Morgan Barbançon Explained

Morgan Barbançon
Birth Name:Morgan Barbançon Mestre
Fullname:Morgan Barbançon
Nickname:Mushu
Nationality:French, Spanish
Birth Date:12 August 1992
Birth Place:Paris, France
Residence:Geneva, Switzerland
Website:https://www.morganbarbanconmestre.com
Sport:Equestrian
Coach:Dorothee Schneider

Morgan Barbançon Mestre (born 12 August 1992 in Paris, France) is a French and Spanish Olympic dressage rider.[1] Representing Spain, she competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London where she finished 7th in team competition and 23rd in the individual competition.

Barbançon competed at the 2014 World Equestrian Games in Normandy, France, where she finished 5th in team dressage, 15th in special dressage and 15th in freestyle dressage competition. She also competed at the 2015 FEI World Cup Finals in Las Vegas, Nevada, where she finished 8th.

She competes for France since May 2018.[2]

Biography

Morgan started riding at the age of three in Switzerland and started dressage at the age of 10. Morgan competed successfully in the youth division and competed at several European Championships for Ponies and Juniors. In 2012 she competed at the age of 20 at the Olympic Games in London under the vision of triple Olympic gold-medalist Anky van Grunsven. After eight years living in The Netherlands, she returned back to Switzerland in 2018.[3] In recent years she has competed several horses at Grand Prix level, including Painted Black, Sir Donnerhall II OLD, Girasol, Bolero, Vitana V, Heimliche Liebe, Don Lorean and Black Pearl.[4]

In 2024, Barbançon Mestre was shortlisted for the French national team in consideration for the summer Olympic Games. She was later suspended from the team when she failed to comply with France's anti-doping agency to report her whereabouts for out-of-competition drug testing. She claimed the lack of compliance was due to technical issues, but the organization dismissed the appeal and extended her suspension to 18 months.[5]

Personal life

Morgan Barbancon is born to a French father and a Spanish mother. Her younger sister Alexandra Barbancon competes also in international dressage. She is fluent in French, English, Spanish, Catalan, Dutch and German.[6]

Dressage results

Olympic Games

EventTeamIndividualFreestyleHorse
align=left London 20127th23rdPainted Black
align=left Tokyo 20209th24thSir Donnerhall II

World Championships

EventTeamIndividualFreestyleHorse
align=left 2014 Caen5th15th15th Painted Black
align=left 2022 Herning12th32nd-Sir Donnerhall II OLD

European Championships

EventTeamIndividualFreestyleHorse
align=left 2015 Aachen4th14th12thPainted Black
align=left 2019 Rotterdam10th27th-Sir Donnerhall II
align=left 2021 Hagen9th23rd-Sir Donnerhall II
align=left 2023 Riesenbeck19th16th14thHabana Libre A

World Cup

Final

EventScoreRankHorse
align=left 2015 Las Vegas76.161%8thPainted Black
align=left 2018 Paris76.4208%10thSir Donnerhall II
align=left 2019 Gothenburg74.511%14thSir Donnerhall II
align=left 2022 Leipzig76.986%7thSir Donnerhall II OLD
align=left 2023 Omaha74.814%10thSir Donnerhall II OLD
align=left 2024 Riyadh75.337%7thSir Donnerhall II OLD

Youth Dressage European Championship

Final

EventScoreRankHorse
align=left 2007 Freudenberg67.350%12thDiscus 7
align=left 2009 Ermelo-52ndAhorn
align=left 2011 Kronberg-7thDankeschön

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Morgan Barbançon. fei.org . 5 April 2015.
  2. Web site: Morgan Barbançon Mestre rejoint l'équipe de France / Haut Niveau Disciplines FEI / Accueil / Sites FFE - Portail FFE. 2019-10-02.
  3. Web site: Morgan Barbançon Mestre Relocates Home to Switzerland. Eurodressage. 8 May 2023.
  4. Web site: Morgan and Gus – Triumph over adversity! | the Horse Magazine.
  5. Web site: 2024-06-26 . French dressage rider to miss Paris Olympics following suspension . 2024-07-15 . Horse & Hound . en.
  6. Web site: Morgan BARBANÇON. 8 May 2023.