This article is about the 2014 equine (horse) sports season and results. For other sports' results, see
2014 in sports.
Overview of the events of 2014 in equestrianism
- March 21, 2013 – March 23, 2014: 2013–14 FEI World Cup Dressage[1]
- 2013–14 Western European League winner: Tinne Vilhelmson-Silfvén[2]
- 2013–14 Central European League winner: Tatiana Dorofeeva[3]
- 2013–14 North American League winner: Lars Petersen
- 2013–14 Asia / Pacific League winner: Mary Hanna
- April 17 – 21: 2014 Reem Acra FEI World Cup Final at Lyon[4]
- March 27, 2013 – March 23, 2014: 2013–14 FEI World Cup Jumping[7]
- 2013–14 Western European League winner: Marcus Ehning[8]
- 2013–14 Arab League winner: Abdelkebir Ouaddar[9]
- 2013–14 Australian League winner: Jamie Kermond[10]
- 2013–14 Caucasian League winner: Jamal Rahimov[11]
- 2013–14 Central America and Caribbean Islands League winner: Manuel Espinosa Pla[12]
- 2013–14 Central Asian League winner: Umid Kamilov[13]
- 2013–14 Chinese League winner: Liu Tongyan[14]
- 2013–14 Japan League winner: Tae Sato[15]
- 2013–14 New Zealand League winner: Samantha McIntosh[16]
- 2013–14 North America East Coast League winner: Kent Farrington[17]
- 2013–14 North America West Coast League winner: Nayel Nassar[18]
- 2013–14 South African League winner: Jeanne Engela[19]
- 2013–14 South American North League winner: Juan Manuel Gallego[20]
- 2013–14 South American South League winner: Yuri Mansur Guerios[21]
- 2013–14 South East Asian League winner: Kurniadi Katompo[22]
- April 17 – 21: 2014 Longines FEI World Cup Jumping Final at Lyon[23]
- Winner: Daniel Deusser (with horse Cornet d'Amour)[24]
- April 24 – November 15: The 2014 Longines Global Champions Tour[25]
- April 24 – 27 at Antwerp[26]
- Class 05: Antwerp 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: McLain Ward (with horse Rothchild)[27]
- May 2 – 4 at Madrid[28]
- May 29 – June 1 at Hamburg[30]
- Class 06: Hamburg 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Katrin Eckermann (with horse Firth of Lorne)[31]
- June 6 – 8 at Shanghai[32]
- Class 04: Shanghai 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Pieter Devos (with horse Dream of India Greenfield)[33]
- June 12 – 14 at Cannes[34]
- Class 14: Cannes 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Scott Brash (with horse Hello Sanctos)[35]
- June 26 – 28 at Monaco[36]
- Class 05: Monaco CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Bassem Hassan Mohammed (with horse Victoria)[37]
- July 4 – 6 at Paris[38]
- July 10 – 12 at Cascais, Estoril[40]
- Class 04: Cascais 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Scott Brash (with horse Hello Sanctos)[41]
- July 25 – 27 at Chantilly, Oise[42]
- August 1 – 3 at Valkenswaard[44]
- Class 04: Valkenswaard 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Christian Ahlmann (with horse Codex One)[45]
- August 14 – 16 at London[46]
- Class 14: London 2014 - CSI5* - 1.60 m (main GCT event) winner: Scott Brash (with horse Hello Sanctos)[47]
- September 12 – 14 at Lausanne[48]
- Class 10: Lausanne 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Ludger Beerbaum (with horse Chaman)[49]
- September 18 – 21 at Vienna[50]
- Class 04: Vienna 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Marcus Ehning (with horse Plot Blue)[51]
- November 13 – 15 at Doha (final)[52]
- Class 05: Doha 2014 CSI5* 1.60m (main GCT event) winner: Rolf-Göran Bengtsson (with horse Casall Ask)[53]
- Overall winner of the 2014 LGCT: Scott Brash (with horse Hello Sanctos)[54]
- June 4 – September 14: The Spruce Meadows Tournaments in Calgary[55]
- June 4 – 8: The "National"[56]
- June 12 – 15: The "Continental"[58]
- Biggest purse: The C$210,000 CP Grand Prix event.
- June 26 – 29: The "Canada One"[60]
- Biggest purse: The C$125,000 Imperial Challenge event.
- Winner: Nicolas Pizzaro Suarez (with horse Colasko)[61]
- July 2 – 6: The "North American"[62]
- Biggest purse: The C$210,000 Cenovus Energy Classic (Derby) event.
- Winner: Angel Karolyi (with horse Indiana 127)[63]
- July 10 – 13: The "Pan American"[64]
- Biggest purse: The C$400,000 Pan American Cup Presented by Rolex event.
- Winner: Kent Farrington (with horse Uceko)[65]
- September 10 – 14: The "Masters"[66]
Thoroughbred horse racing
- Triple Crown (US)
- Triple Crown (Canada)[69]
- English Triple Crown (UK)
- Australian Triple Crown
Other equine events
References
External links