Showing posts with label Bruce Davidson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruce Davidson. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Boyd Martin: How He Proposed to his Wife, Getting Fit Without Going Fast, and an Olympic Legacy


Boyd Martin brings Aussie style to America along with his wife Silva Martin, a German Grand Prix Dressage rider.  He placed 9th at Rolex in 2008 with Neville Bardos as well as 11th with Ying Yang Yo in 2006.  Back in Australia he placed 8th at the Adeleide CCI**** with Orchard End Winston and smoked it in 2003 placing first on True Blue Toozac.  He's cheeky, talented and handsome.  Quite the one to watch out for.

Copyright Amber Heintzberger 2009



Q.  Where are you from originally? 
A.  I was born at Manly Hospital in Sydney, Australia.

Q.  What do you love about Australia? 
A.  The biggest thing I miss is the lifestyle.  It's a very relaxed lifestyle and I was brought up in it.  It's the one and only thing I miss about Australia.   You know, you go to a pub to have a beer and don't have to wear shoes.   On the eventing side:  the events are a lot more like weekend camping.   There are no stables; you build your own pens.  There are no hotels so everyone camps out for the horse trials which puts everyone in the same spot.  There's a big barbque at night.   It's a lot more social.   That's basically the only things I miss.  America is way ahead in every other department.
Q.  How did you come to ride in the States? 
A.  I rode Advanced since I was about 16 in Australia.   I was doing it for eight or nine years and did every three and four-star event in Australia and New Zealand.  I got a bit bored.  I had a young horse due for a 4-star so brought him over and did [Rolex] Kentucky with another Australian named Phillip Dutton.  Ever since I set foot in the Promised Land I've loved it.

Boyd receiving the Caramati Cup, Rolex 2008
Copyright Amber Heintzberger, 2009

Q.  Are there any places you've visited that you've particularly liked?  I like Unionville [Pennsylvania] where I'm living.   With the competing I've been to Chicago down to Florida and up to New York.  But there's no place like home.  I enjoy Pennsylvania and Unionville with the countryside; the feel of the whole place is fantastic.
photo by Mike McNally



Q.  How was your family involved in sports? 
A.  Both of my parents were very sporty.  My father was a  cross-country skier and went to the Olympics.  My Mom was a speed skater and went to the Olympics for America.   I have a sporting background and was pushed very hard to accomplish sporting goals as a young person--and advised to stay well away from college and university--to have a view of life as a sportsman.

Q.  How did you get into riding?
A.  I grew up outside the city on five or ten acres and we had horses we raced around on.  I was intrigued with riding horses.  Actually my sister was more into it than I was.  But when I turned fifteen and did 3-Day eventing I got the thrill cross-country and went for it.

Q.  Did you ever try sports other than riding?
A.  I was actually was a very good middle-distance runner and still hold the record for the Australian School-Boy 1500 meter.  I've run some half marathons in my time.

Q.  How did you meet your wife? 
A.  I met Silva when she came to Australia as a German dressage rider and she didn't know much English.   She's the good-looking sort and everyone was chasing after her.  For one reason or another I out-manouvered my competitors.   I was able to seduce her at the Newcastle Races one day and run around with her.   We had the same interest in horses and stuff and for some reason she stuck around longer than I thought she would.  I ended up signing her up.

Silva Martin. Copyright Hoofprints Photography, Video & Web Design.
Q.  How did you ask her to marry you? 
A.  I thought I had the feeling I was about to get dumped.  I thought, right, getting engaged buys me some more time.  So we went to Ayers Rock in the center of Australia.  I had a plastic ring so I wouldn't have spent too much money in case she said no.  I asked her, you know, and she said yes.  I figured if she said no I could push her off the rock.

We married at the end of 2006.  After [Rolex] Kentucky I went back home and signed the bride up and moved directly back [to America].   When we got married I thought that would make her a resident of America but, unfortunately, it didn't.  We didn't see each other for four months while she was waiting for approval.  

Photo by Mike McNally
Q.  If you were to give her flowers what kind would they be? 
A.  I would probably steal some from the neighbor's yard.

Q.  Do you have any pets? 
A.  No.  When I first came over I had cat called Mick.   She [Silva] made me get rid of him because he was always on the bed and he dribbled.  One of the only regrets I have about our relationship is losing my pet cat.

Q.  Who are the horses you have going right now? 
A.  My 4-star horse Neville Bardof: he got hurt earlier this year so hasn't gone out yet.  I have a ride on Remington and Benwald, Belmont and Bruce Davidson's Rock on Roses.  That's my group of horses.  One of my homebreds is about to go out.


Q.  Who's your favorite horse of all time?  
A.  A horse called Flying Doctor had a huge heart.  I bought him as nine year old and he had never evented.   I tried him out and fell off but he didn't run away; so I thought he was nice natured.  He carried me around for years and years and was pretty special.  We had no idea what we were doing; it was a matter of natural talent on his part and I had a bit of natural feel.  There wasn't much training or education but we had a connection and I suppose we both taught each other a lot through trial and error.   I gave him to young kid in Australia and they evented the lower levels. He died last year. 

Q.  How do you think Phillip Dutton would describe you as a person? 
A.  We're pretty opposite people.  He's old and wrinkly, he doesn't talk much and I talk a lot.  I don't know what he'd say, probably not too much.  I think we get along pretty well together even though we're quite opposite personalities.  That's probably why we've gotten along for so long.

Q.  How do you think Silva would describe you as a person? 
A.  Fantastic lover.

Q.  What are you most proud of in your riding style? 
A.  I'm a very good competitor. For some reason I go better under a bit of pressure at a competition.  I also have a good ability to accept all sorts of instruction and information from all types of people. 

Q.  What are your goals? 
A.  To get on this American team eventually.  Winning 4-stars I suppose.

Q.  What characteristics are necessary in a successful 4-star horse? 
A.  They need to be good at dressage, cross country and show jumping.  And they need to be pretty sound.

Q.  How do you like to condition a horse for an event? 
A.  Moving to Pennsylvania and working under Phillip--we train on hills so that has helped a lot. Getting fit without going fast.

Q.  What's your style around the barn?
A.  Silva is a German dressage rider so I struggle a bit with the cleanliness and order.  I could pay a bit more attention to detail.  The horses are all looked after and taken care of.  I like to stay busy.  I don't like it when there's not enough work.

Copyright Amber Heintzberger 2009

Q.  When you're not on a horse or in the barn do you have any hobbies
A.  Not really.  I like to take it easy since our lifestyle is so active.  When we actually get time away from horses I do yoga.  I've been doing yoga once a week for a couple years now.  With all the riding and falling off a lot it's good.  I quite like the mental side of it.  I adapt it to competition--staying relaxed and focused and stuff like that.

Q.  What kind of music do you listen to? 
A.  Australian hip hop like the Hilltop Hoods.
Hilltop Hoods














Q.  Do you have a favorite book? 
A.  Not fiction.   I like autobiographies of infamous criminals or famous horsemen.  Like The Damage Done: Twelve Years of Hell in a Bangkok Prison.  It's a  story about an Aussie footballer [Warren Fellows].  He spent 20 years in a Bangkok prison for smuggling drugs out of the country.  He was a top class sportsman who made a few bad decisions.

Q.  Is there any food that you just hate? 
A.  Not really, I'm not that into food.  The pickles and cheeseburgers at McDonalds.  They're no good.

Q.  What 3-Day eventer do you most look up to? 
A.  Bruce Davidson or Ralph Hill.  They both evented back in the 70's and were both characters and fantastic horse trainers and horse men.

photo by Kelsey Sherman

Monday, April 27, 2009

Buck Davidson Takes 3rd at Rolex and: The Horse that Broke His Heart, That "It" Thing, and Fierce Friendships.


Currently the number one rider in the United States, Buck Davidson, Jr. is the son of Bruce Davidson, one of eventing’s greats.  Buck was a three-time Markham Trophy recipient as the highest placing Young Rider in a United States Equestrian Team Championship.  He was the 2008 Olympic alternate in Hong Kong.  Buck won the recent Fork CIC***, won two Advanced divisions at the Rocking Horse Winter Horse Trials and just placed 3rd this past weekend at Rolex on My Boy Bobby.

Q. When did you start riding? 

A. When I was four.

Q. What was your first horse or pony’s name? 

A. Bucket.  He was a  furry, bay pony with a white face about size of a dog.  The first time I rode mom and dad put Nancy and me on Bucket and held us there.  Then they simulataneously let go and Nancy fell off on way and I fell off the other way.  It was day one: learning how to fall off.    

photo by Stu Forster/ Getty Images

Q. How old are you now? 

A. 33

Q. How is your family involved in eventing

A. Obviously my Dad has done everything in the sport: won two world championships, Olympic gold, silver, bronze, Pan Am gold, Badminton, Kentucky, Burghley.  He's won everything there is to win.  Mom has done Burghley, Badminton, and she was the leading rider in the country one year.  My sister rode up to 2-star level and then went on to other things. I grew up with it.

Q. What did your path to eventing look like? 

A. Because it was so easy and so right there--you always want what you can’t have.  A million horses around and the only thing I wanted to do was anything without horses. I did what I call "guy sports" like football, basketball, ice hockey.  I had to work at the farm and pay rent so-to-speak.  But then I tore up my knee and had to get knee surgery so missed a soccer season.  I played hockey and had another surgery and missed another soccer season.  So then I rode and as I got better I thought maybe I could make living at it.  And after high school I jumped into the family business and here we are today.  It's not the easiest way to make a living but there may not be a better way.  I work for myself.  I couldn’t sit behind a desk. 



Q. What are your colors? 

A. Red and yellow.  And that came from Dad and that came from the guy that taught him to ride and his name was Bayard Tuckerman.

Q. Are you in a relationship? 

A. I am not for the first time.  I've been single for 6 or 7 months and it’s good.

Q. Do you have any kids or hope to? 

A. I don’t have any kids that’s for sure.  I definitely want to get married and have kids and a family and live a life that’s not just for me.  It's definitely something I want to do.  The right thing will come around I’m sure about it.


photo by Emily Daily

Q. Who’s your favorite horse of all time? 

A. There's been a bunch. Diffferent horses for different times.  Pajama Game was a  half-Morgan, half-Thoroughbred that got me the jacket so to speak.  We didn’t know anything but we believed in each other and got the stuff done.  

Trans Am A flirt took me to my first 4-star.  Not the world’s best mover but an unbelievable jumper.  He got me my first top 5 in a 3-star and 4-star.  Mystic Mike got me the National Championship at Kentucky.  The best horse I've ever ridden is Reggie.  But there's been so many.  

Glad Touch...all he ever seemed to do was break me: my back, my leg.  But he was probably most talented horse I've ever ridden.  He died of some weird liver disease.  It was a train wreck from day one.  We thought I needed "real" horse so we got a syndicate together.  He came lame off the plane from Ireland.  But he looked like the real thing.  So a week after one of my horses went lame in Australia I came home and rode him at Menfelt.  He turned over and broke my leg.  We got things righted and got on the list for World Games.  Then we went to Burghley and fell on steeplechase and he broke my back and neck.  For all the horses that aren’t good enough the worst things that happened were on the best horse.  

One day he laid down in the field and that was weird for him.  He had a temperature of 105 so we took him to the vet.   When we got him home I walked past his stall and he was laying down.  He stood up when I walked past. I walked away and he laid back down.  I walked back to his stall again and he stood up. I couldn’t take it anymore.  It still makes me sad to think about it now.  He made my dad so angry because he cribbed so bad and tore up the place!  It was the first horse that was for me and didn’t have some problem.  He was a special horse.  Thinking back he’d be older now but would still be going.  He was as talented or more talented than Reggie. He jumped around Kentucky like it was a joke.  But sometimes it doesn’t work out.  I wish things could have been different--that was a good horse.    I wish we could do it over.   

Q. Who are your current Advanced Horses? 

A. I'm lucky right now have six of them. Ballynoecastle (Reggie), might be the most famous of them all; My Boy Bobby (we call Bobby)--those go to [Rolex] Kentucky.  May I Tell Ya (Ben) goes to Jersey Fresh 3-star; Titanium (Ty)also goes to Jersey Fresh 3-star; LA Albert (Albert) goes to Bromont; Donald also goes to Bromont.

Q. How do you decide which competitions to take them to? 

A.  Reggie and Bobby are both at the 3-star level and ready to go to a 4-star.  Ben and Ty go to the Jersey Fresh 3-star because it's maybe a little easier and the emphasis is more on dressage and show jumping.  Donald will go to Bromont since he's still a bit weak on dressage and the show jumping is not as technical as Jersey Fresh.  The best cross country horses go to Bromont.  And then you pick which one could be most competitive:  at that level you go to win.   I'm lucky for the first time to have the number of horses at this level.  At the end of the day on their day they could all be really competitive.


photo by Emily Daily

Q. Who's your best/ favorite right now? 

A.  They’re all good unique in their own way.  Reggie is so talented and so young and we trust each other.  Albert is the greenest one and the most unreliable but I love him.  He’s beautiful and sweet.  Ty is a beautiful grey horse with a beautiful eye.  He's just a baby and actually and I own him.  That’s fun since I can do exactly what I want, when I want, and if do something wrong no one can get mad at me.  I paid nothing for him and think he will be very very good.  He gives you everything.  Bobby I don’t know very well.  I just started riding him last year so this winter he's staying with me and I ride him every day.  He has won every Advanced he’s gone in [three so far] and won the CIC*** [at The Fork].  He's a sweet horse though he doesn’t have tons of personality and character.  May I Tell Ya (Ben) looks like a pony.  He's so cute and it's exciting to have him back after two years off.  He's dead, dead quiet and then out of no where he bucks you off --and he’ll buck you off right proper.  Then he’ll look at you on the ground and think “I got ya”.  He’s the sweetest in stall.  He’ll pick up all the halters and throw them around aisle.  He has a mini pony that lives with him to try and keep him under wraps.  He's been hurt a couple times in field.  I'm happy to have him back.  

Q.  Do you have any superstitions? 

A.  A lot.  Like unbelievably a lot.  Everything starts with left.  Left sock first, left pant leg first, left shoe first.  Also, at every event I would know exactly what I did the first three times in warm up.  If I jumped the x three times in a row and it goes well then I jump the next horse over the x three times in a row.  If it goes badly then I definitely don't jump the x three times in a row the next time.  Once I had a run out at a competition and I changed everything: boots, britches, underwear, socks--everything.  The next one had a run out and I changed everything again: socks, boots, britches, underwear.  Then the third one went well.  I'm a bit crazy like that.  I once marked pair of britches that went really well.  I wore them the next week and that didn’t work out so I don’t do that anymore!  Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good.  You put in the work and you should be good but then it doesn’t hurt to have a little luck.

Q.  What are you known for or proud of in your riding style?  

A.  I'm proud of the work I put in and my development and improvement from the beginning to now.  Everyone thought I was the person that could ride any horse and since I can ride bad horses people send bad horses.  I earned my stripes riding horses no one else could ride.  As they say:  good horses allow you to ride well, bad horses make you ride bad. As I've gotten older and hopefully smarter (hence, broken) I don’t ride just anything anymore.  If it’s not good enough it’s not good enough. 

Q. How would your friends describe you? 

A.  I hope they would say first and foremost that I’m a good friend. My friends have been my friends for a long time.  I don’t have a lot of friends but the friends I have would do anything for me and I would do anything for them.  Wendy and Rob [Lewis] are friends like that.  

 I would do anything for them.  If I was in real trouble I could call them up and they would drop everything and I would do the same for them.  Wins and losses don’t mean anything without that.  My friends would tell you I’m nothing like what everyone thinks I am.  The public side of me is not at all me.  I’m basically a boring person.  I don’t drink, don't smoke, don't go out. I go home, watch tv, and go to bed.  I'm not that exciting.  I'm shy, then maybe once you know me you can’t get me to shut up.  

Q.  What do you look for in a successful four-star horse? 

A.  It's doing it.  You don’t know until you do it.  I'm not sure that Bobby is 4-star horse.  He's a 3-star winner.  Not to say that he’s not a 4-star horse.  He was having trouble going prelim last year and with a change of pilot in a year he's going to a  4-star.  That’s a big step.  He's done everything I've ever asked him to do.  He's a fantastic jumper, the best.  The same with Reggie.  Neither are throughbred horses.  They're Irish and not clean bred for sure.  I try to give them a nice time.  I look for minds.  You can’t train horse that doesn’t have good mind.   You watch American Idol and think that guy has it or he doesn’t.  You'll turn and look at a 4-star horse a second time.  Even if you don’t’ know it’s a 4-star horse.  It has that “it” thing.  It takes a special horse. 

Q.  What is the highlight of your career so far?  

A.  It’s still gonna happen.  I don’t look back on anything I’ve done.  It doesn’t really matter.  It’s:  Where are you gonna go?  We live in sally-come-lately-society.  Last weekend I won the 3-star with Bobby and then had to go back and ride Reggie Advanced and people said "smile!".  Maybe I need to take a step back.  I'm more proud of the person that I am and the friends that I have.  At the end of day it's all about the people in your life.  Nobody in 30 years is gonna remember what Buck Davidson did as a rider.  Sometimes we fool ourselves into thinking that we’re important.  And it is important to me. But it’s not the only thing.

Q.  What are your ultimate goals and hopes? 

A.  Short term I would really love to win the World Championships next year.

Q.  Who’s been most influential in your riding career? 

A.  My mom and my Dad. Taught me everything I know, basically.  It would have to be them.  No question.

photo by Kelsey Sherman
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