CSIO 4*

Kyle King & Replay van de Stapelheyde Storm to Win the $117,000 Grand Prix CSIO 4* at Tbird

Langley, Canada โ€“ย May 29, 2026ย โ€“ Kyle King (USA) passed on buying Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde the first time. But he didn’t pass up their first chance to win an international Grand Prix atย Thunderbirdย Show Park.

King and the 9-year-old Belgian Warmblood (Vannan x Narew XX) made their Grand Prix CSIO 4* debut at the Odlum Brown BC Open. Friday’s feature class saw riders from Canada, United States, Mexico, New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, Great Britain, and Uruguay come forward to contest Peter Holmes 1.55m track. Just six charted a clear path to advance to the jump off.

First to return for the short course, Mexico’s Tanimara Macari (MEX) and Dax 68 stopped the clock at in 39.74 seconds to set a speedy standardโ€”and King’s expectations.

Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde

“I didnโ€™t know how fast Tanimara would go” said King, who immediately followed her in the jump-off. “I hadn’t seen her ride that horse and she kind of laid it down, so I said, Oh boy, there is something to beat.”

Always a speed threat, King, 51, knew he had to roll the dice with “Heyde,” but thought he’d lost the class at the second-last fence.

“I had a nice roll back, went across the middle, got the steps I wanted, and then I got in a little trouble at the second-last jump. From what I walked, there was one less [stride] and I got stuck. I thought I lost the class right there, but Heyde found a way to crawl his way over that and twist and try.”

The pair crossed the timers in 39.57 seconds, narrowly pipping Macari to the post, and then had to wait to see if the remaining four could catch it. Canadian Olympian Amy Millar (CAN) came close too, in 39.98 seconds on 10-year-old Gaiete dโ€™Elle, while Uma Oโ€™Neill (NZL) and Luigi dโ€™Eclipse looked like they’d done enough, but ultimately stopped the clock a second slower in 40.51 seconds.

“I thought Uma had me for sure,” admitted King. “Heyde is so fast across the ground. He’s got Thoroughbred blood and it comes into play.”

Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde

In the end, just four-tenths of a second separated the top three. King took the win. Macari slotted into second, and Millar, third.

The victory was a trifecta of firsts for the speedy gelding: his first 1.55m competition, his first four-star start, and his first FEI Grand Prix win.

It was also one that nearly didn’t come to pass. King admitted he initially passed on the horse.

Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde

“Kirsten Rombouts had been riding him and told me he’s the horse that I wanted. I went and saw him and I didn’t like him at first. I didn’t like that he has a little breathing issue and he’s a Thoroughbred horse, which I didn’t go all the way to Belgium to buy,” he said.

Two months later, Rombouts urged him to try the horse again. โ€œI told her I wasn’t gonna buy him. And as soon as I jumped my very first jump, I knew he was my horse.”

Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde

Heyde has been proving the both right ever since.

“He’s a winner. He’s been a winner in every level. He’s the horse that I just really believe in,” smiled King, adding that he has a particular soft spot for Heyde. “He’s my total pet. He is just so comfortableโ€”he’s light, narrow, he is easy on my old body. I just love him to death.”

Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde

Fina Results โ€“ $117,000 Grand Prix CSIO 4*

1) Kyle King (USA) & Replay Touch van de Stapelheyde โ€“ 0 / 0 โ€“ 39.57

2) Tanimara Macari (MEX) & Dax 68 โ€“ 0 / 0 โ€“ 39.74

3) Amy Millar (CAN) & Gaiette D’Elle โ€“ 0 / 0 โ€“ 39.98

Source: Press Release from Thunderbird Show Park

Photos: ยฉ Tbird / Kim Gaudry


 


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Categories: CSIO 4*