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Images check out fine. Personally, I think the image of the horse and rider should go on the left so they are looking "into" the article, and also so they aren't sitting at the bottom of the infobox but that's just a style issue outside GAN criteria. Your call.Montanabw(talk)19:21, 2 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
I think it's fine, as you add more to the article (if you do) the image will move down. On my computer, it's only about a quarter inch of overlap. Montanabw(talk)06:18, 4 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
Nitpicks:
Blonhofen is redlinked, perhaps either find the nearest place to link to, or otherwise give us some notion of where this is.
Frustrating, it appears to be a village or suburb of Kaltental in Ostallgäu, but the maps are weird and vague... even de.wiki has no direct article, just a longer one on Kaltental that mentions Blonhofen. This might have to sit as is, but if you are OK wikilinking to Kaltental, I won't object. Frustrating it's not a very good article to link to, though. Montanabw(talk)06:30, 4 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
" she was the European Team Champion of Young Riders" --awkward wording, may want to rephrase. (Sounds like a German translation)
Changed. I've seen that source, and if definitely includes some good information, but I don't think it can be considered a reliable source. No editorial policy that I can find, no idea of who wrote the information, etc. Dana boomer (talk) 17:02, 4 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
"riding a horse named Rusty both times" - Rusty probably has a more official name and a breed designation. If he doesn't, (i.e. if he was a grade horse or something) that is remarkable and also should be noted. Can you find this out? Also, per " testosterone propionate" - was he a stallion or a gelding?
signature pirouettes and to date still best one-tempi changes" -- may want to link to wikipedia articles on these -- see Pirouette (dressage), and tempi doesn't have it's own, but see Lead (leg)#Tempi_changes
"Exceptions were not made for her ..." Passive voice, prefer more active sentence. Neutrality is handled well, but OK to call it as you see it too. ;-)
IMHO, and not a GAN-killer, but I find the career subsections awkward, jumping from the Olympics, back to the 1990's, but mentioning the Olympics, then going to the present, but then the "training" subsection (which probably should be titled "coaching" as it is mostly riders, not horses?) bounces back to 2005. Personally, and this is just me, I'd be more comfortable with a chronological organization, possibly with the Olympic stuff in the middle, where it seems to occur chronologically (more or less), if it must have a subsection. The whole article is short enough that the career section doesn't have to have subsections.
Now in chronological order. I tend to make this split with riders who have been at a dozen competitions on half a dozen different horses, because it's easier to create a narrative moving from one Olympics/WEG to the next. In this case, however, since she was on one horse and only at a few events, it is easier to have it be chronological. Dana boomer (talk) 02:22, 3 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
Do we have any idea what kinds of injuries plagued Herzruf's Erbe?
The 2009 injury was the major one, which left him three-legged lame, and I've now expanded on this. A source from 2013 mentions "niggling injuries" and "recurring issues", but I can't find anything more specific about if it is still problems from the 2009 injury or if he's had additional problems. Dana boomer (talk) 02:22, 3 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
References: Do any of the articles cited have named authors? Eurodressage is a RS, as are the others, but possibly consider listing author as "staff" or "press release" if there is no named author so it doesn't appear to be an inadvertent omission?
None of them have listed authors, and I'd prefer not to put staff or press release, since the articles themselves don't say this. I know who runs to Eurodressage website, but I don't know if they write all of the articles. Dana boomer (talk) 02:22, 3 March 2014 (UTC)Reply
NEW: Noticed in reviewing sources that the musical kur bit could be refined; the way you phrase it in the article suggests it was only done once, which had me scratching my head how music that stopped became a signature piece. However, the source says: "Rusty's Carmina Burana freestyle was never changed and this music became tightly linked to the hors..." I'd add a wee bit to explain that he did the same routine over and over, the way you have the chronology worded, it sounds like the single performance was the "signature" one....