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Only two of the eight divisions took place on day two of the 2007 Holiday Tournament of Champions. However Dani Corkill (left) and Amanda Pettingill (right) saw to it that Mount Holyoke's 'Megamix' team went undefeated that day. With Corkill first in intermediate flat and Pettingill first in open flat, Megamix finished with 35 points to keep Mount Holyoke unbeaten in 2007-08 tournament action.

MOUNT HOLYOKE TWO-FOR-TWO AT TOURNAMENT SHOWS IN 2007-08

Long Valley, NJ - The Holiday Tournament of Champions show had a slightly different feel to it this season. Though eleven of the 24 schools with full teams were currently leading their respective regions, several teams that normally take part were not present due in most part to conflicting regular season shows over the December 1st/2nd weekend.

Add to this the fact that at least three Head Coaches did not accompany their teams (and were certainly missed by their riders and many others involved with the show itself) and you had what started out as a "Strange" show in the words of one coach who shall be nameless. However when the final points were tallied a pair of legendary IHSA programs held the top three placings and things seemed back to normal.

Just as they had done on September 22nd, Mount Holyoke took two full teams of eight riders to a Tournament of Champions show. And once again one of those teams placed third while the other was the Holiday Tourney Champion. Mount Holyokes' "Megamix" team, boasting three blue ribbons won the Tournament with 35 points while another group of Lyons called "Jacked & Tan" earned a tie for third with 20 points.

Between Megamix and J&T four Mount Holyoke riders were blue ribbon winners. The lone J&T first actually preceded the wins for Mega, as walk-trot rider Andrea Falciana won to give Jacked & Tan 16 points through half the divisions at the time. The walk-trot-canter classes followed, with Emily Coler putting Mega ahead for good. The sophomore from Minneapolis, Minnesota won the WTC, giving Megamix 20 points and their best ribbon following seconds for Lindsay Sceats in open fences and Lora Ciborowski in novice fences. With the show taking place over two days, Megamix scored firsts with both of their rides on day two. As the snow fell quietly outside the Centenary Equestrian Center, Dani Corkill and Amanda Pettingill gave reason for Lyons' supporters to make noise indoors. A junior from Amherst, Massachusetts, Corkill won her section of intermediate flat while Pettingill, a junior from Guilford, Vermont won the section of open flat which followed. Tracey Mack concluded the Lyon scoring with a third in the second open flat class which ended the short Sunday morning session (over and done in under two and a quarter hours!). Jacked & Tan had one other second place ribbon, as Michelle Piccione equaled Ciborowski in novice fences.

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Lauren Nelson of East Stroudsburg University (left) was third in open fences. Teammate Emily Johnson (right) was second in intermediate fences less than 20 minutes later. Through two divisions East Stroudsburg's nine points put them ahead of Virginia Intermont, Centenary, Penn State and Two Mount Holyoke teams at the time. The Warriors went on to score 13 points, still enough to place 15th out of 26 teams.

Though Mount Holyoke went on to win in usual fashion, for a while it looked as though the entire IHSA had achieved parity! The first riders to win were the open fences champions. Divided into two sections of 13 riders, section 'A' went to Kat McGhee of host Centenary College's "Gravy" team while section 'B' went to the University of Kentucky's Callie Schott, who was the reserve national champion Cacchione Cup rider last season. The intermediate fences followed, with only six teams able to add points to their open jumping results. The two entries from Zone 1, Region 4 swept the intermediate fences, as Katie Christiansen won the first section for Tufts while Rebecca Clifford won the second section for Stonehill. With Tufts having earned a second in open fences via Katie Wulster, the Jumbos were leading the region-rival Sky Hawks 12-11 through two divisions. In third at the time was East Stroudsburg University, currently tied for third in Zone 3, Region 4 and one of the closest schools in land miles to the Centenary Equestrian Center. The Warriors had 9 points while Mount Holyoke Megamix had 8, Centenary-Gravy 7, Kentucky 7, Pace University 5 and Lafayette College 5, the latter a fellow Zone 3, Region 4 school with East Stroudsburg making their Tournament of Champions debut.

The novice fences only jumbled things further. Six schools not previously on the scoreboard avoided shutouts, with two of them claiming blue ribbons. After seeing Crystal Threlfall's ride for the College of Charleston, her Head Coach Bob Story remarked "She's going to win the class" and sure enough the freshman from Ridgefield, Connecticut did just that. Goucher freshman Kelly Usher is also from the nutmeg state, hailing from Glastonbury (a town which has produced a disproportionate number of IHSA riders over the years). Usher won the second section, giving Connecticut riders a sweep of the novice jumps. Mount Holyoke was still without a first, though Megamix now had the lead with 15 as Ciborowski had been second to Threlfall. Tufts and Stonehill were now second and third, respectively while Jacked & Tan and East Stroudsburg were tied for fourth with nine each. Only two teams out of 26 were not yet on the scoreboard.

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Pace University senior Jessica Mills (left) and teammate and sophomore Jessica Krystyniak pose with their ribbons. Mills won her section of walk-trot while Krystyniak was third in walk-trot-canter. Through five divisions Pace had 16 points and a real shot to win the Tournament.


Following the novice fences the jumps were removed for the Medal division. Taking the place of a high point ride-off, riders may enter the Medal division regardless of if they are part of a full team already enterred or if they have already graduated. One of the five alumni who competed was Jessica Schatz of the University of Pennsylvania, who was also the EMT at today's show. 40 riders in all were enterred in the Medal class, with three separate flat sections held on December 1st. 20 of the 40 riders were invited to return the next day for the jumping phase by judge Scott Hoffstetter. Through the flat phase Vanderbilt freshman Whitney Goulart had the top score. Goulart was essentially in her own neighborhood, as her hometown of Mendham, New Jersey is less than a 30 minute drive from Long Valley.

Following the medal came the walk-trot. Falciana finally gave Mount Holyoke their first blue ribbon of the day while Pace senior Jessica Mills won the second WT section. When coupled with Caroline O'Connell's second to Clifford in intermediate fences the Setters now had 12 points, two more than Zone 2, Region 1 rival Centenary's "Mashed Potatoes" team (though Mashed Potatoes did pick up five points in the first section as Mary Bogatko was second to Falciana). The University of the South picked up the first of their two red ribbons as junior Kara Holcomb was second to Mills. Mount Holyoke temporarily had each of the top two teams as Jacked & Tan led with 16, Megamix was second with 13, Pace and Tufts were tied for third with 12, Stonehill remained at 11 and both Centenary Mashed Potatoes and surprising West Chester University had 10. The Golden Rams were in a position to win thanks to thirds for Heather Yarnell in intermediate fences and more recently Victoria Asplen in walk-trot.

Perhaps the biggest surprise to some at this point was not who was unexpectedly doing well but that one prominent team was back in the pack. Defending National Champion Virginia Intermont College was without Head Coach Eddie Federwisch, who was taking care of a family issue. Federwisch was most definitly missed, as his VI team had won at least two Tournament of Champions shows each of the previous three seasons. Having finished second at the Pre-Season Tournament on September 22nd VI had to rally big to win and hope for another victory on January 26th in the Winter Tournament of Champions to keep their streak of deuces going. It would have to be some comeback: Virginia Intermont had only four points through four divisions.

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Mary Bogatko was one of two Centenary riders on their "Mashed Potatoes" team to earn a second place ribbon. Bogatko was a red ribbon winner in walk-trot, after which the Cyclones would score significantly in three more divisions to earn 25 points and Reserve High Point Team honors.

The first section of walk-trot-canter made the University of Mary Washington a competitor, as freshman Shannon Brown won the division. The Eagles rose into double digits with 11 points thanks to Brown's flat work. Katie Norris of Penn State was second, raising the Nittany Lions' total to eight points. Third place meant a lot, as Pace sophomore Jessica Krystyniak suddenly provided the Setters with 16 points to temporarily tie Jacked & Tan for first place. None of the remaining placings in the first section brought anyone into double figures nor did anyone else in double figures gain ground. The second section created a change at the top of the standings, as Megamix moved into first via Coler's seven points. Megan Blaskewicz of the University of Delaware was second, giving the Fighting Hens a fighting chance with 11 overall (Head Coach Bryan Bradley was another of the MIA Head Coaches with a strong presence. Bradley was only about 90 minutes away, coaching the University of Delaware western team in one of four Zone 3, Region 2 shows over the weekend). While Lafayette picked up four points thanks to Christina Chen, fourth place went to Ashlynne Jones of the Mashed Potatoes, now at 13 and within a first of Megamix. Hillary Hamlyn was fifth, giving Stonehill 13 as well. Kelley McNeill of West Chester was sixth. The Golden Rams were only nine from the top. Would many have predicted Pace or West Chester to be in the top six after five divisions were completed?

The final division on Saturday was the novice flat. The University of Massachusetts at Amherst enterred the Tournament with a degree of notoriety. The Minutemen could claim to be a point ahead of Mount Holyoke College in the Zone 1, Region 3 team standings through the fall show schedule. However at the moment UMass was near the back of the pack, with Head Coach Jerry Schurink under the weather and not present to no doubt give the team some good advice. UMass broke into double digits when the first novice flat class was pinned, as junior Amy Donahue won outright to give the Minutemen 12 points overall. Mary Washington suddenly was closer to the top, as Tiffany Batterton was second. The Eagles now had 16 points while Caitlin Belding provided Rutgers with their best ribbon of the competition with a third. The Scarlet Knights, one of four teams from Zone 3, Region 4 to compete in the Tourney, eventually finished with 10 points. Goucher reached double digits as Justine Wilson was fourth as did College of Charleston via Caitlin Smith's fifth. Both the Gophers and the Cougars now had 10 points.

Sixth place was important at the time, as Caralie Cahill of Mount Holyoke (no relation to Head Coach Carol J. Law, who was Carol Cahill when she started with the Lyon program two decades ago) added a single point to the Megamix total. Now at 21, this assured Mount Holyoke that one of their teams would definitly be ahead at the end of day one. But would Jacked & Tan overtake them in the second section?

Missy Cohen of Centenary proceeded to win section 'B' of novice flat (which was pinned at 3:24PM in the afternoon, leaving all the teams with plenty of time to entertain themselves in the early evening). The Mashed Potatoes were suddenly only a point behind Megamix, trailing 21-20. Emily Rosen made things even more interesting, as the junior was second to elevate West Chester to 16 points through six divisions. Penn State senior Lauren Klutchka was one of a handful of riders who competed at Centenary both today and at the 2004 Holiday Tournament of Champions. Klutchka won the walk-trot-canter in '04 but was only third in novice flat this time. Jennifer Kelly of Virginia Intermont was fourth, giving the Cobras their fifth, sixth and seventh points of the event. Stonehill sophomore Kelli Monroe was fifth, leaving the Sky Hawks with 15 while Axton Reilly gave the University of the South one more point with a sixth. The Tigers, who were perhaps the school which traveled the furthest with a full team to compete in the tournament were now into double figures with 10. Jacked & Tan did not score, so after one day it was Mount Holyoke Megamix with 21, Centenary Mashed Potatoes with 20, Pace, Mary Washington, West Chester and J&T with 16, Stonehill with 15 and Penn State, Tufts and UMass all at 12. The only team questions that really remained were...

A) Could both Mount Holyoke teams somehow falter, and...

B) Who would be the best team either in front of, between or behind the Mount Holyokes?

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They started the class with 40 riders spread out over 3 sections of flat. Then 20 were called back to jump. Then 6 of the 20 took part in a testing phase. When the Medal division was completed, New Jersey residents Whitney Goulart of Vanderbilt (on right) and James Fairclough of Drew (left) were Champion and Reserve Champion, respectively.


While the sun was out some of the day on Saturday, snow fell during most of the Sunday session (though without the wind the temperature at least felt warmer outside). The schedule resumed with 20 riders jumping in the medal phase. Though we do not have judge's scores from the flat, Goulart was ahead followed by Kate Lawrence of UMass, Sceats of Mount Holyoke, Lindsay Maxwell of the University of the South, Brittany Denton of Virginia Intermont, Schott of Kentucky, Becca Reiner of Tufts, Brittany Martin of Goucher, Hannah Mayer of College of Charleston, Devon Poeta of Stonehill and ten others who would need a tremendous outing over the fences to have any chance of a callback for further testing. However two riders below tenth would in fact make the test.

Drew University junior James Fairclough had an exceptional jumping round as did Diana Glenney of the University of Kentucky. Though Glenney rode in today's show as an alumni she is actually a second semester senior who will graduate this month. Both Fairclough and Glenney were invited back to test along with Denton, Goulart, Maxwell and Schott to jump a specific series of fences with 'halts' thrown in for good measure.

Following each of the six rides Hoffstetter was ready to pin the class. With six riders still on their horses, the riders who placed 7th through 12th were asked to return to the ring for their ribbons (according to Xavier of Ohio Head Coach Jim Arrigon, who with wife Gwen manages the Tournament series, Hoffstetter had already placed 7th through 12th before the testing phase began). Twelfth place went to Renier, who is currently leading the Zone 1, Region 4 Cacchione race. Eleventh went to Martin, who is in the same position as Renier but in Zone 4, Region 1. Tenth went to Sceats, who due to commitments to "A" shows has seen more action in IHSA Tournament shows in her first season thus far than in Zone 1, Region 3 IHSA shows. Ninth went to Nicole Benesch of Centenary College, the only one of four Cyclones enterred in the medal divison to make the round of 20. Eighth went to Wulster, who was leading the Zone 1, Region 4 open rider standings until teammate Renier pulled ahead. Seventh place went to Devon Poeta of Stonehill College, the highest to place in the division from the extremely competitive Zone 1.

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Seen here thanking "Pamarilla" for being a good partner, Julianne Wilson won Virginia Intermont's only blue ribbon of the tournament with a first in intermediate flat.

The remaining six riders then rode over to where IHSA Founder and Executive Director Bob Cacchione and Jim Arrigon were standing. The first of the mounted riders to receive a ribbon was Glenney. This was Glenney's first IHSA-related ride since her second in team open flat at Nationals last May. Glenney's former teammate was next, as Schott was fifth. The senior from Versailles, Kentucky had one sticky fence to earn the fifth, but the Zone 6, Region 2 Cacchione leader would be back in the winner's circle before the day was out. Like Schott, Reiner and Martin, Brittany Denton is leading her region's Cacchione race. From Atlanta, Georgia, Denton was fourth but was not the last Atlanta resident to receive a top five ribbon in the Medal division. That honor came moments later, when Maxwell was awarded third. Maxwell (who is not related to the author of this article) is yet another rider who is leading her respective region's Cacchione race.

While third and fourth place went to Georgia residents, first and second went to riders from within the Garden State. Fairclough, who is from Newton, New Jersey was awarded the reserve ribbon. The Drew junior is second in the Zone 2, Region 1 open rider standings, narrowly trailing teammate Tori Frederick, who competed in both the team open fences and the first two rounds of the medal division. Perhaps helped by the top flat score the day before, Goulart was the Medal Champion. The Vanderbilt freshman who carries a double major involving math and computer science within the engineering school beat out 40 others in what is only her fifth IHSA-related show. One of Goulart's initial 39 opponents in the flat phase was her Head Coach, Vanderbilt graduate Mawghan McCabe. We are not sure if this is the first time since the Medal division was created in the Fall of 2006 that a rider and a coach were able to ride head-to-head in an IHSA-related competition. Zone 5, Region 1 was also a big winner in the medal division, as Goulart trails Maxwell 46-41 in that region's Cacchione standings through four shows.

Following the removal of jumps the final four flat classes came and went like lightning. The first section of intermediate flat could be dubbed the 'Brown' division, as three of the 12 riders who competed had that last name! Most of the field was eliminated from a potential championship ribbon, as Corkill won the division for Megamix. Katherine Dembergh of the University of the South was second, giving the Tigers a shot at second place. East Stroudsburg broke into double digits as Marissa Favata was third. Delaware Valley College doubled their point total to six as Terrence Prunty was fourth. While Centenary's Mashed Potatoes team had been consistantly in the ribbons, their Gravy team scored only their eighth and ninth points via Molly Brown here. The University of Georgia picked up their final point as Erin Brown's sixth gave the Bulldogs five points.

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Seen here with teammate Ali Cibon, University of Kentucky senior Callie Schott (left) was the only rider to win two team classes at the 2007 Holiday Tournament. Schott and Cibon pose in the snow following the former's first in open flat to conclude the event.


There was a quirk in the schedule that meant the first section of open flat came before the second section of intermediate flat. Because of this several teams would be done with their riding before the final two classes were held. One of these teams was Megamix, which took their 28 points into the first section of open flat hoping Amanda Pettingill would clinch the top prize for them. Mary Washington had their first ride of the day in this section while Pace, West Chester and Jacked & Tan would all have to wait until the second section of intermediate to mount up for the first time on this day. Pettingill rode well and made the outcome a rout, winning to give Mount Holyoke Megamix 35 points and their second tournament championship in less than three months. The other five placings were a little anti-climactic. Samantha Pandolfi was second, giving Penn State 17 points which would be good enough for eighth place when the tiebreakers were factored in. Ashlynd Peters was third, bringing Virginia Intermont into double figures with 11 at the time. Megan Spilatro added three points to the University of Delaware total, which was complete at 14. Likewise Megan Keily closed out the Tufts scoring with a fifth and the same total of 14. Fairclough was sixth to add a point to the Drew total.

There was still some drama as second place remained up for grabs when the second section of intermediate flat began. When it was over the drama still remained, as several riders were unable to seize the moment. Julianne Wilson delivered a face-saving blue ribbon to Virginia Intermont. The senior who also rode in the 2004 Tournament show at Centenary brought VI's total up to 18 points, perhaps enough to make the top six. Sarah Pandolfini of Goucher was second, giving the Gophers fifteen points earned by only three separate riders. O'Connell gave Pace four more points with a third, giving the Setters 20 points and temporarily a tie with Mashed Potatoes for second. Stonehill continued to earn points, as Kayla Scheider was fourth. The Sky Hawks were tied with VI at this point. University of Kentucky freshman Ali Cibon was fifth, giving the Wildcats 12 points. Cibon is not the first rider in her family to compete in a Tournament of Champions show. Her older sister Kati rode in the pre-season classic medal class but is better known as Ohio University's standout open rider and two-time Cacchione Cup qualifier. Charleston added one more point for eleven, as Wesley Laudeman was sixth.

The final class of the day did change the standings significantly. Schott won again to give Kentucky 19 points and move them ahead of Virginia Intermont, Penn State, Mary Washington, Pace, West Chester, University of the South, Goucher, the University of Delaware, Tufts and East Stroudsburg all in one fell swoop. The race for second went to one of the home teams as Jenn Elrod of Centenary was second in open flat, raising Mashed Potatoes total to 25. Jacked & Tan were destined for third, as Tracey Mack won the yellow ribbon to give Mount Holyoke a share of third with 20 in addition to first. Alex Charles brought Rutgers to ten points with a fourth while Jamie Marsalise was fifth for Stonehill, allowing the Sky Hawks to tie Pace and Jacked & Tan for third before the tiebreakers. Maxwell was the final rider to earn a point, giving the University of the South 16 for the day and a tie with Mary Washington and West Chester.

Tiebreaker Correction: If two teams tie then the number of blue ribbons for each is the first tiebreaker. If there is still a tie then the number of red ribbons is the second tiebreaker. Though Campus Equestrian intitially reported that Pace was third by virtue of their edge in third-place ribbons the third tiebreaker was actually points over fences, which gave Jacked & Tan the true third place ribbon, Stonehill the fourth and Pace the fifth. Kentucky was sixth with 19, Virginia Intermont seventh with 18, Penn State eighth with 17, Mary Washington technically ninth with 16 (one blue ribbon), the University of the South technically tenth with 16 (one more red ribbon than West Chester) and West Chester eleventh also with 16.

The third and final Tournament of Champions show of the 2007-08 season takes place on Saturday, January 26th, when the University of North Carolina at Charlotte hosts at the Chatham Hall School in Chatham, Virginia. This one-day show will be the first Tournament competition ever to take place at a Prep School. School is not yet back in session at Mount Holyoke until after the Winter Tournament on the 26th, and though they will likely compete it will be interesting to see which riders Mount Holyoke is able to scrounge up. Last season the Lyons took many riders who lived relatively close to the Mount Holyoke campus for the Winter Tourney in Athens, Georgia, so the rest of the IHSA will still likely have their hands full. But if Virginia Intermont has Eddie Federwisch on the Chatham Hall grounds the likelyhood of a Mount Holyoke three-peat becomes questionable.

--Steve Maxwell

Show Incidentals: Partly Sunny Skies but windy on Saturday, with Temperatures in the mid 40's. Snow and sleet on Sunday, with temperatures in the low 30's. Entire show held indoors. Saturday start time: 9:43AM. Finish: 3:24PM. Sunday start time: 9:07AM. Finish: 11:20AM. Judge: Scott Hoffstetter. Stewards: Bob Story/College of Charleston, Cory Kieschnick/Delaware Valley College and Ginny Smith/University of Georgia. This show was Hunter Seat or English only.

Team Totals: Mount Holyoke College - Megamix (High Point Team) 35; Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes (Reserve) 25; Mount Holyoke College - Jacked & Tan 20; Stonehill College 20; Pace University 20; University of Kentucky 19; Virginia Intermont College 18; Penn State University (State College) 17; University of Mary Washington 16; University of the South 16; West Chester University 16; Goucher College 15; Tufts University 14; University of Delaware 14; East Stroudsburg University 13; University of Massachusetts at Amherst 12; College of Charleston 11; Rutgers University 10; Centenary College - Team Gravy 9; Lafayette College 9; Delaware Valley College 6; Becker College 5; Drew University 5; University of Georgia 5; Mount Ida College 2 and University of Scranton 0.

Class-by-class results, in the order in which they were held:

Open equitation over fences - Section A: 1. Kat McGhee, Centenary College - Team Gravy. 2. Katie Wulster, Tufts University. 3. Quinn Traendly, Stonehill College. 4. Emily Mallory, Lafayette College. 5. Jessica Van Brocklin, Mary Washington College. 6. JoJo Gutfarb, Mount Holyoke College - Jacked & Tan. 7. Brittany Martin, Goucher College. 8. Amanda Overholt, College of Charleston.

Open equitation over fences - Section B: 1. Callie Schott, University of Kentucky. 2. Lindsay Sceats, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 3. Lauren Nelson, East Stroudsburg University. 4. Ashley Miller, Virginia Intermont College. 5. Jenn Elrod, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 6. Kaitlyn McLaughlin, Delaware Valley College. 7. Amber Bauchner, Pace University. 8. Tori Frederick, Drew University.

Intermediate equitation over fences - Section A: 1. Katie Christiansen, Tufts University. 2. Emily Johnson, East Stroudsburg University. 3. Rachel Denning, Drew University. 4. Cass Sanford, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 5. Erin Curcio, Rutgers University. 6. Katherine Dembergh, University of the South. 7. Michelle Geise, University of Scranton. 8. Jessica May, Virginia Intermont College.

Intermediate equitation over fences - Section B: 1. Rebecca Clifford, Stonehill College. 2. Caroline O'Connell, Pace University. 3. Heather Yarnell, West Chester University. 4. Elizabeth Tripp, Mount Holyoke College - Jacked & Tan. 5. Emily Hanson, Lafayette College. 6. Shannon Stevens, Becker College. 7. Lila Pemberton, Mount Ida College. 8. Ali Cibon, University of Kentucky.

Novice equitation over fences - Section A: 1. Crystal Threlfall, College of Charleston. 2. Lora Ciborowski, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 3. Heather Mrzyglod, Becker College. 4. Sami Davis, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 5. Valerie Mahala, West Chester University. 6. Elena Serkin, University of Massachusetts at Amherst. 7. Katie McDonough, Lafayette College. 8. Maria Gubbiotti, University of Scranton.

Novice equitation over fences - Section B: 1. Kelly Usher, Goucher College. 2. Michelle Piccione, Mount Holyoke College - Jacked & Tan. 3. Valerie Shurtleff, University of Delaware. 4. Brie Bolsvert, University of Georgia. 5. Taylor Bergquist, Mount Ida College. 6. Bobbi Asper, Rutgers University. 7. Sarah Whitley, East Stroudsburg University. 8. Rebecca Page, Pace University.

Walk-trot equitation on the flat - Section A: 1. Andrea Falciana, Mount Holyoke College - Jacked & Tan. 2. Mary Bogatko, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 3. Victoria Asplen, West Chester University. 4. Taylor Jaros, Penn State University. 5. Brooke Aldrich, University of Delaware. 6. Jaime King, Virginia Intermont College. 7. Jessica Lindquist, Mount Ida College. 8. Charlie Knecht, East Stroudsburg University.

Walk-trot equitation on the flat - Section B: 1. Jessica Mills, Pace University. 2. Kara Holcomb, University of the South. 3. Sara Pennington, University of Massachusetts at Amherst. 4. Sarah Bybee, University of Kentucky. 5. Jennifer Hogue, University of Mary Washington. 6. Lyndsey Renken, College of Charleston. 7. Ashley Burka, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 8. Taylor Guastella, Delaware Valley College.

Walk-trot-canter equitation on the flat - Section A: 1. Shannon Brown, University of Mary Washington. 2. Katie Norris, Penn State University. 3. Jessica Krystyniak, Pace University. 4. Kaki Nix, University of the South. 5. Katie Kashner, Delaware Valley College. 6. Cali Freeman, University of Georgia. 7. Chelsea Dressler, Virginia Intermont College. 8. Katie Caracappa, Rutgers University.

Walk-trot-canter equitation on the flat - Section B: 1. Emily Coler, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 2. Megan Blaskewicz, University of Delaware. 3. Christina Chen, Lafayette College. 4. Ashlynne Jones, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 5. Hillary Hamlyn, Stonehill College. 6. Kelley McNeill, West Chester University. 7. Leigh Cooper, Tufts University. 8. Jen Solomon, Mount Ida College.

Novice equitation on the flat - Section A: 1. Amy Donahue, University of Massachusetts at Amherst. 2. Tiffany Batterton, University of Mary Washington. 3. Caitlin Belding, Rutgers University. 4. Justine Wilson, Goucher College. 5. Caitlin Smith, College of Charleston. 6. Caralie Cahill, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 7. Jillian Cassetori, University of Scranton. 8. Megan Frantz, East Stroudsburg University.

Novice Equitation on the flat - Section B: 1. Missy Cohen, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 2. Emily Rosen, West Chester University. 3. Lauren Klutchka, Penn State University. 4. Jennifer Kelly, Virginia Intermont College. 5. Kelli Monroe, Stonehill College. 6. Axton Reilly, University of the South. 7. Rebecca Wichard, University of Kentucky. 8. Casey Tiefenwerth, Drew University.

Medal Division: 1. Whitney Goulart, Vanderbilt University. 2. James Fairclough, Drew University. 3. Lindsay Maxwell, University of the South. 4. Brittany Denton, Virginia Intermont College. 5. Callie Schott, University of Kentucky. 6. Diana Glenney, University of Kentucky. 7. Devon Poeta, Stonehill College. 8. Katie Wulster, Tufts University. 9. Nicole Benesch, Centenary College. 10. Lindsay Sceats, Mount Holyoke College. 11. Brittany Martin, Goucher College. 12. Becca Renier, Tufts University.

Intermediate equitation on the flat - Section A: 1. Dani Corkill, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 2. Katherine Dembergh, University of the South. 3. Marissa Favata, East Stroudsburg University. 4. Terence Prunty, Delaware Valley College. 5. Molly Brown, Centenary College - Team Gravy. 6. Erin Brown, University of Georgia. 7. Lena Ohta, Penn State University. 8. Kristen McDermott, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Open equitation on the flat - Section A: 1. Amanda Pettingill, Mount Holyoke College - Megamix. 2. Samantha Pandolfi, Penn State University. 3. Ashlynd Peters, Virginia Intermont College. 4. Megan Spilatro, University of Delaware. 5. Megan Keily, Tufts University. 6. James Fairclough, Drew University. 7. Chelsea Levine, University of Scranton. 8. Sarah Smith, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Intermediate equitation on the flat - Section B: 1. Julianne Wilson, Virginia Intermont College. 2. Sarah Pandolfini, Goucher College. 3. Caroline O'Connell, Pace University. 4. Kayla Scheider, Stonehill College. 5. Ali Cibon, University of Kentucky. 6. Wesley Laudeman, College of Charleston. 7. Rachel Samuels, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 8. Rose Holmes, Drew University.

Open equitation on the flat - Section B: 1. Callie Schott, University of Kentucky. 2. Jenn Elrod, Centenary College - Mashed Potatoes. 3. Tracey Mack, Mount Holyoke College. 4. Alex Charles, Rutgers University. 5. Jamie Marsalise, Stonehill College. 6. Lindsay Maxwell, University of the South. 7. Amber Bauchner, Pace University. 8. Julie Fink, Goucher College.

 


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