Coast to Coast: The US Equestrian Open of Dressage Delivers a Double-Header
Del Mar opens the West Coast campaign. Wellington counters on the East. With the US Equestrian Open of Dressage running in two places at once, a genuine chance to take over the Series lead is on the line.

For the first time in 2026, the US Equestrian Open of Dressage runs coast to coast. Wellington, on the east, hosts one qualifier. Del Mar hosts the other, bringing the Series spotlight back to California and widening the leaderboard race in a single weekend.
Del Mar Dressage Opener
It’s the first West Coast Open qualifier of 2026, giving California-based combinations their first real chance to make a mark this season — unless, like Geñay Vaughn, they headed east to Wellington to get their campaign underway.

Geñay Vaughn and Gino arrive at Del Mar as the clear favourite. Their FEI freestyle average of 74% is five points clear of the next combination in a five-horse field. Their personal best of 76.415% is also the highest entered.
Vaughn and Gino have been together since he was six. They've gone from regional shows to the world stage side by side, and they've done it the hard way - Vaughn is rider, caretaker, groom, and travel companion rolled into one, running a family business in California with her mother.
Vaughn sits fifth on the 2026 leaderboard with 30 points. A win here is worth 20, which would move her to the top of the standings and, if the result follows the data, likely secure a World Cup qualification. Last year marked her first appearance. This weekend could book her second.

Behind Vaughn, the field is closely grouped. Yet, the most intriguing entry is Cyndi Jackson and Florisson, who carry no FEI freestyle record but have averaged 73% across three national freestyle starts with a personal best of 75.600%. National scores carry a different weight, but a combination averaging 73% at any level is capable of making this weekend's contenders uncomfortable.
Palm Beach Dressage Derby
Wellington's freestyle card is the lighter of the two this weekend, with most of the Grand Prix talent at Global opting for the Special. Three combinations have entered.

Susan Dutta and Don Design DC are the favourite with a freestyle average of 71.5% and a personal best of 73.950%. Dutta sits just outside the current top 10 on the leaderboard, and a strong result here likely moves her into that bracket.
Michael Klimke and Harmony's Fado enter on a single FEI freestyle result of 71.445%. Klimke's pedigree is impeccable but having only one score makes him relatively difficult to place.
Adriane Alvord and Selfmade carry an FEI average of 67.06%, though a national personal best of 76.750% suggests there's more ceiling there than the international record shows.
In a three-horse field with the Series' smallest points allocation, Dutta has the clearest case for the win. Whether Klimke's experience closes the gap is the question that only Palm Beach can answer.




