You know that, and I know that, but the average Joe doesn’t know that. We can’t talk about “this is what will kill eventing” without taking into consideration what outsiders to the sport will see. And that, my friend, is the point I’m trying to make.
Personally, I think the sport as a whole will get more tough when we start to criticize riders who are trying to do best by their horse.
Calvin has been with this horse for a long ass time, this horse was clearly thoroughly vetted, that the FEI only chose today, two and a half days after, to “warn him” shows more of a subservience to the court of public opinion than a true ruling of a federation.
If FEI really gave a shit about horse welfare, than riders like Marilyn Little would never be allowed to compete due to the heinous ways they get their horse around a course.
You’re absolutely right, Hamel was doing her best – we know that. Calvin, too, was doing his best with a horse that, in his mind at the time, was clearly prepared to keep going.
If we want this sport to live on, we can’t cherry-pick what we care about; as I mentioned before, we have to trust that most riders know their horses.