Coach Greg Williams'
hope to better support his team and his desire to produce
a team that was second to none, even his winning pre-varsity
team. The decision was long-awaited by Williams, Assistant
Coach Herb Schneider and all the 2002-2003 team members.
As a freshman on the 2001-2002
Auburn Equestrian Team, I learned early on that sacrifice
is the unspoken rule for the team. It began with the first
team in 1996 when 15 girls helped Williams create the core
for the future team. It has continued as an established practice.
In so many ways our designation
as a varsity sport was an answered prayer, but for those first
15 girls it had come too late. Still, it was the possibility
that had pushed them. The sacrifices my freshman teammates
and I would welcome as being a part of this team came from
an appreciation of the sacrifices made before us.
At times, the surrender of
time and effort seemed to be demanded by our upper classmen,
but we began to expect it from each other. In ways, this team
is like any other varsity team. We have workouts three mornings
a week at 5:55 a.m., then attend class, practice every afternoon,
physical therapy in the training room if needed, study hall
or tutoring if required. Fridays of competition weekends are
reserved for travel, which runs right back into Monday morning's
5 a.m. wake-up call. It's a structured schedule that primarily
works on an adjust-to or be-adjusted basis.
This team is so unlike any
other Auburn sport because it is two-dimensional. The girls
only make up one dimension of the team. The second dimension
is the horses. It's an equally important job to care for them,
as athletes, just as we take care of ourselves. Riding is
just the beginning. There is daily feeding, watering, grooming,
clipping and more. The horses are the true foundation of this
team and anything we do for them is always worth it (though
keeping them as fit as us humans usually fits into the category
of “most time consuming team responsibility”).
Having proudly earned my spot
on this team, I realize that I am part of an already winning
team. Over the years our team has won numerous awards in both
the Western and hunt seat divisions. The team has won the
regional championship for the past two years and has qualified
for nationals for the past two years, finishing with an overall
placing of fifth.
We're a group of winners, and
I'm not ashamed to say it. But what sets this team apart is
its ability to build leaders – leaders for future teams,
leaders in the sport, leaders in the real world and leaders
willing to put those whom they lead before themselves. Some
teams have a captain to lead the entire team and give support
to team members who need building up. On our team, everyone
is a captain. It's important to us that every member knows
her full potential and faults. There's no place on this team
for girls who can only think of individual success. All of
this team's successes belong to the entire team. We win and
lose as a team, fail and succeed as a team.
As sophomores, we became part
of an historic event that would leave us with privileges members
of that first team in 1996 had worked so hard for us to have.
My teammates and I would never have to experience sleeping
eight girls to a hotel room at competitions, or having four
teammates compete in the same uniform because without that
one, the others wouldn't be able to compete. What the girls
of the past Auburn Equestrian Team accomplished for the future
teams is status, a status that no one in Auburn or equestrian
history has ever attained.
I can't expect any other student
athlete to understand how the hard work of the team absorbs
you. Some may say it's a general "love of the game"
and that every great athlete has that drive to succeed, but
it's more than that. When you peel back the outer layer of
this team – the well-rounded girls with high GPA's in
any array of majors, double majors and minors that know how
to work hard to win – you're left with 31 girls who
work hard not for themselves, but to make their team a better
institution for the girls who will join it after them.
As my junior year begins this
fall so will the Auburn Equestrian Team's second year as a
varsity sport. There is so much to look to forward to and
so much promise in the team. With the introduction of a new
format consisting of head-to-head meets and no division levels
(as in previous competitions), National Collegiate Athletic
Association equestrian events can continue to become a greater
spectator sport and a boon to the horse industry.
Williams and Schneider are
looking forward to competition in the fall and the new format.
Procedure and routine for this team will change as the years
go by, but the formula for success will never change. The
girls of the Auburn Equestrian Team know they are the glue
that holds their team together.
<< top
|