Читать книгу Beyond the Track - Anna Morgan Ford - Страница 8
■ Foreword by George H. Morris
ОглавлениеIt is simple, really. When a horse has quality, he has Thoroughbred blood—and the more, the better.
I believe the American Thoroughbred is the best sport horse in the world. I grew up with Thoroughbreds. I, and those I have taught, have had great success with Thoroughbreds. If you read my autobiography Unrelenting, you’ll see the word Thoroughbred over and over again, dozens and dozens of times. That is because this breed of horse hugely influenced my life. It influenced the development of the American style of forward riding “with the motion” that evolved in the middle of the twentieth century. This kind of riding became what it did because it was what was best for the American Thoroughbred. And my system—the one I still teach in clinics all over the country and the world today—it is based on the classical, yes, but it also developed out of that forward style riding best suited to Thoroughbred horses.
I was once asked what kind of horse I’d want if I were trapped on a desert island, and my answer was, of course, a Thoroughbred. Yes, many of you have heard me say that I think the Thoroughbred horse is the greatest invention since sliced bread. I do think that. I do.
I love the true Thoroughbred quality of being “quick on the blood”—very responsive to the aids with the right mix of forward and reactive with manageability. The horse has to be responsive. He has to be light. He also has to be submissive…but content in that submission. Content submission. I like horses with class—to look like a Thoroughbred, to go like a Thoroughbred with enormous scope and a beautiful gallop and beautiful balance. Class.
The best horse I ever owned was an off-track Thoroughbred. In the mid-seventies my friend Kathy Kusner had a jockey’s license and was trying her hand at life at the track. Kathy had a great eye for talented jumpers and saw a big, rangy, six-year-old bay jump a couple of fences. She called me and said I had to see the horse, called The Jones Boy. At about 17 hands but light and with immense scope, he could really jump. I loved him and bought him on the spot. The Jones Boy was a quick study with a lot of heart, which is not uncommon for big, athletic Thoroughbreds. People don’t realize with the slow-to-mature Warmbloods so popular now that it can take four years to teach what I taught The Jones Boy in four days! He was incredibly talented and went on to have terrific success with Katie Monahan Prudent.
Bertelan de Némethy was known to have said that in the Thoroughbred, Americans have “the best for Olympic jumping.” He told me repeatedly, “George, the best horses in the world are these American Thoroughbred horses.” He was correct. First, the physical size and type of the animal is right. These are big (16 to 17 hands), light, athletic, refined animals. Second, their mental capacity is usually good. While blood horses are often hot and nervous, they are at the same time extremely sensitive and intelligent. And what’s more important, they are bold.
George Morris with The Jones Boy. (Newspaper clipping from Morris’s personal collection.)
Even today when I look at horses in Europe, I gravitate intuitively and instinctively toward the Thoroughbred horse. You see, that’s our base, that’s our background, that’s our upbringing. You might bring out horse after horse after horse, but I won’t say “That one!” until it’s a blood horse.
I would like somehow in the next 25 years to see people in the United States get back in that direction and utilize this internal resource. Yes, it can maybe be harder today than it was years ago to find a horse like The Jones Boy off the track, but there are still all these Thoroughbreds…there are many, many farms and many, many tracks and many, many horses. Horses with class. If a book like this can help more people appreciate what we have right here, if it can help more people work with these sensitive, intelligent, classy animals, and help more of them find success in the show jumping ring, the dressage arena, on the cross-country course, then I believe it is integral to the future of our sport.
George H. Morris
Former Chef D’Equipe US Show Jumping Team
Author of Unrelenting: The Real Story:
Horses, Bright Lights, and My Pursuit of Excellence