Paris Olympic Games

In the world of equestrian sports, the Nations Cup is the flagship team event of a season and a federation for the Olympic disciplines (show jumping, dressage and eventing). The Nations Cup is the only team class in of this mainly individual sport with of course the European, World and Olympic Team Championships. Each year, a national federation can organize only one Nations’ Cup per country.

This concept, which is highly publicized, did not yet exist in polo, even though it is a team sport par excellence! The prospect of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games has inspired the French Polo Federation (FFP) and the Chantilly Polo Club: the Polo Nations Cup will be held in June 2023 (from 8 to 18). It will oppose, at a 12-goal level, teams representing a nation and a region or a state selected by their federation with a maximum of two foreign players per team.

In 2024, this Polo Nations Cup will be part of the events held outside the official program organized in the wake of the Paris Olympic Games.

Polo has always been part of the Olympic family and the FIP is a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). Polo has been an official discipline of the Olympic Games five times. First played at the 1900 Summer Olympics, it was dropped from the program after the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. It was an Anglo-American team that won the first gold medal in 1900, then Great Britain twice (1908 and 1920) before Argentina took over (1924 and 1936).

The Polo Nations Cup will perhaps allow a gradual return to this beautiful era of polo at the Olympic Games, but above all to attract the public around the fields to continue to develop polo in France!

More infos :

Pascal Renauldon – +33 6 08 75 94 07 – p.renauldon@rbpresse.com

Justine Jacquemot – +33 6 77 74 52 94 –  justine@chantillypoloclub.com

 

 

About the Federation of French Polo (FFP)

The Federation of French Polo is the governing body of polo in France. Created in 2006, its main objective is to make polo accessible to all, to promote the sport throughout France and to support by all means the common interests of its affiliated clubs.

www.francepolo.com

 

About the Polo Club du Domaine de Chantilly

In 1995, a group of friends created the Polo Club du Domaine de Chantilly in the village of Apremont. The grounds and grasslands were previously used for polo, having been chosen by Baron Robert de Rothschild in 1920. In 2004, the club took up the challenge of organising the Polo World Championship. All the games took place on the club’s nine fields. A relaxed, cavalier spirit continues to flourish in this countryside near Paris. The standard of polo continues to improve, with the world’s greatest players coming here regularly, attracted by the various tournaments. The development of polo in France and the Chantilly Polo Club is a shared history!

www.poloclubchantilly.com

Video © Justine Jacquemot:

The French Championships traditionally close the French grass season. Fifteen days after a memorable French Open, the Domaine de Chantilly Polo Club hosted this time the final of this Championship “6-8 goals” where the Parisian team of Sainte-Mesme kept its title and after a very close match (9 at 8½).

Usually, these finals are played at the Polo de Paris, on the traditional “lawn” of Bagatelle, which hosted polo at the 1924 Paris Olympic Games. But the rain having been generous these last few days, the polofield already very much solicited during the qualifying phase was… tired. And it is quite natural that the Polo de Chantilly received the semi-finals yesterday and this final on Sunday afternoon. The eight polofields of this flagship French polo club allow to alternate the matches which can take place on grounds that are perfect for horses. Fourteen teams were entered in this competition, six in the Paris zone and eight in the Chantilly zone, a sign of the good health of French polo.

For these finals, the main field “Honneur 1” had been preserved throughout the week. Despite the presence of Argentinean professionals (maximum two per team) allowed in this competition, there were seven Frenchmen in the final of this Championship and it was a 100% French team that won. Sainte-Mesme had father and son, Birger and Robert Strom, the young French professional trained in Chantilly, Louis Jarrige and the excellent young arena player, Victor Louarn. Opposite, only one Argentinian, Nacho Kennedy, a brilliant attacker at the French Open, and three Frenchmen, Jérôme Hue, Charlotte Garaud, the only woman in this final and her brother Florent wore the colors of Omédia Paris/Black Mamba. A difficult match that ended with the smallest gap (9 at 8½). The French 5-goaler, Robert Strom, who converted a decisive 60 yards penalty at the end of the game, was expecting such a challenge: “It’s true that this final was difficult, there were very good teams in the Chantilly zone and we knew that the one that would make it to the final would be tough. In addition, they started with a goal and a half lead that we had to overcome. Opposite, Nacho Kennedy made a big match like the huge season he just made in France. I must say that I was very well accompanied because I have the chance to play with these two young Frenchmen, Louis (Jarrige, 23 years-old) and Victor (Louarn, 19 years-old). The latter is a bit of a revelation. We discovered him this winter in the arena with my brother-in-law, Clemente (Zavaleta, Argentine h7, Ndr). We knew that at handicap 0, it was a good ‘pickaxe’ and at each match of this French championship, he played better and better. As for Louis Jarrige, he’s still our favorite French player. We have been following him for some time, he came with us to Sotogrande. For me, it is French talent that has the greatest future”.

It is also the nice side of this beautiful team of Sainte-Mesme, which we see on all the big fields of the world (it will be in Argentina this winter to play the Copa Camara) but which gives young French players the opportunity to express themselves and to progress.

Sainte-Mesme: Robert Strom (h5, 4 goals), , Birger Strom (h0), Louis Jarrige (h3, 2 goals), Victor Louarn (h0, 3 goals)

Omédia Paris/Black Mamba: Charlotte Garaud (h0), Jérôme Hue (h-1), Nacho Kennedy (h4, 7 goals), Florent Garaud (h 3)

Progression Sainte-Mesme: (0/1½) – 3/2½ – 6-5½ – 7/6½ and 9/8½

Top scorer of the final: Nacho Kennedy who scored all 7 goals of his team Omédia Paris-Black Mamba.

BPP: Messi, 9 years old bay mare by Lucheza X Sobretodo, belonging to the stud farm of Sainte-Mesme, played by Robert Strom and bred in Argentina by Martin Garrahan. Photo: @R&B Presse/P.Renauldon

 

Top scorer of the final: Nacho Kennedy (right) who scored all 7 goals of his team Omédia Paris-Black Mamba with Louis Jarrige, one the French polo best hope. Photo: @R&B Presse/P.Renauldon

 

Photos: @R&B Presse/P.Renauldon

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