November 14, 2022

(Dr. Cinderella von Dungern on behalf of POLO+10-Magazin)

POLO+10: Why and when you started to play polo?

LIU Shilai: This is the old story. In China, the ambassador of Jordan in China, called Mr. Anmar. He was equivalent to seeing me riding my horse in an equestrian club, and then invited me to play polo. At that time, we were in a Beijing equestrian club, and then began to play Arena Polo. At that moment, there was no polo horse in China. We put some ordinary semi -blood horses, that is half of the Mongolian horse‘s half -blooded horse to polo ponies through several months training. That is how and where the story began. 

Around 2003, that is 20 years ago, I went to Australia to play polo. After that I went to Argentina to learn polo. Soon after, I won the 4-goal championship of US Polo Open. The polo playing process continued with tournaments in Windsor and Guards in UK as well as the 16-goal Gstaad Gold Cup.

POLO+10: How did polo develop over the time you are playing? 

LIU Shilai: I returned to China in 2009 and founded the “Tang Polo Club” in Beijing. Before that, it was about 2008, there was a polo club founded near Shanghai, the “Nine Dragons Hill Polo Club”. It was created by a local listed company investor called Qinfu Li and operated by GM Steve. 

However, there was no polo field in Beijing at that moment. Therefore, I returned to Beijing to establish the first club – Tang Polo Club. The second club in Beijing was the “Reignwood Club”. A bit later, another polo club in Tianjin emerged – the “Metropolitan Polo Club”. Last year, I built another club facilities in Anping (Hebei province) because the rules how to use land which “Tang Polo Club” initially used in Beijing, were changed by government. So currently in total, we have four clubs in China.

Regarding the number of players, in the beginning, it was also only 4 polo players in total. After a few years play with the Ambassador Anmar, we went to Argentina to study polo and how to improve our skills. Two of those initial players do not play anymore, only Nan Liu and I have been insisting until now. That was the earliest 2003 situation. To this day, there should be dozens of people who play polo in China. In the early ages in 2008, only I went to play the tournament in Nine Dragons Hills Polo Club Shanghai. Few years later in Tang Polo, we could have five teams with a total of 20 players in our own club, with all Chinese players. This has developed in the past 20 years. Now, the total number of Chinese polo players should be more than thirty or forty probably, but it is just an estimation. In the Polo Association, there should be about 50 players with Handicap.

POLO+10: What is the situation now, especially due to Covid restrictions?

LIU Shilai: The Covid pandemic still has an impact on us, because the pro of Argentina can‘t come. So, for Shanghai‘s horses, there is no good training. But there is no problem for Tang Polo, because we have cultivated our own professionals, with a 2-goal and 1-goal pro. And we also have own veterinarians, horseshoeing masters, all of them trained in China by ourselves through many years. Therefore, Tang Polo Club is not affected by the pandemic, it also serves as training base for the China national polo team. But Covid is still affecting Shanghai and Tianjin a lot. Anyway, as the economy grows, the polo sport will be better and better in China in the future.

LIU Shilai and Cinderella von Dungern met at last year’s tournament of JJ International, hosted at Tang Polo Club in Anping. © Tang PC, NDH PC, MPC PC, JJ International, private

Although Polo in China has a very long tradition dating back to the Tang dynasty, its modern development is rather exclusive, with a small circle of a total of only under 100 active players.

Over the past 15 years, it became quite a vivid and determined polo place with international medium and high goal tournaments in Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, impressive modern polo-clubs and some Chinese players also joining tournaments worldwide, especially in Thailand and Europe.

In the recent past, however, polo in China suffered substantially under pandemic restrictions. Compared to previous years, the imposed health and visa restrictions were further increased, effectively banning international travels, and limiting the player pool to domestic players. But even those domestic players were hardly able to play. Various lockdowns in numerous Chinese cities and severe national travel restrictions for humans and horses prevented regular polo activities all over the year. Inbound travels from international players or reliable planning for tournaments and sponsoring were once again not possible. The already comparatively small number of Chinese polo players was extremely challenged by those external circumstances.

The driving engine behind polo in China came from a few experienced players who – before Covid started in 2020 – had travelled as active players through various polo destinations worldwide. Among those established polo promoters are Shilai Liu (China’s best polo player & successful business entrepreneur), Zongming (Windson) Rao (founder & owner of the clothing company Fast Fish) and Yanyang Li (editor of China’s leading horse magazine and organisator of international equestrian events). Currently the only foreigners who play in China are two Argentinian players, Cesar Hugo Palacior (hcp +3) in Tianjin and Rodrigo Bauzada (hcp +4) in Shanghai, which arrived at the very end of the season due to visa and
travel difficulties.

Only in autumn, some action became more feasible & visible. The three traditional polo clubs, Tang Polo Club (Tang PC) in Anping, Nine Dragons Hill Polo Club (NDH) in Shanghai and Metropolitan Polo Club (MPC) in Tianjin somehow managed to keep their horses trained in midst of all Covid restrictions and organized small club tournaments in rather turbulent circumstances. In all three locations, some players just started to play again after a long pandemic break, so the level of the games was adjusted accordingly. The low goal tournaments were focused, with only two teams competing against each other. In Shanghai, the two teams of the “Fast Fish Gold Cup” tournament consisted of Muqiao Chen, Ye Yang, Wawa, Jeff Su (Team NDH) and Windson Rao, Jack Ji, Sasha Feng, Biao Wang (Team Fast Fish). In Anping, the two teams that met in the “China Open Cup” involved Biao Wang, Rodrigo Bauzada, Windson Rao, Yanyang Li (Team Fast Fish) and Shilai Liu, Nan Liu, Ketu Chao, Yin Bao (Team Tang PC). In Tianjin, the two teams of the “Metropolitan Polo Open 2022” tournament were made up of Cesar Hugo Palacior, Yuan Jian Liu, Fatin Li, Rogers Wang (Team MPC) and Ya Lie Chen, Xin Li, Michael Xu, Jin Qiang Hui/ Sasha Feng (Silk Team). Everybody was so relieved to play, finally back on horses and enjoying some ambitious fights after such a long “silent season”. After the games, opulent dinner parties followed. The atmosphere among riders and visitors was very joyful and enthusiastic.

Polo in China faced challenging times during pandemic, and Chinese players demonstrated strong resilience. Hopefully in 2023, they can again restart from the spot where since 2020 external circumstances had limited them. They are very ambitious and eager to learn the skills and strategy behind the game. And above all, they are good horse riders. But of course, it would be essential to involve some international players. It’s encouraging to observe strong mutual efforts to keep the polo sport & spirit going.

Text by Cinderella von Dungern. Photography Tang PC, NDH PC, MPC PC, JJ International, private

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