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The Master of Hickstead, Douglas Bunn
invented Team Chasing in 1974. He had been invited to a sumptuous
lunch by Alan Mouncer who was then a top ranking sports producer at
the BBC. The purpose of the invitation was to see if Duggie could
come up with any new ideas for Hickstead. After the third or fourth
glass of port Duggie suggested a team chase of five riders (four to
count) over the natural formidable fences on the Hickstead Estate.
The conditions for the chase were written on the back of the menu.

Twenty teams were invited to compete. Each
equestrian discipline had its own team (i.e. Eventers, Dressage,
Show Jumpers, Jockeys, Hunters etc.). The one and a half-mile course
consisted of about 30 fences. The second was a 10ft drop hedge
closely followed by two 5ft solid rails into and out of the Railway.
So it continued mercilessly to the last 3 gigantic downhill fences
which had to be taken at full speed to be in with any sort of a
chance.
The Team Chase was televised live on Good
Friday and continued as an annual event until the Hickstead Easter
meeting was replaced by a Whitsun meeting some eight years later.
Thus the Team Chase was born and equestrians all over the country
soon realised that Team Chasing could become a very attractive
competition sport for 'grown ups'; it combined the thrill of the
chase, the speed of racing, the skill of eventing and the discipline
of show-jumping with spectacular ups and downs enjoyed by both
competitors and spectators alike.
Team spirit manifests itself in many ways
none more so than in the early days when Major Humphrey Mews having
broken his leg at the second fence called from the ground 'Carry on
chaps, it is only a broken leg'.
Our thanks for this article
which has been copied from a well worth visiting site. Click
this link :
www.teamchasing.co.uk
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