hello.  My name is..." were all filled in with the name "Barbie" and 
                        placed in all the prize packs for riders to place on their jackets if they 
                        desired.  Mount Holyoke head coach C.J. Law heard about the Barbie-themed 
                        Draw Room far enough ahead of time to have someone associated with the school 
                        named Kira Schaefer create a special cover for the Zones show program.  
                        Schaefer came up with a take-off on a Barbie movie poster one might find 
                        outside a movie theater which showed the film upon it's release.  The heading 
                        read "Zone 1, Region 4 Presents...Zone 1 Finals (those last three in large 
                        pink and white letters).  Then it read "Only in Theaters April 6, 2024".  
                        Instead of starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gossling the program said the 
                        stars were Sacred Heart University, Stonehill College, Mount Holyoke College, 
                        University of Vermont and University of Rhode Island (these were the five 
                        schools who won their respective regions and thus had a full team entered in 
                        the Zone 1 Zones team competition).  Most Zones and Semifinals events have a 
                        "winner's circle" area where teams, riders and anyone at the facility can 
                        go and take pictures with a banner stating the name of the event.  This area 
                        also received the Barbie influence, with signs sitting nearby that said 
                        things like "This Barbie is going to Nationals!" not to mention the pink 
                        cowboy hats that Martin referenced earlier.   
              
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                | After finishing second to Eaton-Ayres at Zones in individual open flat Amherst College sophomore 
                        Willow Vince stepped into the Barbie Room for this photo near Barbie's car and her Airplane.  A coach in Zone 3 believes 
                        Barbie's plane might cost $100.00 but apparently all the toys seen here set the buyers back only $15.00. |  And then of course there was the Barbie room itself.  Unless one of the 
                        Barbie dolls was wearing something that wasn't pink the color pink was 
                        everywhere.  It was not unlike a museum exhibit or a fun house, where you 
                        went in one side and came out the other.  In talking about the Barbie room 
                        with some of the coaches at Zone 1 Zones (and when explaining the Barbie 
                        room to Zone 3 Zones coaches the next day) a fair number thought it must 
                        have been expensive to aquire all of the Barbies, her accessories and her 
                        vehicles unless someone knew a Barbie fanatic who already owned the items.  
                        But according to Martin it was easy to be thrifty when piecing the 
                        room together.   "The Barbie stuff came from a variety of sources, but the total cost 
                        for all of it was $15!  Some of it was being given away in a neighborhood 
                        that one of my students lives in, at the end of a driveway.  And a lot of 
                        it was purchased as a bulk lot by my wife on Facebook marketplace.  I 
                        have an almost five-year-old daughter so we knew we could reuse most of 
                        it when the room was finished.  I think I spent another five dollars at 
                        Goodwill for one of the items."  When told via e-mail that a Zone 3 coach 
                        claimed Barbie's airplane retails for about $100.00 Martin stated she had 
                        no idea the plane was expensive.   Former Morrisville State College rider Sarah Lent was on hand to run 
                        the horse draw and Lent took the opportunity to wear a Barbie Wig 
                        throughout the day.  Along with her shiny outfit Lent was the closest 
                        thing to a real-life Barbie on the premises.  It is difficult to convey 
                        the happy vibe the Barbie motif gave to the show.  One must remember that 
                        only the top two in all but the Cacchione Cup Class advance to IHSA 
                        Nationals (the top three Cacchione riders continue on) and only the top 
                        two teams in the team competition survive.  You would think there would 
                        be only so much joy to go around with almost 80 percent of the Zones 
                        qualifiers seeing their seasons come to a halt.  But there was so much 
                        camaraderie between teammates, family and friends that for once the terms 
                        "focused," "serious" and "party" somehow all fit together.  It was a 
                        field day for everyone who cobbled the whole Barbie thing together.   --Steve Maxwell 
              
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                | Worcester State University head coach Courtney Germain (on left) and Ciara Goellner of the 
                         Lancers are all smiles after Goellner was second at Zones in individual intermediate on the flat.  The two 
                         were all but too happy to pose next to the entrance of the Barbie room at that moment.  Perhaps other Zones 
                         and Semifinals in the future will have themed rooms for horse draw on a par with "Barbieland." |    |