MICHELLE
MERCIER
Leading the Ride at
University of Florida
Toasting Women
in Business
2026 Women Entrepreneurs
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WOMEN IN BUSINESS
JO-ANN WILSON
Keeping Horses at Their Best
20
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
WHITNEY PERSEK
Baking and Breaking Barriers
28
DRESSAGE COLUMN
GEORGE WILLIAMS
Thoughts From a Bench at the Olympic Museum
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WOMEN IN BUSINESS
SUSAN DIFELICE
Merging Equestrians and Aesthetics
34
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
JAIME MCKINLEY
The Next Generation at W.F. Young
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WOMEN IN BUSINESS
LANA KANDYBOVICH
Creating Her Own Narrative in the Saddle
and Behind the Lens
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HUNTER-JUMPER
ARIANA CYR &
KASSANDRA COUSSEILLANT
Partnership and Success Built on Happy Horses
On the cover:
Michelle Mercier is the coach of the
University of Florida eventing and
dressage teams and also events and
runs her own farm and training business.
May 2026
62
About this photo:
Michelle and her 11-year-old eventer
Shirsheen Fun For All, aka Gordie.
Photos by Kacy Brown
Volume 38 Issue 5 SIDELINES (ISSN 1071-3859) is owned by TRAUB CAPITAL PARTNERS and is published ten times a year.
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Candice Wagner
Photo by Melissa Fuller
IN EVERY ISSUE
12 Letter From the Editor | 77 Sidelines Business
77 Sidelines Directory | 7 Advertisers Index | 80 Sidelines Spotlight
SIDELINES is owned by
TRAUB CAPITAL PARTNERS
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Britney Grover | editor@sidelinesmagazine.com
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WRITERS
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Laila Edwards, Kimberly Gatto, Jessica Grutkowski,
Annelise Klepper, Laura Scaletti, Helen Townes
PHOTOGRAPHERS
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Scholten, Laura Ann Wagner, Shawna Whitty
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SIDELINES (ISSN 1071-3859) is published monthly by Sidelines.
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©Sidelines, 2026 All Rights Reserved
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WOMEN IN BUSINESS
CANDICE WAGNER
A Heart Horse Inspires a Life’s Journey
54
PONY/JUNIOR
GABI CAICEDO
Writing Her Own Story
56
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
ROSEANNE SPALLONE-NAGLE
Two Careers, One Path
62
COVER STORY
MICHELLE MERCIER
Leading the Ride at University of Florida
70
SHOW JUMPING
EMILY CHAMBERLIN
Doing it All
76
HORSE SHOW
FAMILIAR PLACES, FAMILIAR FACES:
Old Salem Farm With Scott Hakim
RoseAnne Spallone-Nagle
Photo by Sophia Donohue
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DRESSAGE
BRITNEY GROVER
Editor
Stay in touch by emailing editor@sidelinesmagazine.com
and follow us on Facebook and Instagram @sidelines_magazine
Michelle Mercier
Photo by Kacy Brown
Lana Kandybovich
Photo by Melissa Fuller
Whitney Persek
Photo by Dustin Persek
Celebrating Women Who
Work for the Love of Horses
he May issue has always had a special place in my heart—and this year it’s even more
meaningful. For years, May has been our Women Entrepreneurs Issue, featuring women
who have started their own businesses, often in the equestrian sphere, in order to
support their love of horses. I’m always inspired by their stories, and this issue is no exception.
This year, the issue hits even closer to home as I have taken on the role of editor here at Sidelines,
where our team includes women from many different backgrounds: We represent student athletes
and amateur riders to me, a single mom who gets her horse fix through the pages of the magazine
for now, and our Editor Emerita Jan Westmark Bauer, who ran a show barn in Wellington. With
our own varied experiences and as a woman-led business, Sidelines is proud to shine the spotlight
on not just entrepreneurs but women across various industries and a wide diversity of positions—
women in business, all united by our love of horses.
A common characteristic among the women we feature is their ability to juggle seemingly
impossible roles all at once. In this issue alone, we have women with roles including coach,
trainer, influencer, author, founder, entrepreneur, board member, volunteer, president, CEO and
(my personal favorite) mother—and most balance more than one of these. Our cover features
Michelle Mercier, who not only runs her own farm and boutique training business but actively
competes in eventing—all while coaching the University of Florida eventing and dressage teams
to multiple accolades.
Michelle brings not just equestrian experience but sound life advice to the students she
coaches, helping to create a true barn family. “The world is bigger than the horse world,” she
said. “If you hit a rough patch, take a trip, see something new—you’ll come back with a fresh
perspective.”
That kind of perspective is exactly what many of our businesswomen bring: There’s more than
one way to live a successful life with horses in it. Lana Kandybovich was raised in Russia, nowhere
near horses—but a passion for video production began alongside her passion for horses from afar.
She established a career in media that included her videos playing on Times Square jumbotrons
in New York—before finding a way, as many of these women have, to combine her passions.
Whitney Persek’s business venture began with horses—and fellow equestrians battling celiac
disease. She decided to make truly gluten-free horse treats, and from there Dapper Darling
expanded into lifestyle pieces and now has an impressive following—all while Whitney shares her
love of horses and the dream life she’s living with her husband and three children.
I hope you are inspired by the stories in this issue—and keep watching both our print and
exclusive digital content for more. As Whitney said, “If there’s something on your heart, something
you feel called to create, pursue it. You might surprise yourself with what’s possible.”
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Tell us a bit about equine massage and
your journey developing this method.
Between Jack’s work and my work, we have
70 years of doing this. I was the principal
investigator of a research grant, conducted with
the staff from the leading motion laboratory
at Harvard University’s Department of
Comparative Zoology, so we have science
supporting the massage. When Jack passed
away in 2005, I was there at his bedside. He said
to me, “Jo-Ann, can you do me a favor?” I said,
“Yeah, sure, Jack. What is it?” He said, “Will you
spread my method throughout the world for
me?” It was so profound. So that’s where I am
today. I produced a DVD and training videos,
and ultimately developed a certification school
program. I recently wrote a book, “Keeping
Horses At Their Best: A Hands-On Guide to
Equine Sportsmassage” that combines Jack’s
foundational work with my work to offer readers
the opportunity to learn how to work on their
own horses to eliminate muscle tightness. I lived
up to his request and I honored what he did,
because he basically brought sports massage
into the equine world.
Walk us through what
a typical session looks like.
A typical session includes three ways to take in
information for an assessment. One is a visual
observation. I do gait analysis immediately. I
watch a horse walk about 75 feet in a straight line
away from me and then back toward me.
You get the best view of muscle function at
the walk. The slower a horse moves, the more
muscle he has to use. I’m looking at resistance
in motion: Does he look shorter in the left hind?
Does his body drift, say, to the right? Does he
hold his head and neck in one direction? Is he
not free? Is it harder for him to move one limb
over another? Is he more labored?
Then the second assessment is to listen.
What does the rider tell you? What does the
owner or the trainer tell you about the horse?
For example, a rider may say the horse is harder
bending left, or the horse switches behind, or
the horse won’t pick up the correct lead.
Then the third assessment is kinesthetic—
feeling with my hands. I palpate the muscles
to determine tightness in the specific areas.
Basically, what I’m doing is assessing restrictions
in motion that are caused by muscle tightness.
Can you give an example?
Just the other day, a rider said the horse’s back was
really tight, and the horse was traveling with his
head up, sort of hollowing his back, and not coming
Jo-Ann Wilson never could have guessed that a chance encounter with Jack Meagher, U.S. Olympic eventing equine
sports massage therapist who also worked with the highest-level athletes in the NFL and Olympics and even
Muhammad Ali, would lead to a career in equine body work. At the time, Jo-Ann was at the top of her field, working 70
hours a week as the director of children and adolescent programs at a major Harvard teaching hospital.
Following the recommendation of a friend, Jo-Ann called Jack to work on her horse. “When I came back out to ride, I
was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this horse feels brilliant.’ I called him, and he talked with me, and then I met him. Right after the
first session, he completely restored my horse’s ease and freedom of motion.” She was so impressed by the outcome
that she wanted to explore equine massage further.
Jo-Ann resigned from her job—“Everyone thought I was insane!” she remembered. She became a licensed human
massage therapist, learned the ins and outs of muscle structure and anatomy, and then began studying under Jack.
Jo-Ann eventually became his associate and partner, forming Wilson Meagher Sports Therapy together. Building off
the foundation of her late business partner, Jo-Ann used her expertise as a rider and medical professional to develop a
research-backed, industry-shifting method for treating horses across all disciplines and breeds.
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
JO-ANN WILSON
Keeping Horses at Their Best
By Annelise Klepper
Jo-Ann Wilson is the director of
Wilson Maeger Sports Therapy.
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through. The rider was going to have further
diagnostics done on his back. I applied the sports
massage. Within one minute, the horse’s back was
soft and pliable. The rider couldn’t believe it.
How do you make decisions
in your bodywork sessions?
It’s the results that help you evaluate what you’re
doing. If I get immediate results and then the
rider rides the horse and the horse feels great, then
it was just simple muscle tightness. What was the
cause? It could be anything. It could be imbalanced
hooves. It could be overtraining. It could be
exercise-induced; they did too much one day.
If the tightness doesn’t come out, then it
tells you it’s not exercise-induced. It’s a more
complicated issue. You just keep it simple. If
the horse feels better and the muscle becomes
pliable and soft, then you know that’s the right
treatment. I always say the correct treatment
should relieve the horse in two sessions, and if
it’s not better, it’s not the right treatment. Maybe
shift gears to a veterinary evaluation, or a farrier
or dentist. You’d be surprised. It could be TMJ
or a hock issue. Basically, the tightness could
be secondary and reflecting a deeper structural
issue. It’s a problem-solving process.
What is the most common
issue you see across disciplines?
I work with all disciplines of horses, from
pleasure to barrel racing to five-star eventing to
Olympic dressage, whatever it is. The common
issue I see across the board is tightness in the
neck, because all disciplines require the horse to
use his neck in specific movements.
What is a standout moment in your career?
I was the USA Olympic Eventing Team
Sports Therapist/Physio for all the horses and
riders at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney,
Australia. David O’Connor won the individual
gold medal riding Custom Made, and the U.S.
team won the bronze medal. I was so honored,
ecstatic and privileged to be a strong part of the
support staff for the entire team. I was mostly so
proud of the riders and horses for their world-
stage accomplishments!
What are some challenges you have
faced as a woman in this space?
It was tough. A man went around to barns
and literally told people that women are not
strong enough to do this job. Another man
undercut me by charging less. Neither man was
successful in undermining me! My response
was: If women needed strength, they wouldn’t
be able to ride these 1,000- to 1,500-pound
animals. You have to be somewhat strong, but
you wouldn’t be able to ride these animals if
strength were the whole story.
What advice would you give to a young
woman wanting to follow a similar path?
The way I grew up, and what I was told by
my parents, is that you can do anything in life,
within reason. Don’t let fear stand in your way.
I’ve always felt that. You have to believe. If you
want something, you apply yourself. You find a
good mentor. You have to have discipline and
motivation, but you have to believe in yourself,
and you have to have a good teacher, one who’s
going to support you and not put you down.
Follow Jo-Ann on Instagram
@joannwilson_equinetherapy or visit sportsmassageinc.com
Photos courtesy of Jo-Ann Wilson
Jo-Ann teaches her science-backed
method of treating horses.
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