Chrome Cash hits the spot at EuroPaint 2023
APHA’s popular incentive program, Chrome Cash, turned up the heat at EuroPaint 2023—the blazing hot European Paint Horse Championship that took place August 19–27 in Rieden, Bavaria, Germany. EuroPaint offered five Chrome Cash classes, jointly sponsored by Paint Horse Club Germany and APHA, paying out a total of 13,580€ in prize money.
Congratulations to our winners:
Chrome Cash Reining: Colonelmobster & Elias Ernst
(14 entries, 2,220€ in prize money)
- The 2016 solid palomino gelding, shown by Elias Ernst for owner Eva Kuhn-Sell of Alterkirchen, Germany, earned 710.40€.
Chrome Cash Ranch Riding: Take Your Gun For Me & Kerstin Rutsch
(21 entries, 2,680€ in prize money)
- The 2014 sorrel overo stallion, owned and shown by Kerstin Rutsch of Reutlingen, Germany, won 696.80€.
Chrome Cash Showmanship: A Perfect War Machine & Jennifer Brandes
(20 entries, 2,600€ in prize money)
- The 2016 bay overo mare, owned and shown by Jennifer Brandes of Therwil, Switzerland, won 676€.
Chrome Cash Trail: Invitationsensation & Eliska Mackova
(32 entries, 3,560€ in prize money)
- The 2010 sorrel overo gelding, exhibited by Eliska Mackova for owners Roman & Petra Polacek of Jesenna, Czech Republic, won 890€.
Chrome Cash Western Pleasure: Milliondollarbaby VVS & Francesco Bassi
(19 entries, 2,420€ in prize money)
- The 2020 sorrel overo mare, exhibited by Francesco Bassi for owner Elodie Pley-Dumoncay of Laille, France, winning 705.60€.
This marks the first time EuroPaint’s extensive slate of classes included Chrome Cash. The event, which was APHA’s biggest approved show outside of the APHA World Championship Show and APHA/WCHA Halter Million last year, drew 311 horses from 14 European countries and boasted a 10 percent increase in entries. Check out the complete results here.
[Reprinting all or part of this news release is permitted, so long as credit is given to the Paint Horse Journal and a link provided back to apha.com.]
About APHA
The American Paint Horse Association promotes, preserves and provides meaningful experiences with Paint Horses. The association originated in Gainesville, Texas and moved its headquarters to Fort Worth in 1974. In 2020, they moved their offices and life-sized Paint Horse statues to the renovated Mule Alley in the Fort Worth Stockyards, where their mission is shared with millions of visitors from around the world. With 40,000 members, they are considered the second-largest international equine breed association.