Scoring the Hunter Round
At Horse Listening, we are emphatic life-long learners of all things horsey. You will be reminded time and again about how there is so much to be learned from horses and other horse people, if only we listened.
This guest post is by Laura Kelland-May, a Sr. Judge in Hunter Jumper Hack and Equitation and founder of the Thistle Ridge Skill Builders Series © of Horse Show Clinics andThistle Ridge Skill Builders©. She is available for judging and developing clinics and riders in your area.
A well thought of and ‘in demand’ coach and trainer with 20+ years of experience, Laura continues to develop and brings her experience online and has been featured guest with “How to Market Your Horse Business” (Facebook discussion) and Featured Guest with “Horse Family Magazine” on #horsechat. In addition Laura offers weekly lessons on her weekly live Q & A session.
Scoring the Hunter Round
Have you ever wondered how the judge keeps track of the horses they like?
We have all lamented about “the judge just doesn’t like my horse”. Well, that usually isn’t the reason why you placed or didn’t place in the show ring. The judge probably DOES like your horse and is hoping it will put in a good trip. Your horse may not have won because it didn’t perform as well as some of the other competitors –OR- you don’t understand what the judge is looking for.
When I sit in the judges stand I often see a horse come in and think, “ ohh, what a lovely horse. This is going to be great!” Then all of a sudden the rider buries the lovely horse in a bad spot or falls into the trot through a corner. As judges we are looking for the best in your horse and we are rooting for you. If you find a bad take off spot or get a wrong lead, then we will have to penalize you.
Judging Criteria for Show Hunters
People who take their showing seriously know the rules and have an understanding of “what the judge is looking for”. Sometimes, however, people (by people I mean trainers, coaches, riders and parents) overlook what the judge really wants to see (an athletic horse that has good form over it’s fences) and concentrate on whether the leads, striding and braids are good.
Ideally, the judge (that would be me) wants to see a well turned out horse and rider combination come in, with purpose, and jump all the jumps out of stride and in good form. It is important to remember that anything that detracts from a rhythmic, steady round (breaking to a trot, wrong leads, adding and leaving out strides) will cause the score to go down. Major errors such as refusals, nappiness at the gate, bucking, rearing (God Forbid!) and knock downs are heavily penalized.
Usually judges are in the same ball park for major errors. A refusal will be scored in the 30’s. A horse that refuses may have the best form over fences but a refusal should knock it out of the ribbons.
A knock down is also heavily penalized. I score a horse that has a knock down with a front leg more severely than if it hits a fence with a hind leg on the way down. This is from the old field hunter school. If a horse hits with its front legs taking off for the jump, it may have a terrible fall or flip. For this reason I score a rail down with the hind legs less severe than a rail with the front hooves. A knock down is considered a major error and I score a 50 for a rail. If it is a bad jump with a rail down I will note its jumping style and a rail by giving it a score in the low 50’s. If it is a rub that robs a nice horse of a first place finish – I may be generous and score it the highest of knock downs.
Posted on October 10, 2011, in guest blogger, horses, showing and tagged horses, hunter horse, hunter judge, judge's comments, showing. Bookmark the permalink. 7 Comments.





Kathy,
Thank you for taking the time to have me write a guest post for your Horse Listening website. You have created a special place for horse people to develop themselves into thinking, feeling and LISTENING horsemen/women.
Thank you,
Laura
Thank you so much for your time and expertise! I am sure many readers at Horse Listening are very interested in your topics too.
Very interesting! I know nothing about hunter classes but would love to read more about them!
Thanks
Despite showing in the hunter ring for years, I have yet to REALLY learn how the judge scores- apart from rhythm, distance, lead changes, and general “attractiveness” of the ride- I’m not sure how the scoring system works. I suppose I do feel it comes down to the brand of tack, custom boots or not, braided tail, etc. if there are two riders tied for first. Thank you for your post, hoping to see more!
Reblogged this on P&M Equitación.
Nice article!! I totally agree with you that the judges ARE ROOTING for the exhibitor. I am also a judge and just finished judging today wishing I could have given higher scores, but the rounds had their mistakes and I am paid to sort them out to my best opinion. The lesson for the exhibitor is to keep doing your best and learning as you go and have fun. :}
Fantastic! Thank you for the comment.