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Totilas

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Totilas
BreedDutch Warmblood (KWPN)
SireGribaldi (Trakehner)
DamLominka (KWPN)
Maternal grandsireGlendale (KWPN)
SexStallion
Foaled23 May 2000
Died14 December 2020(2020-12-14) (aged 20)
Country Netherlands
ColourBlack
BreederJ.K.Schuil & A. Visser
OwnerPaul Schockemöhle, Ann-Kathrin Linsenhoff
RiderEdward Gal, Matthias Alexander Rath
Totilas
Medal record
Equestrian
Representing  Netherlands
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2010 Lexington Team Dressage
Gold medal – first place 2010 Lexington Special dressage
Gold medal – first place 2010 Lexington Freestyle dressage
European Championships
Gold medal – first place 2009 Windsor Team Dressage
Gold medal – first place 2009 Windsor Freestyle dressage
Silver medal – second place 2009 Windsor Special dressage
Representing  Germany
European Championships
Silver medal – second place 2011 Rotterdam Team Dressage
Bronze medal – third place 2015 Aachen Team Dressage

Totilas (23 May 2000 – 14 December 2020), also known from 2006 to 2011 as Moorlands Totilas, and nicknamed "Toto", was a Dutch Warmblood stallion standing 17.1 hands (69 inches, 175 cm) high[1] who was considered to be one of the most outstanding competitive dressage horses in the world, the first horse to score above 90 in dressage competition,[2] and the former holder of the world record for the highest dressage score in Grand Prix Freestyle Dressage.

Going into the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games (WEG), Moorlands Totilas and his rider, Edward Gal, had amassed multiple world-record scores in international competition, leading one American journalist to call them "rock stars in the horse world".[3] Totilas was retired from competition in August 2015 and died on 14 December 2020 due to complications from colic.

Early show career

[edit]

Totilas was bred by Jan K. Schuil and Anna Schuil-Visser in Broeksterwâld (Broeksterwoude) in the Netherlands. They gave him his basic training. Upon entering major competition at age five, he was ridden by Jiska van den Akker and exhibited at the 2005 World Breeding Championships for Young Horses at Verden, Germany. There he distinguished himself as the best horse from the Netherlands, and placed fourth in the final ranking of five-year-old dressage horses.[4][5] Also in 2005, his owners contacted Edward Gal and asked him to ride and compete Totilas.[6] In 2006, after Gal began working with the horse, his sponsors Cees (also spelled Kees) and Tosca Visser purchased Totilas in the name of their investment company, Moorland BV.[1][6][7] After this purchase the horse competed under the name "Moorlands Totilas".[8]

Totilas was ridden throughout most of his international Grand Prix career by Gal, under the flag of the Netherlands. Gal first began working with the horse in 2006 and the pair started to compete in 2008. Gal and the team of people who worked with the horse understood that Toto was "something special" after their first Grand Prix (GP) competition,[3] with Gal later stating, "He has an incredible amount of talent; it's simply a pleasure to ride him."[1]

In July 2009, Gal and Toto broke the previous world record score in Grand Prix Freestyle[9] held by Anky van Grunsven with an 89.50% mark at Hickstead, England, and shortly thereafter followed it up breaking their own record with a score of 90.75% and win gold at the 2009 FEI European Jumping and Dressage Championships.[10] The pair also won a silver in the special dressage and gold in the team dressage event.[11] In December 2009, at the fourth leg of the 2009–10 FEI World Cup Dressage series at Olympia in London, they extended their record in GP Freestyle to 92.30%, more than 10 points above the second-place finisher.[10] They won that season's FEI World Cup final with a win in GP Freestyle at home in the Netherlands, winning by more than 7 points with a score better than their first world record.[12] The pair also have a world-record score in the Grand Prix Special discipline to their credit, having recorded 86.460% at Aachen in July 2010.[9][13] The pair were triple gold medalists at the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games,[13][14] becoming the first horse–rider partnership ever to sweep the three available dressage gold medals (team, special and freestyle) at a single FEI World Games.[13]

The horse's career was not free of controversy, particularly due to his training using the highly controversial "LDR" (low, deep and round) hyperflexion training technique also known as Rollkur, which faces claims of causing physical harm to the horse,[15] and is considered "mental abuse" by the FEI.[16] Critics claimed that his extravagant paces were not natural, but rather a product of harmful training, accusing Totilas' trainers of artificially inflating dressage scores and corrupting the fundamentals of the sport. One German equestrian magazine compared his performances to those in a circus.[17][18] The head of the World Cup judging panel at the Olympia competition in London dismissed such criticism, saying, "People should be big enough to recognise brilliance when they see it."[18]

While some give primary credit to the skill of Gal as the primary reason the horse reached such a high level at a very young age for a dressage horse,[3] Anne Gribbons, dressage technical adviser for the United States Equestrian Federation, assessed Totilas as having taken the sport to a new level: "He is capable of such power and balance while he's in motion that it is almost beyond what most other horses can do."[3]

Breeding status and sale

[edit]

Totilas was approved for breeding by the KWPN in 2009,[19] and stood at stud in 2010 for a stud fee of €5,500,[2][6] or about $7,000 (US), considered a very high fee for a warmblood stallion.[7] A total of 175 mares were approved for the stallion, including US Olympic medal-winner Brentina.[2] His first year at stud generated fees of nearly €1.4 million.[2][20] In September 2010, an embryo by Totilas sold for €32,000.[6] His first foal, a seal brown-colored filly named Moorlands Guinevere, was foaled 23 January 2011 in Utrecht, Netherlands.[21]

In October 2010, it was announced that sport horse breeder Paul Schockemöhle had purchased Totilas,[6] for an undisclosed sale price,[22] estimated to be in the range of €9.5 million[2] to as high as €15 million.[20] At the World Equestrian Games, Gal strongly denied that the horse was for sale, but his owners stated that after his wins at the WEG, "we could no longer ignore the interest in the stallion."[6] Though the official press release stated that Gal "understood" the Vissers' decision,[6] other news sources quoted him as stating, "I'm absolutely devastated...It's like I'm struck by lightning."[20]

The news was a shock in the dressage community, with the Dutch national dressage team expressing disappointment that their Olympic hopes had been damaged by the horse being sold to an individual from Germany, The Netherlands' closest rival. Dutch team trainer Sjef Janssen described the sale as "a huge blood-letting" for the team,[23] expressing concerns that the horse would perform for Germany in the 2012 Olympics.[20] The volume of online discussions led the Eurodressage web site to crash.[20] Comment included criticism of Anky van Grunsven from Gal's business partner Nicole Werner for posting the news via Twitter prior to the official news release, and a resulting public exchange between the two camps on Facebook.[24] The Vissers stated that they would continue to make promising and talented horses available to Gal.[25]

German ownership

[edit]

In March 2011, Schockemöhle changed the horse's show name with the FEI to "Totilas".[26] Schockemöhle and promoter Michael Mronz marketed the horse under the new name.[27][28] Schockemöhle and co-owner Ann-Kathrin Linsenhoff selected Matthias Alexander Rath, a 26-year-old German rider who is Linsenhoff's stepson, to be the horse's new rider. In November 2010, Totilas and Rath made a public appearance in Mühlen, Germany, at Schockemöhle's stallion station.[29] The pair competed with the German team for the European Dressage Championships held in Rotterdam in August 2011,[21] failing to medal in that competition individually, although their scores assisted the Germans to win a silver team medal.[30]

Allegations of abuse arose soon after the pair's 2011 performance in Rotterdam. A public showing where Totilas stuck out his tongue while performing, viewed as a sign of stress, caused public concern.[30] Further controversy arose in October 2012, when the German branch of PETA filed a legal complaint against Rath, Schockemöhle and Linsenhoff, alleging that Totilas was being abused due to the use of rollkur in his training and management that kept him confined in a box stall, isolated from other horses. PETA alleged that the horse's treatment violated the free-movement requirements of the German Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture, and Consumer Protection. As of 2012, prosecutors had not determined whether PETA's allegations were sufficient to constitute an alleged violation of German law.[31] As the bulk of the complaint focused on the issue of rollkur training, which PETA was attempting to ban in Germany (although it was already prohibited by the German Equestrian Federation), the charge was viewed within the dressage community as a means to bring the issue to public attention via a high-profile case.[15]

Totilas was injured during the winter of 2011/12.[30] Rath and Totilas were expected to compete in the 2012 Olympics and placed in the top three at the 2012 German Championships. Shortly afterwards, Rath became ill with mononucleosis and withdrew from competition at CHIO Aachen in June and subsequently from the German Olympic team.[32][30][33] Rath expressed hope that the pair would be able to compete in the 2016 Olympics, although by that time Totilas would be 16 years old.[32] They then moved to the Netherlands to work with Sjef Janssen, coach of the Dutch team and of gold medalist Anky van Grunsven, presumably to obtain experience in the training techniques that Totilas was familiar with while in the care of Gal.[34]

Totilas was injured in 2012 and spent two years out of competition.[35] Rath and Totilas made their return at the May 2014 CDI Kapellen event in Belgium and competed in two test events at the 2014 CDIO Aachen event but had to withdraw from the freestyle event due to another injury. The pair returned in 2015 at a local event in Hulten and then competed at the CDIO Hagen in July.[36] Rath and Totilas won a bronze in the team event at the 2015 European Championships in Aachen.[8] The pair scored 75.9% in the grand prix event, with some observers believing Totilas to be lame. He was subsequently withdrawn from the special freestyle event. Aachen was Totilas' final competition; a subsequent MRI scan showed bone inflammation in his left hind hoof and he was retired in August 2015.[8][37]

Totilas spent his retirement at the Gestut Schafhof in Kronberg, Germany, travelling to Mühlen for breeding purposes. He made a celebration appearance at the 2019 KWPN Stallion Licensing event. In retirement he was ridden by Rath and Linsenhoff.[36] He died from colic on 14 December 2020.[38]

Pedigree

[edit]

Moorlands Totilas was sired by a Trakehner stallion, Gribaldi, that was approved by KWPN, the Dutch Warmblood registry, and noted for elegance and refinement.[19] Gribaldi had also been shown at the Grand Prix level by Gal.[17] Toto's dam, Lominka, a KWPN-approved Dutch Warmblood, came from bloodlines that have produced both show jumping and dressage horses, many of whom were noted for good temperament.[17][19]

Enrico Caruso
(Trakehner)
Kostolany
(Trakehner)
Kapstadt
(Trakehner)
Gribaldi
(Trakehner)
Ibikus
(Trakehner)
Gondola III
(Trakehner)
Gloria VI
(Trakehner)
Moorlands Totilas
Nimmerdor
(KWPN)
Glendale
(KWPN)
Silja
(KWPN)
Lominka (KWPN)
Akteur
(Groningen (NWP))
Elsa
(KWPN)
Wominka
(KWPN)

[19][39]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Moorlands Totilas".Edward Gal.com Accessed 2010-10-17 Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c d e "Totilas sold to Paul Schockemöhle of Germany." Dressage News.com accessed 2010-10-17
  3. ^ a b c d Cengel, Katya (26 September 2010). "Dutch pair setting pace for dressage competition at World Equestrian Games". The Courier-Journal. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  4. ^ 2005 World Championships for Young Dressage Horses: Total Pleasure with Totilas, eurodressage.com, 4 July 2005
  5. ^ "Om de Trakehner te eren" (Dutch article about Totilas and his breeders)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "Dressage sensation Totilas sold to Paul Schockemohle". horseandhound.co.uk. 14 October 2010. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  7. ^ a b Beatty, Sarah. "Totilas Will Stand At Stud In 2010" Chronicle of the Horse, 2010-02-02, accessed 2010-10-17
  8. ^ a b c "Equestrian Life - Totilas turns 20". Equestrian Life. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Search Centre: Results by competitor or horse". International Federation for Equestrian Sports. Archived from the original on 31 July 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2010. Search fields: Competitor = Gal, Administering NF (National Federation) = NED (Netherlands), Gender=Male
  10. ^ a b "Edward Gal and Moorlands Totilas Set New Dressage World Record" (Press release). International Federation for Equestrian Sports. 18 December 2009. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  11. ^ "Special Report: At Home with "Normal" Moorlands Totilas". Dressage News. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  12. ^ Cuckson, Pippa (27 March 2010). "Edward Gal and Moorlands Totilas win FEI World Cup dressage final". London: Telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 24 May 2010. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  13. ^ a b c "Gal and Totilas Win the Special in Style – Can They Make It a Hat-Trick of Gold?" (Press release). International Federation for Equestrian Sports. 29 September 2010. Archived from the original on 12 January 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  14. ^ "Gal and Totilas Make It a Golden Hat-Trick on a Night to Remember" (Press release). International Federation for Equestrian Sports. 1 October 2010. Archived from the original on 12 January 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  15. ^ a b Jurga, Fran (22 October 2012). "PETA Alleges Owners of Dressage Star Totilas Guilty of Rollkur and Animal Welfare Violations". The Jurga Report. Equus Magazine. Archived from the original on 22 January 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  16. ^ FEI Veterinary Committee (1 January 2010). "NEWS FROM THE FEI VETERINARY COMMITTEE". Fédération Equestre Internationale. Archived from the original on 14 April 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  17. ^ a b c Battram, Simon. "The magic of Moorlands Totilas" Stepintodressae.com, accessed 2010-10-18
  18. ^ a b Cuckson, Pippa (16 December 2009). "Edward Gal and Moorlands Totilas break record in Olympia's World Cup dressage". London: Telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  19. ^ a b c d "Dressage Super Sires Moorlands Totilas Gribaldi and Kostolany at the helm!" Accessed 17 October 2010 Archived 8 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ a b c d e "Sale Totilas Causes Shock Wave and Online Webquake" Eurodressage.com 2010-10-14, accessed 2010-10-17
  21. ^ a b "Totilas 1st Foal Born" Dressage News.com. 23 January 2011. Accessed 28 January 2011
  22. ^ "SOLD:Moorland Totilas" Eventing Nation, Accessed 17 October 2010 Archived 19 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Dutch Equestrian Federation Mourns Sale of Totilas" Eurodressage.com 2010-10-14, accessed 2010-10-17
  24. ^ "Heated Emotions on Facebook Due to Shocking Sale Totilas" Eurodressage.com 2010-10-14, accessed 2010-10-17
  25. ^ "Totilas Sold to Paul Schockemohle" Eurodressage.com 2010-10-14, accessed 2010-10-17
  26. ^ FEI Horse Detail: Totilas Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 1 August 2012.
  27. ^ Paul Schockemöhle: Breeding stallions
  28. ^ Totilas auf Kaffeetassen: Dressurpferd soll Kasse machen (German) Archived 21 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Matthias Rath Presents New Ride, Totilas, to the Press, eurodressage.com, 30 November 2010
  30. ^ a b c d Totilas' Olympic Selection Raises Concern | eurodressage
  31. ^ Lesté-Lasserre, Christa (24 October 2012). "Dressage Stallion Totilas' Owners, Rider Face PETA Complaint". The Horse. Blood-Horse Publications. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  32. ^ a b Rath And Totilas Out Of 2012 London Olympic Games | The Chronicle of the Horse
  33. ^ Befangenheit und andere Probleme bei Totilas-Entscheidung | STERN.DE Archived 7 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ German Dressage News. "German Branch PETA Files Charges Against Totilas' Owners". Eurodressage. Eurodressage bvba. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  35. ^ "World Champion Dressage Stallion Totilas Dies". Chronicle of the Horse. 15 December 2020. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  36. ^ a b "Totilas, Global Dressage Sensation, Passed Away". Eurodressage. 15 December 2020. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  37. ^ Elder, Lucy (14 January 2016). "Totilas' stud fee drops €5,500 as Toto Jr delights judges *VIDEO*". Horse & Hound. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  38. ^ Bryan, Polly (15 December 2020). "Totilas dies aged 20: dressage world mourns loss of global superstar". Horse & Hound. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  39. ^ "Moorlands Totilas". Pedigree Online - All Breed Database. Retrieved 19 August 2024.