AP/ August 2, 2012, 1:21 PM

Ann Romney: Horse's Olympic performance "thrilled me to death"

Jan Ebeling from United States rides Rafalca in the equestrian dressage competition, at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012, in London. Rafalca is co-owned by Ann Romney, the wife of U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

Jan Ebeling from United States rides Rafalca in the equestrian dressage competition, at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012, in London. Rafalca is co-owned by Ann Romney, the wife of U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney. / AP Photo/Markus Schreiber

(AP) LONDON - Ann Romney said Thursday her horse Rafalca "thrilled me to death" with a solid performance at the Olympics, where the U.S. presidential campaign crossed paths with the equestrian sport of dressage at Greenwich Park.

The 15-year-old, German-bred mare has been the source of political jokes and Democratic ads questioning how U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney can presume to know the problems of ordinary Americans when he inhabits the rarefied world of dressage.

Romney's wife Ann was in the VIP section of the equestrian stadium for Rafalca's Olympic debut, watching literally from the edge of her seat as the mare completed the 7-minute Grand Prix test. At the end, she gave horse and rider Jan Ebeling a standing ovation and a wave. Their score of 70.213 put them in provisional eighth place, though many riders still had yet to compete.

The stadium was nearly full.

"She was consistent and elegant," Romney told The Associated Press. "She did not disappoint. She thrilled me to death."

Ebeling, too, was upbeat about the performance.

"She felt really strong and is peaking at the right time," he said. "She was amped up, a little stronger than usual. She had more oomph. The trick is to manage that."

He said he hadn't spoken to either Romney before the competition — he never does — but said her final words of advice were to "Do what you know (how) to do, and do what you do best."

"It was a good score. Overall it was great," he said.

Mitt Romney unleashed a torrent of criticism in the British media recently when, shortly after arriving for the Olympics' opening ceremony, he said the problems facing Olympic organizers were "disconcerting." It was the first of several gaffes that followed during campaign-style visits to Israel and Poland that were supposed to show off his foreign policy chops.

Rafalca's turn in the equestrian arena turned an Olympic spotlight on another issue facing Romney: his vast personal wealth during tough economic times in the United States. He is worth as much as $250 million.

His wife's financial interest in Rafalca, a bay Oldenburg, has fed criticism that Romney is out of touch with the concerns of more modest-income voters. A topflight dressage horse can cost more than six figures. Upkeep runs a few thousand dollars a month and transport and competition fees cost tens of thousands. The Romneys own several horses; Ann Romney rides as part of her therapy for multiple sclerosis.

The sport, better known in Europe than the U.S., is the equine equivalent of ballet. A rider, clad in top hat and tails, takes the horse through a series of steps that look like the horse is dancing: twirling pirouettes, prancing trots and the crowd-pleasing "flying change," which looks like the horse is skipping.

The Romneys' interest in dressage — financial and otherwise — has furthered the impression that the sport is a pastime of the monied 1 percent. It has inspired several episodes of political satirist Stephen Colbert's "The Colbert Report," with one aired this week in which Colbert — dressed like Roy Rogers — takes a dressage lesson from Michael Barisone, the U.S. dressage team's reserve rider in the 2008 Olympics.

"Dressage is the new American pastime!" Colbert declared.

In his first riff on the sport, Colbert produced a red foam finger in a bid to show more blue-collar support for its competitors. The U.S. Equestrian Federation seized on the moment and created a few hundred "Dressage is No. 1" red foam fingers for use at the Olympic trials that secured the Romney mare a spot in London. Ann Romney waved one herself, though there was no evidence of the red foam finger on Thursday.

She has shown similar good humor in laughing off a Democratic National Committee web ad, since pulled, that mockingly used footage of one of her show horses.

Out at Greenwich Park, such jokes were far from the minds of the U.S. dressage team, which has a shot at the bronze team medal. Germany and Britain are favored for the top medals.

"All of our horses are peaking at the right time," said U.S. team member Tina Konyot, who was riding Calecto V. "The other competitors are watching us."

Rafalca's rider, Ebeling, welcomed the attention, negative or not, that the Romneys' stake in the horse has given the sport, saying it's a chance to show that dressage isn't about millionaires but hard work.

"I think the biggest misconception is always that people think that you just sit on a horse and they just kind of trot around in circles," he said. "That really is not the case."

A typical dressage horse requires up to a decade of training to compete at Olympic levels. Horse and rider work very much as a team, with the rider giving the horse invisible cues through subtle leg, hand and seat shifts. The horse is judged from 0-10 on executing a standard test of 33 movements that include:

-PASSAGE: a prancing, high-striding step

-PIAFFE: a passage done in place

-HALF-PASS: where the horse moves forward and sideways at the same time by crossing over its legs

-PIROUETTE: where the horse completes a full circle in place while cantering

-FLYING CHANGE: where the horse changes the sequence of its steps

And while horse owners may need deep pockets to maintain their dancing breeds, the riders very often come from more modest means. Konyot, for example, grew up in a family of circus performers: Her father trained circus horses and her mother was a tightrope walker. Ebeling himself emigrated from Germany in 1984 hoping to find greater financial and professional opportunities in the U.S. than he could at home.

That said, the sport does have an aristocratic background. Dating from ancient Greece, dressage was revived in European royal courts during the Renaissance as an art form. The creation of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna in 1729 eventually brought its renown outside Europe.

The school's famous Lipizzaner stallions are still performing classical dressage in exhibition tours today. In the 19th century, dressage became essential to the training of cavalry officers who then started competing as another part of their training — competition that evolved into an Olympic sport in 1912.

The seven highest scoring teams from Thursday's Grand Prix advance to a second, harder test called the Grand Prix Special on Aug. 7. The 18 highest-scoring individual riders then perform a freestyle set to music to determine individual medal scores. That competition is Aug. 9.

Ebeling, who became a U.S. citizen in 1998, said the Romneys have been great supporters of the sport and have helped boost its visibility.

"I really welcome the attention," he said. "It's given us a fantastic opportunity to have our sport — have visibility in our sport — and show what we're really about, show that it is an Olympic discipline and show people how much we work to get there."

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
13 Comments Add a Comment
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ForestWalk says:
Congratulations to Ann and Mitt for sending their horse to the Olympics. It shows true American spirit. Of course it would show more American Spirit if they had sent one or two or more of their sons into the service of their country. They have five boys and when they hang out behind their parents they look well and fit. But none of them has chosen to serve their country in the military. But why should they? They like their daddy are from a privileged class. Mitt did not serve during Viet Nam - why should he ask them to serve? There is a difference between being a business boss and the president. In business you are the boss - as president you are called to serve. Romney and Miss Ann do not seem to have that desire to serve for themselves or for their sons. She is happy to send her horse overseas. And she is happy to send your sons and daughters into war - but not her sons.
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lightbreeze replies:
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And Obama never served in the military either. On the other hand, he smoked a lot of weed and did cocaine growing up, so I guess that's better than a candidate not serving in Vietnam.
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magicbeans2 says:
How did Democrats become such a bunch of envious bafoons? Rafalca is and the rider are representing the USA at the Olympics. You would think you could get behind your own country but no its politics of jealousy and envy 24/7.

Get off your azzes and make something of yourselves if you want more. The opportunity is there for you. Don't you have roads and bridges where you live? Then it should be easy, right?
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Lindag20 says:
How is having a horse in the Olympics a "medical expense"? The Romney's wrote off $70,000.00 on their taxes for the training and upkeep of this horse and it's in the Olympics. Nothing like taking advantage of the tax laws.
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lightbreeze replies:
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I'm continuously amused by the ignorance of those on the left parroting something they've heard from the main stream media they take supposedly as fact.

Check the REAL facts, dear. All losses, even if they're reported on one's tax return, do not result in writeoffs on your taxes. So what's the REAL amount the Romney's received in tax benefits for the horse?

$50.

Yes, that's right, all of the ignorant criticism over the horse is about a $50 writeoff.

You know, about the amount it takes to fill your gas tank with high-priced gas, with real purchasing power you hopefully have left over after inflation, and that's if you're lucky to have a job in this decimated Obama economy.

But hey, don't let me stop you or your ilk spreading the lies from the main stream media. It's a constant source of amusement for us.
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raptor-022 says:
"His wife's financial interest in Rafalca, a bay Oldenburg, has fed criticism that Romney is out of touch with the concerns of more modest-income voters. A topflight dressage horse can cost more than six figures. Upkeep runs a few thousand dollars a month and transport and competition fees cost tens of thousands. The Romneys own several horses"




Of course these plutocrats are out of touch with the average American, and get more tax credits each and every year than the average American family makes in income!

Papers please willard, so we know exactly how many years you skipped on your taxes, and offshored more money to hide it.
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StephAFrey says:
Let's hope the horse is better taken care of then Seamus the dog....
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nikkicraft replies:
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http://youtu.be/U2WfaU-TLt0 see how they train these horses to dance and prance. It's not only a nasty elitist human so-called sport but it's cruelty exemplified. even if her horse is not trained that way it encourages the abuse of animals. s this being discussed? I haven't seen it. Even Stephen Colbert has not mentioned this aspect of the training and he usually covers it all. disappointing.
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catmomtx says:
It would have shown compassion on Romney's part if he showed just a little support for his wife. I just can't get past how he basically said he really didn't care about her "sport". It is her thing, he said. He didn't even know when the horse would be competing and acted as if he didn't care. Makes me wonder how much he will care about things that are important to average Americans.
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stupa5 replies:
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He doesn't care abouthe average American that's obvious to bade the average GOP turns a blind eye to that! they are the "you people" to the Romneys!
luadda22 replies:
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Cat, really??!! I can't find anything in this article that supports your claim. Nor yours either stupa. It's just sad to see envious and vindictive people, like you both, that portray nothing but hate and think in your clever little minds you are being sagacious.
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stupa5 says:
The common folk ("you people as she would say")can really relate to this horse do do sport of the upper 1%! Yea Right!
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lightbreeze replies:
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I suppose it's because you're uninformed about just how widespread dressage is among average income folks. You can buy a dressage horse and stable it for far less than a nice bass boat.
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