IF you had the chance to choose, who would be your favourites from the winners over the past decade of FEI Awards?

Well now you have that opportunity! In a year when equestrian sport has been brought to a standstill by the pandemic, the FEI is looking back through the years and giving people the chance to pick the best of the best from the five FEI Awards categories.

The public vote for the special edition FEI Awards 2020 is now open (www.fei.org).

This year the winners in each of the five categories will be chosen entirely by the public and votes can be cast on FEI.org from now until November 22nd. Winners will be announced the second week of December.

There are 55 nominees representing 19 nations across the five Awards categories: Longines FEI Rising Star; Peden Bloodstock FEI Best Athlete; Cavalor FEI Best Groom; FEI Against All Odds; and FEI Solidarity.

“These Awards are a way to honour the heroes of our sport through their amazing stories of resilience, horsemanship, determination and passion,” FEI President Ingmar De Vos said.

“Equestrian is not just a sport, but a way of life for many people and this has been a desperately difficult year for the equestrian community, just as it has been for everyone, in every sector. Now, more than ever, we need to focus on the positives that our sport has to offer and celebrate the fantastic ambassadors that we have, both on the field of play and behind the scenes making a difference.”

Since their launch in 2009, the FEI Awards have become a key addition to the annual equestrian calendar and have grown in size and stature over the last decade. The FEI Best Athlete and FEI Rising Star Award categories have featured a high calibre of nominees from around the world with numerous Olympic, Paralympic and FEI World Equestrian Games honours among them.

Wexford show jumper Harry Allen is among the nominees for the Rising Star award, having won in 2017, the same year he claimed gold at the FEI Pony European championships.