Mark Todd (equestrian)

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Mark Todd (born March 1, 1956)(height 172) is a New Zealand horseman who was voted Rider of the 20th Century by the International Equestrian Federation, (Fédération Equestre Internationale).

Born in rural Cambridge in the heart of the Waikato on the North Island, Todd was considered by his peers to be the consummate three-day-event horseman.

From small pony club beginnings he went on to win two Olympic Games gold medals, (the first rider to win successive individual three-day-event titles for 60 years), and also won two bronzes. He won the prestigious Badminton Horse Trials on three occasions and the Burghley three-day trials five times. He also won gold medals as a member of the New Zealand team at the world championships in 1990 (Stockholm) and 1998 (Rome), the European Championships in 1997 (when it was open to te world), plus 20 or more other international events.

Mark Todd was not only a great eventer, but he also competed in the 1988 and 1992 Olympics in the sport of show jumping.

He won back-to-back gold medals on Charisma at Los Angeles in 1984 and Seoul 1988. Charisma was a 16 year old when he won the second gold, and he was only the second horse to win two individual gold medals.

As a youngster, Todd went through a succession of broken bones and tears in pony club events, but he was passionate about horses and persevered. He considered becoming a jockey but quickly grew to 6 ft 2 in which forced him into show jumping instead. Although he was a lanky lad with a high seat, he impressed with his elegant riding and the uncanny rapport he quickly fostered with his mounts, even those he had never ridden before. He was able to coax exceptional jumping feats from some horses which other riders had decided were not worth the effort.

After gaining a Diploma of Agriculture at the Waikato Technical Institute, Todd decided to move to England where he mucked out stables and began to earn event rides. As a total unknown, he entered and won the 1980 Badminton trials on Southern Comfort, and from then on became the most successful individual eventer in equestrian history.

Todd was a popular sportsman in his home country, as were the numerous horses he rode, but especially Charisma, the small Anglo-Arab horse which was retired to a Waikato farm and died aged 30.

Todd, who had married Carolyn Berry in 1986, retired from eventing following the 2000 Sydney Olympics to his Rivermonte Farm near Cambridge to breed horses and concentrate on several business ventures, including the manufacture/retail of harness and other tack. He has become a familiar face at race tracks where his thoroughbreds have enjoyed success.

In 2000, the Sunday Mirror accused Todd of being a homosexual and a cocaine user. It published photographs of Todd, showing him snorting cocaine with another man. Certain homosexual acts were also alleged to have taken place aboard a horse float. Todd appeared on the Holmes television program to discuss the allegations, but refused to explicitly deny them. The incident caused considerable embarrassment in New Zealand sporting circles and society generally, although it remains unclear just how much truth was behind the allegations, and what exactly occurred in the horse float at the centre of the allegations. Todd remains married to his wife, despite the lack of a formal denial any of the allegations.

Todd's autobiography, So Far So Good, has become a popular seller among the international equestrian scene.

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