Sure, as it is my horse I know the scores he received for jumping and they were good - and sorry for somehow hijacking this thread that actually is for Colorado Skrodstrup.

@shiggins: I can stand critique, this is no problem for me. It is just that if you critique you should mention the details and why you see something negative and something positive. As to a lot of exterior critiques I found here (and where I normally do not interfere) I see that they are often done in the wrong way. You should look at the total horse first and get the tendency of impression, then you go in detail and see if it serves the whole or still serves the whole or really could lead to problems. Here I often find picking on "negative" things immediately as soon as they are not "standard".
(I hope it is understandable what I want to say with this - English is not my mother tongue).
When it comes to different breeds I would not say that some breeds have higher standards than others - they have different standards. As for Knabstruppers you will find the sports type (and there you will find a lot of warmblood mainly) and the classical or even baroque type that is pure bred.
As to Hussar he is a classical pure bred. He is not out of a show jumping breeding program, he is out of a breeding program in dedication to preserve this rare breed.

@nicolemorgans: I personally find it very hard to judge from photos. Regarding my own stallion and its photos I am lucky as I could see the jumping line personally and I am aware of further facts such as the horse being trained for a jumping line before the grading 4 times in total and being not even 3 years of age then. The angle of the jump in the photo does not show a direct side profile, the photographer stands a bit left to the jump.
What I can see from the photo and what I find important for a young horse being in the jump line is the following:
The horse is a bit fast, but gets high enough for the jump, it is still a bit unbalanced, but not too much, the top line is good, the face expresses that the horse is concentrated and going forward on its own.
As to the other shot you picked: Yes, quite a typical phase for a young horse not being that balanced, but showing effort to get over the jump safely.

As to Colorado's jumping technique I would like to point out that I find this horse well trained and showing that his jumping technique improved immensely. And this is something you have to underline when it comes to Knabstruppers: Their trainability and willingness to learn.