MIRRABOOKA, Neale Lavis’ horse from the 1960s, was inducted into the Equestrian Australia Hall of Fame Outstanding Horse Category recently.
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More than 220 leading members of the equestrian and sporting communities gathered in the Olympic Room of the MCG to celebrate the sport’s highest achievers of 2015 as part of the Equestrian Australia Sport Achievement Awards.
As well as honouring the highest achievers within the sport of 2015, the annual awards dinner also paid tribute to the legends of the sport through a new round of Hall of Fame inductions.
Olympian, coach and leading Eventing judge Barry Roycroft was honoured in the service to sport category, while Neale Lavis’ silver medal-winning horse from the Rome Olympics was this year’s horse induction.
Mirrabooka - understood to be an Indigenous word for Southern Cross - was a talented and spirted dark brown gelding who found success with rider Lavis. He purchased the horse in Cooma for 100 pounds and after his sterling performance at the Rome Olympics, Mirrabooka could have fetched up to 10,000 pounds for his owner, but Lavis refused to sell him.
Mirrabooka won several Showjumping events in England, was fourth at the Badminton Horse Trials and six weeks before the Rome Olympic Games won the International Great Auckland Combined Training Event.
It was the Rome Olympics where Mirrabooka made his mark, contributing to the gold medal winning performance of the Australian team and individually winning silver.
Five weeks out from the Rome Games, Mirrabooka became lame and Lavis had to decide whether he would ride his leading horse or call upon his reserve.
He knew that Mirrabooka would not let him down, so he stuck with him and the pair went onto produce the famous performance that secured the individual silver medal.
Four years later Mirrabooka competed with Lavis at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.
Mr Lavis OAM had previously been inducted into the EA Hall of Fame.