Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, July 21 2021 - 19:00
AsiaNet
Jung Aims to Make More History With a Hat-Trick of Gold
LAUSANNE, July 21, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

--Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games - Eventing Preview

After Germany's Michael Jung won the second of his two consecutive Individual 
Olympic Equestrian Eventing titles at Rio 2016 he was asked what he had next in 
his sights. "Tokyo 2020 of course, and the Europeans and maybe the world title 
along the way!", he replied.

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He wasn't joking of course, because the 38-year-old who made Eventing history 
by becoming the first to hold European, Olympic and World Championship titles 
at the same time is one of the most formidable athletes in all of equestrian 
sport.

He didn't make it to the FEI World Equestrian Games(TM) in 2018 when his horse 
had an injury, but at the FEI European Championships the following year he took 
team gold and was just pipped for the individual title by team-mate Ingrid 
Klimke. 

This is a man who sets the bar really high for everyone else, and if he can do 
the individual hat-trick in Tokyo then he will set a new Olympic record. 
Charles Pahud de Mortanges (NED) came out on top in Amsterdam 1928 and in Los 
Angeles 1932, and Mark Todd (NZL) won in Los Angeles in 1984 and in Seoul in 
1988. Both riders partnered the same horse on each occasion, the Dutchman 
riding Marcroix and the Kiwi riding the legendary Charisma. 

Jung also partnered the same horse, the mighty Sam, when coming out on top at 
London 2012 and Rio 2016. This time around he will ride his 2019 European 
Championship horse Chipmunk, and the world waits to see what more magic he can 
bring.

He'll be joined on the German team by two of the three athletes who helped 
clinch team silver in Rio, Sandra Auffarth (Viamant du Matz) and Julia 
Krajewski (Armande de B'Neville). However it is the French who line out as 
defending team champions, with Thomas Carlile (Birmane), Nicolas Touzaint 
(Absolut Gold HDC) and Christopher Six (Totem de Brecey) flying the flag for 
Les Bleus. 

The British arrive as reigning world champions and with the world number one, 
Oliver Townend (Ballaghmore Class), number five Tom McEwen (Toledo de Kerser) 
and number 22, Laura Collet (London 52) in their side, backed up by last-minute 
replacement reserve Ros Canter with Allstar B, the horse she rode to individual 
gold at the FEI World Equestrian Games(TM) 2018. 

READ MORE ( https://inside.fei.org/fei/your-role/media )

Click here ( https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/sports/equestrian/ ) for more 
information on Equestrian at the Olympic Games ( 
https://olympics.com/en/sports/equestrian/ ).

Follow all media updates ( https://inside.fei.org/fei/your-role/media ) and 
competition results ( https://tokyo2020.live.fei.org/ ) throughout the Games.

Images 
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https://www.flickr.com/photos/gallery_fei/albums/72157708780958282 ) for 
editorial use only.

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Media contact: 
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FEI Media Relations & Media Operations Manager 
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+41 78 750 61 46

SOURCE: FEI
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