Kyle King Claims his Home Field in $50,000 Hygain Feeds National Grand Prix

Kyle King Claims his Home Field in $50,000 Hygain Feeds National Grand Prix

Kyle King had the last word in Saturday evening’s $50,000 Hygain Feeds National Grand Prix, and he made his words count. With Etalon, owned by Christine Maclean, he bested a six-horse jump-off stacked with speed, bringing home his first grand prix victory of the 2023 Desert Circuit.

Bernardo Costa Cabral set a track for 24 entries to contest, with top talent coming forward. Among jump-off contenders were Belgian superstar Gregory Wathelet, Australian Olympian Katie Laurie, and fellow Desert International Horse Park (DIHP) Roadrunner Kaitlin Campbell. King had an advantage, however, and that was his spot as last to go in the jump-off.



With Campbell leading aboard Armentos, owned by SWS Training & Sales, Laurie and Wathelet were then taken out of win contention with rails. King knew the time was beatable, and he also knew he could count on Etalon.

“I was going to win one way or another,” King said, after taking two consecutive second-place finishes just this week in CSI3* competition, among other top-five placings that were just shy of the top spot. “I was not going to settle for second again, third again, or fourth again. I consider this my home field, so I went in with my ears pinned.”

With his ears pinned, King sped to a time two seconds faster than Campbell’s, and with all rails intact. Campbell claimed second, while Lorcan Gallagher took third with Hunters Conlypso II. Sophia Siegel captured the EquiFit U25 Classic with Unchained 2 on a single time fault.



“I saw everybody’s strides and did the same,” King remarked on his strategy. “I was maybe a little short to the third jump, and I’m glad I got patient because I was going to get the seven to the last but on the angle [I had] that would’ve been [a risk]. I’m proud of myself for being a little patient at the end.

“Etalon is one of my longest partners,” he continued of the 14-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding (Otangelo x Concorde). “He’s a great horse. We’ve had him four or five years now, we’ve won numerous grand prixs, his owners were here tonight which is really cool. Between Gregory and Kailtin, I knew I had to lay it on the line, and he came through.”

The horse put in his all, but it wasn’t without the expert guidance of King, who hasn’t had the win percentage he would have liked at this point in the circuit. But with the hard work put in, he expects to push for the results from this point out.

“I like to win a lot. It’s a bit frustrating, but I’m proud of my horses,” King said. “I purposely started out a bit easy because I was injured the first three weeks. I have a back injury I’ve been fighting. I’ve been slowly getting through it while riding my horses. I wasn’t totally on my game at the beginning and I was patient with my horses; I’m really looking at the long run. This is only [Etalon’s] second week. I’ve got enough horses right now to rotate. They’ve all been answering well and now it’s time to tighten it up a little bit.”

Read more:

Kyle King Claims his Home Field in $50,000 Hygain National Grand Prix – Desert International Horse Park (deserthorsepark.com)




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