Last year, to attract attention to the sport and to find sponsorships, independent riders such as 44-year-old show jumper Huang Zuping and teenaged eventer Alex Hua Tian launched media campaigns around China, giving interviews, shooting TV shows and staging charity fundraising parties.
Only Hua, a student at the prestigious Eton College, secured a sponsorship, a generous 30-million-yuan ($3.8 million) donation from Jiang Fengcan, a business tycoon from Guangdong Province. Jiang's sponsorship will cover all the expenses Hua Tian needs for his Olympic preparations.
Huang is not that lucky. After he failed to find someone to pay for his horses, he had to pay for them by installments. He registered two horses while dressage rider Liu Lina and show jumpers Zhang Bin and Li Zhenqiang each registered one.
Li, another independent rider, who owns an equestrian club in Guangdong Province, paid for his horse with his own money.
Liu Lina, the best dressage rider in China, and Zhang Bin, the national show-jumping champion, gained support from local sports bureaus in Xinjiang and Shanghai, respectively. They have both trained in Germany for over five years.
Cheng said once these riders book their tickets to the Beijing Games, sponsorships will follow.
"Many potential sponsors are still watching the performances of Chinese riders," he said. "Once they book their berths in the Olympics, sponsorship will come.
"Local sports officials are aiming for the National Games following the Olympics. If Liu and Zhang can qualify for the Olympics, they can outperform the other Chinese riders and win gold medals for their hometowns."
Olympic hopeful
Of the five registered riders, Hua is China's best bet for qualifying for the Olympics.
"Hua is our biggest hope," Cheng said. "His goal should be not just qualifying for the Olympics but going further in the competition."
Hua was the first Chinese rider registered by FEI. He is also the first Chinese rider to compete in an international equestrian eventing competition.
Trained for seven years by leading eventing riders Clayton and Lucinda Fredericks, the 18-year-old, who has ridden horses since he was four, will be the youngest rider in Olympic history once he qualifies for the Games.
With the 30-million-yuan sponsorship, Hua and his parents bought six horses and set up a top international team of 20 in Britain. Besides the Claytons, the team includes a show-jumping trainer, a dressage trainer, a veterinarian, a Hong Kong climate and environment vet consultant, a groom manager, a physical therapist, a physical trainer and a competition administrator.
"It is a very complicated and professional job to select the right horses for Hua Tian and we have been so lucky to find the good ones," said Hua Tian's father Hua Shan. "Our team is also very strong with top eventing riders, the former trainers and grooms for the British team, and excellent vets. Now Hua Tian is ready to compete for the Olympic qualifications, which will kick off in March."
But Cheng worries that Hua Tian's lack of experience will hurt him in such fierce competition.
"In this sport, experience is very important for a rider, and Hua Tian may be too young to handle such a big event," he said. "The Beijing Games is a good start for him, but we're also aiming for the 2012 London Olympics."
Besides Hua Tian, another four Chinese riders are in Europe busy preparing for the qualifications. They each hope to be among the first Chinese equestrian athletes in history.