Boyd Martin
Boyd Martin (born August 20, 1979) is an American equestrian.[1] Competing in eventing, he participated at two Summer Olympics (in 2012 and 2016).[2]
Boyd Martin and Otis Barbotiere competing at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. | |
Personal information | |
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Born | August 20, 1979 |
Medal record
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Biography
Olympic three-day event rider Boyd Martin was born to Toy Dorgan, an American speedskater, and Ross Martin, an Australian cross-country skier. His parents met at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. Martin and his sister Brook were raised in Terrey Hills, New South Wales, on the outskirts of Sydney. Boyd started his riding career in Forrest Hills Pony Club, with a pony named Willy.[3]
The day after he finished high school he moved into the bunkhouse at Heath and Rozzie Ryan's Newcastle Equestrian Centre,[4] and stayed there for the next eight years, first as a working student and later running his own business. Heath Ryan imprinted hard work and horsemanship on Martin and was a huge influence on his early career. During this time Boyd represented Australia at the Young Rider level against New Zealand on a Trans-Tasman three-day event on Brady Bunch, and won the very last long-format four-star event at the 2003 Adelaide CCI4* riding True Blue Toozac. He was long listed for the Australian Eventing Team for the Summer Olympic in 2000, 2004 and 2008. To maintain his horses Martin supplemented his income by selling school books for the family business, picking grapes at the local wineries in the early morning, and selling holiday packages as a telemarketer.
In 2006 Martin traveled to the US to compete at the Rolex Kentucky CCI4* riding Ying Yang Yo, and fell in love with eventing in the U.S. He then returned to Australia to liquidate most of his assets before he and his wife, Silva (née Stigler), moved to the U.S. in 2007 to pursue their dreams of competing internationally. They both walked away from a very successful business and lifestyle in Australia, starting over from the beginning to build a business in the United States.
For the first three years in the US, Martin worked as an assistant to Phillip Dutton,[5][6] then in 2010 Silva and Boyd started their own business Windurra USA, LLC. They leased the upper barn from Dutton, running their business out the same farm. Dutton continued coaching and training Martin through this transition. Dutton became somewhat of a father figure to Martin in the United States and remains his coach and mentor.
Today the Martins own their own farm, Windurra USA in Cochranville, Pennsylvania. Located in Cheshire Hunt Country and adjacent to the 3,000-acre Runnymede Sanctuary, the Windurra facilities include jumping and dressage arenas and a galloping track, all featuring all-weather footing. The extensive cross-country schooling course designed and built by Eric Bull includes beginner novice through four-star elements. During the winter Boyd and Silva are based at Stable View Farm in Aiken, South Carolina and Silva also travels to Wellington, Florida to train and compete.
As the son of an American citizen, Martin has always enjoyed dual citizenship, and in 2009 he officially began representing the United States in International competition. He was the top-placed US rider (10th) at the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Lexington, Kentucky riding Neville Bardos; top US rider (7th place) at the 2014 World Equestrian Games in Normandy, France riding Shamwari; and was a member of the US Olympic Eventing Team in London in 2012 riding Otis Barbotiere. In 2015 he placed 4th individually and was a member of the gold medal winning US team at the Pan American Games in Toronto riding Pancho Villa. In the following year Boyd competed at his second Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil riding the Off the Track Thoroughbred gelding Blackfoot Mystery. He placed 16th individually and thus was the second best US-rider, behind Dutton who won a bronze medal.
As of 2018 he has competed in two Olympic Games, two World Equestrian Games, a Pan American Games and has been a member of five US Nations Cup teams. In all ten appearances for the USA, he has never picked up a cross country jumping penalty. Throughout his 4-star career, Boyd is the only rider in the world to have competed at every 4-star in the world, including the Olympic Games and the World Equestrian Games. He has competed in a total of forty 4-stars, producing a total of nineteen individual 4-star horses. In US Eventing in 2017 he had over 175 starts and became the US Eventing Association Rider of the Year.
German-born dressage rider Silva Martin obtained US Citizenship in 2010 and competed on her first US Team at the Nations Cup in Wellington, Florida in February, 2014 riding Rosa Cha W, helping to bring home a team gold medal. She also operates a separate business under the same banner at Windurra USA. She specializes in training dressage horses and coaches a number of high level eventing and dressage riders.
Martin purchased his best-known horse, Neville Bardos, for $850; Neville had been rescued from the racetrack by another trainer and declared 'no good' as a jumper.[7] After overcoming great adversity including a devastating barn fire at True Prospect Farm in 2011, and the deaths of his father and father-in-law shortly after the fire, Martin and Neville made an amazing comeback to finish 7th at the Burghley CCI4* (England), one of the toughest three-events in the world. Martin finished 2011 ranked 8th on the HSBC World Rankings, Neville Bardos was named the 2011 International Horse of the Year by the USEF, and The Chronicle of the Horse named Martin its 2011 Overall Rider of the Year. They were featured on Rock Center with Brian Williams on NBC Television, the cover page of the New York Times,[8] and were the subject of a Pulitzer Prize winning feature in Sports Illustrated magazine.
Martin has enjoyed much international competitive success, finishing in the top ten at every four-star in the world except Badminton (England): Rolex Kentucky CCI4* (USA); Pau CCI4* (France); Luhmuehlen CCI4* (Germany); the World Equestrian Games (USA and France); and Burghley CCI4* (England). He has trained and competed a long list of successful four-star event horses including Flying Doctor, Brady Bunch, X-Treme, Starkey, Orchard End Winston, True Blue Toozac, Ying Yang Yo, Neville Bardos, Rock on Rose, Remington XXV, Otis Barbotiere, Trading Aces, Shamwari IV, Crackerjack, Master Frisky, Steady Eddie, Welcome Shadow, Blackfoot Mystery and Tsetserleg.
Martin competes nearly every weekend, and coaches a long list of successful riders. He is a sought-after clinician and in the off-season can be found teaching around the United States. Every year he takes one or two trips to Europe, usually on a USEF Traveling grant, to some of take on the world's best horses and riders at the biggest competitions in Europe.
Working hard behind the scenes is a dedicated support team: farriers Doug Neilson and Steve Teichman, and veterinarian Dr. Kevin Keane, DVM, and assistant rider Mike Pendleton. Martin usually employs 5-8 people to work with the horses, often younger working students who are eager to develop their skills for the higher levels. He has successfully syndicated multiple upper level event horses and has a devoted group of horse owners involved in his horses' careers.
In addition to training with Phillip Dutton, Martin receives coaching in dressage with his wife Silva as well as dressage trainer Scott Hassler and show jumper Richard Picken, and regularly works with US Eventing Team Coach Erik Duvander.
With a quick smile, sharp intellect and easygoing personality as well as the ability to easily relate his riding expertise to students of all levels, Boyd Martin is a media favorite. He is a popular co-host of the Eventing Radio Show and his PR team maintains an active website, blog and social media. He also wrote a regular column for Warmbloods Today magazine and does a monthly Q&A, "Everything Eventing", with Sidelines magazine. He has been featured extensively in equestrian media as well as mainstream publications including The New York Times (front page feature) and Sports Illustrated.
His current sponsors include Ariat, Attwood Equestrian Surfaces , Charles Owen, Ecogold, Hylofit, Majyk Equipe Boots, Purina, Smartpak Equine and Stübben Custom Saddlery. Boyd is an ambassador to the equine welfare charity BrookeUSA.
In 2015 Martin was ranked 3rd in the FEI World Eventing Athlete Rankings. In order to view Boyd's most up to date results, please link to US Eventing.
CCI5* results
Results | ||||||||||||
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Event | Kentucky | Badminton | Luhmühlen | Burghley | Pau | Adelaide | ||||||
2000 | 5th (Flying Doctor) | |||||||||||
2001 | 17th (Flying Doctor) 18th (Starkey) | |||||||||||
2002 | 5th (X-Treme) | |||||||||||
2003 | 18th (Brady Bunch) | |||||||||||
2004 | Did not participate | |||||||||||
2005 | 8th (Orchard End Winston) | |||||||||||
2006 | 11th (Ying-Yang-Yo) | |||||||||||
2007 | Did not participate | |||||||||||
2008 | 9th (Neville Bardos) RET (Ying-Yang-Yo) | |||||||||||
2009 | Did not participate | |||||||||||
2010 | 4th (Neville Bardos) 11th (Rock On Rose) 12th (Remington XXV) | 7th (Remington XXV) | ||||||||||
2011 | 9th (Remington XXV) | 7th (Neville Bardos) | ||||||||||
2012 | 8th (Remington XXV) | RET (Ying-Yang-Yo) | ||||||||||
2013 | RET (Trading Aces) | |||||||||||
2014 | 15th (Otis Barbotiere) | |||||||||||
2015 | 7th (Master Frisky) 25th (Cracker Jack) | |||||||||||
2016 | 6th (Blackfoot Mystery) 12th (Shamwari) 42nd (Steady Eddie) | EL (Cracker Jack) | 10th (Cracker Jack) | 13th (Welcome Shadow) EL (Cracker Jack) | ||||||||
2017 | 7th (Cracker Jack) EL (Steady Eddie) | 10th (Steady Eddie) | RET (Cracker Jack) | |||||||||
2018 | 11th (Tsetserleg) RET (Steady Eddie) | WD (Shamwari) | ||||||||||
2019 | ||||||||||||
EL = Eliminated; RET = Retired; WD = Withdrew |
International Championship Results
Results | ||||||||||
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Year | Event | Horse | Placing | Notes | ||||||
2010 | World Equestrian Games | Neville Bardos | 4th | Team | ||||||
10th | Individual | |||||||||
2012 | Olympic Games | Otis Barbotiere | 7th | Team | ||||||
RET | Individual | |||||||||
2014 | World Equestrian Games | Shamwari 4 | 10th | Team | ||||||
7th | Individual | |||||||||
2015 | Pan American Games | Pancho Villa | Team | |||||||
4th | Individual | |||||||||
2016 | Olympic Games | Blackfoot Mystery | 6th | Team | ||||||
16th | Individual | |||||||||
2018 | World Equestrian Games | Tsetserleg | 8th | Team | ||||||
56th | Individual | |||||||||
2019 | Pan American Games | Tsetserleg | Team | |||||||
Individual | ||||||||||
EL = Eliminated; RET = Retired; WD = Withdrew |
References
- "Boyd Martin". London2012.com. Archived from the original on 2013-05-01.
- "U.S. equestrian Boyd Martin overcomes tragedies". USA Today. 28 July 2012. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
- "The Story of Willy". 26 January 2016. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
- http://www.ryanshorses.com.au/page/heath_ryan.html
- "Boyd Martin, horse save each other's lives". NBC. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
- "Neville Bardos". Windurra, LLC. Archived from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
- https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/13/sports/horse-is-a-fire-survivor-and-a-possible-olympian.html?_r=0
- "Q&A with Boyd Martin". NBC. 19 July 2016.
External links
- Boyd Martin (and here) at FEI