The most popular subjects on this blog are about equestrian terminology and the language of the sport. I call it “Horse Speak”. Among the most common Google searches that bring people here are phrases like “show jumping lingo”, “equestrian terminology” and “equestrian slang”. The second-most frequently read post in the history of this blog is “The Language Barrier of Equestrian Sport”. It was prompted by confusion, during the Olympics, between the show jumping phase of the three-day event and the sport of show jumping.
Although this blog is about media relations for show jumping, the word “equestrian” itself creates one of the many terminology challenges associated with that sport. Another of the most frequently-viewed posts on this blog, “The Trouble With the Word Equestrian”, talked about that.
Never were both of these terminology problems more clear than during, and after, the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, which was held recently. When three-day eventers and their followers talk about this event, they call it simply “Rolex”. Television commentators during last year’s Olympics often said “this was his Rolex horse”, as if everyone knows exactly what that means. Name recognition is a good thing for any sponsor. But like any good thing, it can go too far. A Rolex is a watch. It is not a place. You can’t go to Rolex. It is not, in itself, a special event. Rolex, the watch company, also sponsors the show jumping and dressage World Cup Finals. Those two events were held close to the same date as the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event. Rolex also sponsors the International Equestrian Federation World Rider Rankings. So, what is “Rolex” when you use that word alone? To the listener or reader, it is a watch. And singling out a three-day event as “Rolex”, with no further description in the name, does a disservice to Rolex’s other sponsorship. Statements like “I’m going to Rolex”, or “This is my first Rolex”, or “This is my Rolex horse” make no sense in plain English. They are simply bad speaking practice if the sport ever wants to be media-friendly. And, also, bad practice if they want to give their sponsor fair value for all the ways they spread their money around different equestrian sports.
But the terminology problems surrounding the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event don’t end there. NBC promoted their television coverage of it during the Kentucky Derby broadcast. They called it the “Rolex Kentucky Equestrian Championship”. What is an “equestrian championship”? There are at least ten diverse equestrian sports. In my opinion, however, this was not NBC’s fault. They were left with little choice. A large part of good media relations is branding and image-making. When the International Equestrian Federation re-branded the official name of the three-day event as “eventing”, it was big branding blunder. No member of the public could be expected to understand what “eventing” is. Therefore, no journalist is likely to use the term. “Eventing” sounds like an activity like party-hopping. But, you would go from one special event to another.
When I suggested on a social networking site that NBC’s naming of the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event was misleading, it became clear that the three-day eventers in the group are a defensive lot. I got the usual response from one member who thought NBC had to “dumb it down” for the ordinary people. I’ve also blogged before about why the equestrian community thinks they’re smarter than people who don’t understand their language. In actual fact, I think it’s smarter, not dumber, to know that equestrian isn’t the name of a single sport, to know that “eventing” isn’t actually a word, and to know that a Rolex is a watch.