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About
us > Aachen-Laurensberger Rennverein e.V.

From flat and hurdle racing to
the CHIO
The history of the Aachen-Laurensberger Rennverein e.V.
"I saved for three years,
so that I could come to Aachen again this year." Of course
it is not quite as extreme for the riders and drivers today,
as it was for the Hungarian-born Tibor von Pettko-Szandtner
in 1952 - at least not financially speaking. From the sporting
aspect on the other hand, you have to really prove your ability
to be invited to the World Equestrian Festival, CHIO Aachen.
It is indeed the international equestrian elite, who compete
in the show-jumping dressage and driving competitions at the
show grounds of the Aachen-Laurensberger Rennverein (ALRV)
every year. 2007 the tournament was eventually enlarged: Now
eventing and vaulting belong to the CHIO-disciplines. And
even World and European Equestrian Championships are just
as symbolic of Aachen as Emperor Charles the Great, printen
(Aachen biscuit speciality), or the football players of Alemannia.
A city that awakes emotions.
"He has achieved enough.
I just brought him back one more time, so that he can say
a last goodbye to Aachen," Fritz Thiedemann said emotionally
for instance after the last public performance of his legendary
jumping horse, Meteor in 1961. Referring to the enthusiastic
crowd that emanates a more than electric atmosphere just
as much today as it did then. "Aachen stands for top
sport - but also and above all for a folk festival,"
says ALRV President Klaus Pavel.
Of course one could not possibly have foreseen this development
in 1898 when the squires, factory owners, land owners, cattle
traders and riding instructors from the region joined up
forces to form the "Laurensberger Rennverein".
Their intention was quite simple: Jointly organised horse
races were designed to liven up the everyday life of the
equestrian-loving people of Aachen.
Whereby the historical foot steps
that they wanted to ride into were immense even at this
early date, since under the patronship of Charles the Great,
riders had already competed against each other in the field
one thousand years before. A tradition, which meant that
Aachen had the reputation of a being "horse Mecca"
up until the 19th Century. After the initial years of its
establishment, the club that had been renamed "Aachen-Laurensberger
Rennverein" moved to its present location site in the
1920s: To the extensive show grounds at the Soers in Aachen.
As well as the usual "racing day" the first so-called
"riding and driving tournament" was staged in
1924 combined with flat and hurdle races. Twenty thousand
spectators were enthralled and the foundation stone for
the CHIO had been laid.
From then on the developments
raced ahead: In 1927 the first international tournament
was held and two years later the first Nations' Cup and
thus the actual era of the CHIO (Concours Hippique International
Officiel) began. In 1938 120,000 guests from all over Europe
travelled to the Soers and their riders competed against
each other in 50 competitions with 600 horses.
The war meant that things came
to a halt, but it wasn't the end of the tournament. The
flags of the former German opponents Great Britain, the
USA and the Netherlands were already flying again in the
equestrian stadium in 1947. Sport as a basis of understanding
among the different folks - and the break-through into a
new era. Fritz Thiedemann, Hans Günter Winkler, the
Schockemöhles, the d´ Inzeos or Nick Skelton;
Dr. Reiner Klimke, Josef Neckermann, Liselott Linsenhoff,
Elena Petushkova or Nadine Capellmann and Isabell Werth;
Richard Talbot, Ijsbrand Chardon or Michael Freund. These
are the names that were to write equestrian history in Aachen
in the following decades. Sportsmen and women who together
with their horses were able to celebrate spectacular victories
and occasionally had to accept bitter disappointments. At
the World Equestrian Festival, at World Championships (Show-jumping:
1955, 1956, 1978 and 1986; Dressage in 1970) and European
Championships (Show-jumping: 1958, 1961, 1965, 1971; Dressage
1967, 1973, 1983). Looking back the legendary German show-jumper
Hans Günter Winkler says today, "Aachen was my
equestrian homeland. I was lucky enough to be able to achieve
great victories there. And for me it was the crowning finale
being able to end my career in front of 50,000 spectators
at the 1986 World Championships at the Soers."
The place where the crowd really live for the sport, more
than they do anywhere else. "You have the impression
when you meet inhabitants from Aachen, that they are all
purely there for the tournament, whether it be the customs
offices or the hairdressers. "You have to compete in
Aachen if you ride, and you have to take part in Aachen
as often as possible, if you want to continue riding,"
the US trainer Bertalan de Nemethy realised already in the
1960s.
And so more and more spectators
come every year - it was nearly 360,000 in 2008, and they
always include the crowned and uncrowned heads of the high
society: Kings and Presidents, church delegates, international
sport and media celebrities as well as the stars or the upcoming
stars of show business. The CHIO has already been considered
to be the most famous riding tournament in the world for some
time.
A tradition that brings obligations
with it: In 2005 the show grounds were completely renovated
and put into shape for the fifth FEI World Equestrian Games
in seven disciplines - jumping, dressage, driving, eventing,
endurance, vaulting and reining - in the year 2006 (August
20th - September 3rd). For the first time in Germany, for
the first time with all disziplines within walking distance.
800 riders and their horses competed for 16 gold medals
- and 576.000 spectators visited Aachen while 1,6 billion
people worldwide were glued to their televisions. "I
am enthralled, it was simply sensational here in Aachen.
Because it was not just the equestrian fans, but many other
people too who contributed towards this atmosphere. The
viewers can even sense the mood at home in their living
rooms. These World Championships are going to achieve much
for the equestrian sport," commented the legendary
German show-jumper Ludger Beerbaum. Welcome to the future.
It has already long since begun in Aachen.
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