Farewell Gill Rolton

 

 

It happened the way she would have wanted it

Gill Rolton gave her life to eventing and in particular the Australian International 3 Day Event. At the end of the cross country phase today it was announced that Gill, who has been in palliative care for cancer in recent times, had passed away today

Gill had said that her two aims were to see her golden retriever puppies born and this year’s Australian International 3 Day Event take place. She lived long enough to see both

As she would have wanted, the show will go on ............

#gillrideswithus

 

 

The official Equestrian Australia statement regarding the sad passing of Gill is below

 

Equestrian Australia is deeply saddened by the passing of Gill Rolton (OAM). Gill, 61, showed her usual courage and waged a long and brave battle against endometrial cancer.   

She served as a devoted Equestrian Australia Board Member right up until the very end.

Our deepest condolences to her family and many friends.

A schoolteacher from Adelaide, Gill Rolton’s first goal in life was to talk her non-horsey parents into buying her a horse. At the tender age of ten she succeeded in doing that and so began a lifetime of passionate dedication to Equestrian sport.

A Show and Dressage rider and coach until her early 20s, she began Eventing and Jumping at the age of 21 and started competing successfully at international level in 1984.

She became the nation’s first female Equestrian Olympic medallist when she won gold at Barcelona in 1992 and Atlanta in 1996 as a member of the Australian Eventing team. Gill achieved much notoriety at Atlanta after slipping on the flat at the half-way mark of the cross-country course and falling from her horse. She broke her collarbone and ribs but she soldiered on and remounted only to fall again at the next water jump. Miraculously, despite her injuries, she completed the 6000m course and posted a team score.  This helped the Australian team of Andrew Hoy, Wendy Schaeffer and Phillip Dutton to win the prized gold medal.

At both Olympics, she rode Peppermint Grove (Freddie), a horse she’d purchased as a gangly, barely broken in four-year-old. She brought him up through the grades to reach Olympic level.

A history-making rider, Gill had the honour of being one of the eight flag-bearers at the Opening Ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.

Whilst competing on some of the world’s biggest stages, Gill also worked her way through the EA National Coaching Accreditation System (NCAS) to become a level 3 Coach, Coach Educator/Assessor. She was a judge in both Showhorse and Dressage and made it through the EA National Officiating system and then onto the Federation Equestre International (FEI) officiating pathway for Eventing.

Gill held various key administrative positions in Equestrian including EA Australian Eventing Team Selector, Chair of Equestrian SA, Chair of the SA Eventing Committee and Chair of the National Eventing Committee. She also spent four years on the Federation Equestre International (FEI) Eventing Committee. She served on the Equestrian Australia Board from May 9, 2013 until her passing.  

She had a strong vision for a truly national pathway for all facets of Equestrian and for the sport to become better appreciated by the general public, sponsors and TV viewing audiences.

From 2001 to 2007 Gill initiated, co-ordinated and coached the Mitsubishi National Young Rider Squad to support talented young Eventing riders in their transition to senior level. This was a successful era for Young Eventing Riders in Australia with several squad members winning major events and making a successful transition to the senior ranks of the sport. That was also a period when the Australian Young Rider Eventing team was undefeated in Trans-Tasman Events. She also helped form what is now the highly successful National Interschools Program.

Gill stood down as a National selector in 2007 to continue judging at FEI 4* Level.  She was honoured to be one of the Eventing Ground Jury members at the London Olympic Games in 2012 and was President of the Ground Jury at the World Equestrian Games in Normandy in 2014. She was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 2002 and received an OAM for services to sport in 1992.

She also recently received her home town of Adelaide’s highest honour and was handed the Keys to the City.

Gill Rolton was an inspiration and role model to many sportsmen and women throughout the world and she leaves a huge legacy in Equestrian sport through her enormous contribution as a rider and administrator.  

The Chair of Equestrian Australia Judy Fasher paid tribute to Gill and said;

“Gill was always motivated by a challenge and never gave up in the pursuit of success.  Her riding career is a testament to that and she followed through by dedicating her efforts to Adelaide International Three Day Event.”

“Beloved by the riders and seen as the pinnacle event by them Adelaide International has the distinction of being the only four-star event in the Southern Hemisphere.”

“Gill steered the event and brought to Adelaide a bright star to their sporting calendar.”

“Gill will always be remembered for her dedication and interest in young event riders, her service to the sport and her grit and determination to provide a foundation for Adelaide which would see its continued growth for many generations of riders to come,” said Fasher.