Polo+10

POLO+10 volunteer Laura Vele reports on her first visit to a polo tournament and during an interview with Sebastian Schneberger learns why you cannot stop playing polo once you have started.

The weekend started on Saturday under sunny skies and nearly tropical temperatures. Anyone is familiar with the weather in Münster will tell you that this is quite rare. On the sidelines there was a relaxed atmosphere. Instead of a picnic blanket, a group of visitors chose to bring tables and chairs. On the benches and blankets you could find everything you could think about indulging on. Cookies, fruit, sparkling wine – and laughter galore, of course. There even was bull riding, especially for kids’ entertainment. The polo picnic was far from being a stiff event. In the sponsors’ area, the spectators sat on picnic blankets, Fatboy bean bags and bales of straw while watching the polo matches. The audience in this area did not bring their own picnic kits with them, but could choose between all sorts of culinary delicacies. Offering the finest Lafina beef from Uruguay, grilled king prawns, caviar on mashed potatoes or simply fries and hot dogs, the wide range could satisfy any desire.

The visitors of the polo picnic did not only gourmandise, but also enjoyed international polo and exciting matches. As a polo newcomer, one is startled seeing how Eva Brühl (+2) of team Farid’s QualiFighting squeezes her adversary off the track with full use of her physical strength. It was also surprising to learn how many rules and notions there are in the sport of polo. The organisers of Münster made sure that everyone could understand and be informed of the polo rules. On the sidelines the polo newcomers could inform themselves of the rules of the game or variants of conducting techniques.

During the matches the commentators provided the spectators with the background information, for example, that up to 90 percent of all time outs are due to the right of way (line of the ball). This means: The line of the ball is the imaginary path the travelling ball is expected to take. This line may not be crossed by the opponent. A player who is going straight after a ball he has hit, or the first player to swing into the line of a rolling or flying ball, without hampering the others, may not be intercepted by any other player as this could harm the player or the pony. Between the chukkers the band Funny Fellows played some songs and the spectators were invited to the enter the grass to divot stomping aiming to kick and stomp back into place any pieces of turf that have been torn out of the ground during the match.

On Saturday night the players’ party took place under this year’s motto “Dirty Western”. The guests awaited the aforementioned bull riding, which was enjoyed by the kids during the day. Some even accomplished the highest level without being thrown to the ground. The band “Soulsneakers” from Heidelberg played soul and pop classics as well as current hits and made the squaws and cowboys dance.

Feasting, polo and party – these were the keywords of the last weekend at the polo picnic in Münster. Sunday afternoon we had occasion to talk to Sebastian Schneberger, the organiser of the event and player in team Los Nocheros.

POLO+10: Mr. Schneberger, which is your conclusion about the 10th anniversary edition of the polo picnic?
Schneberger: Brilliant! We have been having more visitors than usual and we have been increasing the attendances steadily over the years. Today (Sunday) it is even busier. The spectators are sitting in six to seven “picnic rows” behind one another and all are fully loaded with picnic provisions. It is fun to see them while walking along the rows. Together with my team Los Nocheros we finished up last place, in other words, the defence for the title was definitely backfired. But it still was delightful to play against our friends. That is the advantage of being friends with everyone who is here: lots of laughter.

POLO+10: How many spectators have come this weekend compared to the previous year?
Schneberger: About 2,500 daily, while last year it was nearly 2,000 visitors. I expect there will be nearly 1,000 more than in the past years. We ran a big advertising campaign and distributed many flyers.

POLO+10: When do you begin the preparations for the polo picnic usually? How many people work on the polo picnic?
Schneberger: We slowly begin the preparations half a year before the event. Three months away from it, the tough work starts it really starts in the six previous weeks every day there is something to do. The construction is performed by a main group of ten people, but with all the trimmings of course there are definitely more people who work on the polo picnic. My girlfriend Rhea Gutperle takes care of the preparations. For me it is a lot easier. I communicate all my megalomaniac ideas to her and she makes them real with a more down to earth perspective.

POLO+10: How do you manage with the dismantling after the final games this evening?
Schneberger: Firstly, we focus on the dismantling, and of course, the final numbers that the event left. After that comes our recovery and holidays. Next weekend I will attend the Youpooly tournament in Hamburg, but here in Münster we have closed for the rest of the year.

POLO+10: For how long have you been playing polo and how did you join in?
Schneberger: I have been playing polo for twelve years. Riding had been my lifetime activity, until my cousin Mathieu van Delden, who also participates in this year’s polo picnic, called to tell me that he had a polo coach willing make a polo crash test course for three friends, but all three were unable to participate when Mathieu had already sealed the deal. So I went to Bad Bentheim and did the training with him. After this I stopped playing polo for a short period of time, but attend countless tournaments of the English army together with Mathieu. Not because polo was exciting, but I liked the parties. By chance, during a tournament a player was stuck in a traffic jam and I provisionally stepped in. Along came two, four, and then six horses, and so polo became a part of my life.

POLO+10: I have heard from many players that polo is addictive – would you agree to that?
Schneberger: I think it is pretty difficult to stop playing polo. There is a saying: “There a two ways to stop playing polo: you either die or go broke.” But going broke is a lot more common.

POLO+10: Is Münster a good place to establish the sport of polo?
Schneberger: We have a lot of show jumping here und around Münster there is a huge scene of equestrian sport. Ingrid Klimke for example, Olympic champion in Military, comes from Münster – she has won everything. We also have a lot of classical equestrian sports around here, but polo still is not high in number. The only polo player in Münster is currently sitting here with you on this bale of straw.

The following links lead to our galleries on Facebook. You can also look at them without a Facebook-account.
Polopicknick Münster 2013 part I → click here
Polopicknick Münster 2013 part II → click here

“I want to achieve the maximum success for myself!”

She is only 21 years old and already one of the greatest young polo talents ever. Now Milagros Sanchez (handicap 1 and ladies’ handicap 7) from San Luis, Argentina, is celebrating her sporting German premiere this year at the Ladies Cup in Berlin.

Milagros Sanchez. © Helen Cruden

You will play in the Ladies Cup for the first time. How did it come about?
Last year, Fati Balzano, a very good friend of mine, played in Berlin. Through her, I got in touch with the Ladies Cup organizer Thomas, who then gave me a lot of support in my plans to be there this time as well.

You have already played in polo tournaments in England and Italy. Have you ever been to Germany?
No, this is the first time for me to visit Germany – and I’m already very excited about all the impressions that await me!

Apart from Berlin, what other stops are on your agenda in Europe?
After my time in the capital, I will travel to England. After that, I’ll be heading back to my home country of Argentina.

And what are your plans for the second half of 2022? 
In September, the new polo season starts in Argentina, which I always look forward to extremely throughout the year. And this time there are particularly many great dates, such as the Argentine Open. My schedule is definitely very well filled.

You are currently one of the greatest young talents in women’s polo and, at the age of just 21 and as the first woman, you took part in the Argentine Indoor Championship with Handicap and played against men there. Was the time in Mendoza the greatest moment of your career so far?
Definitely! Mendoza had a great impact. But there were many other moments that were very important for me personally and for my career. I have been able to represent my country in sport more than once and have also played in the USA. I won the first women’s Masters tournament and played in the Open three times. It’s fantastic what I’ve already been able to experience.

How did you discover your passion for polo?
I already felt an extremely great enthusiasm for horses when I was a little girl. A few years later I got involved in the sport of polo, and my family was not entirely innocent of that. And today polo is one of my greatest passions.  

What sporting goals would you like to achieve in the coming years?
I am a very ambitious young woman and have therefore set myself high goals in polo: I want to get the maximum sporting success for myself in every tournament I play in the future.

In your eyes, what should happen so that women’s polo gets even more attention worldwide?
In general, we are already on a pretty good path: We women have conquered our terrain and we know very well how to use it for ourselves. Now it’s important that we continue to put on great tournaments around the world. And all professional women players should be appreciated much more for their dedication and passion.

Milagros Sanchez. © Helen Cruden

TEAMS

1. Elasten / Cosmopolo (+3)
Megan Manubay, USA (+1)
Marie Christine Fuchs, SGP / GER (+1)
Emily Hurst, CAN (+1)
Jen Buchan, CAN (+1)

2. Ingo Pyko (+10)
Clara Mahla, CZ (0)
Maike Hölty , GER (+3)
Svenja Hölty, GER (+4)
Laura Fass, GER / SA (+3)

3. Pool Riese (+12)
Mona Scharf, GER (+3)
Jeanette Diekmann, GER (+3)
Dele Iversen, GER (+3)
Romy Grüner, GER (+3)

4. Polo Sylt (+12)
Heidi Silvey, USA (+1)
Emily Hase-Loock, GER (+1)
Milagros Sanchez, ARG (+7)
Sophie Schmidt, GER (+3)

5. Ostseebad Dahme (+10)
Dr. Anne Großmann, GER (+1)
Marit Fass, GER (+3)
Marie Haupt, GER (+3)
Filippa Luserke, GER (+3)

6. InMedias / POLO+10 (+8)
Ann Kathrin Brendel, CH (+1)
Camila di Luciano, USA (+3)
Marketa Pavleye, CZ (+3)
Jolie Lange, GER (+1)

 

 

PROGRAM

Friday, 15.07.2022: 15.00 p.m. – 17.30 p.m.
Saturday, 16.07.2022: 14.00 p.m. – 17.00 p.m.
Sunday, 17.07.2022: 12.00 p.m. – 14.30 p.m.

Right and Wrong

Quick reaction and a near-reflex assessment of situations are of the essence of tactical play and safety. The next two examples highlight the right, and the wrong reactions in a given situation.

Situation 1 (left half of the field)
A player doesn’t hit the ball hard enough and tries to hit it again by slowing down, or abruptly changing directions. Another player is directly behind the first player in playing position.

Wrong because:

A player hits the ball wrong and gives it a second try by slowing down or abruptly changing direction. There are other players right behind him in position to hit the ball.

Right:

A player, having messed up a hit, should carry on at the same speed without attempting a second hit. He should let a teammate take the next hit or, time allowing, go round and approach from the back of the field to attempt another hit.

Situation 2 (right half of the field)

In an attempt to hit the ball back in an offside-back-shot a player gets into the way of an opponent who is in possession of the ball on his offside.

Wrong Because:

The defender infringes on the opponent’s right-of-way in a manner that is not only dangerous but also unsportsmanlike. He has crossed the opponent’s line leaving too little space between them and therefore puts himself and the other player in danger.

Right:

In order to cover his opponent correctly and effectively, the defender must wait until he can overtake his opponent and hit the ball in the opposite direction of play.

Time journey through 20 years of POLO+10 work. Not only the main issues but also a big number of tournament magazines for international polo organisers rank among the best of” covers.

20 years POLO+10 not only contain a lot of information, interviews and stories, but also a lot of creativity. Again and again we have received great praise from all over the world for how „different, surprising and new“ polo is shown on the covers of our issues. We would therefore like to take this opportunity to express our sincere thanks to all the photo-graphers and creative people who have created POLO+10 with us over the past 20 years and who have accompanied us through the many creative processes.

 

Cover Parade Gallery:

WELLINGTON, Fla., March 27, 2023—Casablanca captured its second World Polo League tournament of the season Sunday at Grand Champions Polo Club.

In front of a good crowd, Casablanca (Grant Ganzi, 3, Tomacho Pieres, 6, Barto Castagnola, 10, Jesse Bray, 7) held on for a 14-13 victory over Dead End (Evan White, Jr., 1, Pedro Falabella, 7, Magoo Laprida, 8/Gringo Colombres, 7, Facu Llosa, 7), 14-13.

Dead End made it all the way to the championship final of the eight-team tournament in its 26-goal WPL debut.

For the second time in two tournaments, Argentine 10-goaler Barto Castagnola was Most Valuable Player. The playmaker scored a team-high six goals and had some clutch plays in the final minutes to clinch the game.

Three horses earned Best Playing Pony honors. Chalo Nina Loly, owned and played by Castagnola, was the Argentino BPP. American thoroughbred Girl Power, owned and played by Ganzi in the second and sixth chukkers, was the American Polo Horse Association BPP. Incari Uvita, owned and played by Falabella in the sixth chukker, was the World Polo League BPP.

Casablanca also won the season-opening All-Star Challenge with a stunning 14-9 victory over 2021 champion Richard Mille (Gilberto Sayao, 0, Gonzalito Pieres, 9, Pablo MacDonough, 10, Alejandro Novillo Astrada, 7).

Unlike its first tournament win, Casablanca survived a rollercoaster ride in the last two chukkers with Dead End overcoming a four-goal deficit to tie the game twice (12-12 and 13-13) before succumbing to Casablanca‘s tenacity.

Pieres scored the game-winner off a broken play with 4:15 left in the sixth chukker. Both teams had scoring opportunities from the field and penalty line in the final minutes before Castagnola came up with a loose ball in the final seconds.

„It was an amazing game,“ said Ganzi, who also won the Madelon Bourdieu Memorial 6-goal tournament with Limehouse Properties teammates Eliza Limehouse, Marc Ganzi and MVP Miki Novillo Astrada earlier in the day. „It was a fun, open game. We scored a bunch of goals and everyone played their hearts out.“

Dead End lost the services of LaPrida with 1:25 in the third chukker to a pulled groin muscle. He was replaced by Gringo Colombres who kept Dead End in the game.

„My hats off to Dead End, they were an amazing team,“ Ganzi said. „Evan White played a fantastic tournament and it‘s fun to play against him. I wish the best for Magoo and a quick recovery. He‘s one of the nicest guys in polo.“

In addition to Castagnola‘s six goals, Ganzi and Pieres each had three goals and Bray added one for Casablanca. The team was also awarded a penalty one in the third chukker.

Llosa led Dead End with a game-high eight goals and Laprida added one. Dead End received three goals on handicap and one penalty one in the fifth chukker.

Casablanca led all statistics: 20-17 shots on goal; 7-6 knock-ins; 11-10 throw-ins, 13-12 fouls; and 3-2 penalties scored with Casablanca converting 30, 40 and 60-yard penalites.

The third World Polo League tournament featured eight teams including two making their WPL debut, Globalport and Dead End.

Casablanca now adds its name again to this year‘s WPL champions.

Casablanca won the season-opening All-Star Challenge. Casablanca (Grant Ganzi, 3, Tomacho Pieres, 6, Barto Castagnola, 10, Jesse Bray, 7) defeated 2021 champion Richard Mille (Gilberto Sayao, 0, Gonzalito Pieres, 9, Pablo MacDonough, 10, Alejandro Novillo Astrada, 7), 14-9. Barto Castagnola was MVP.

Audi (Marc Ganzi, 1, Jeta Castagnola, 10, Nic Roldan, 8, Freddie Mannix, 7) defended its title and finished undefeated (5-0) in the Founders Cup with a thrilling 14-13 overtime victory over Richard Mille (Patricio Mayor, 0, Gonzalito Pieres, 9, Lucas James, 7, Pablo MacDonough, 10). Jeta Castagnola was MVP.

In last year‘s Palm Beach Open Catamount (Scott Devon, 1, Toro Ruiz, 7, Polito Pieres, 10, Nacho Novillo Astrada, 8) knocked off Richard Mille (Santos Bollini, 2, Grant Ganzi, 3, Pablo MacDonough, 10, Juan Martin Nero, 10), 9-7 to win its first-ever WPL tournament title in a battle of unbeaten teams. Polito Pieres was MVP.

The world-class league will run through April 16. The remaining WPL events are the Tommy Hitchcock Legacy Memorial, Triple Crown of Polo and Beach Polo World Cup Miami Beach.

Grand Champions, the nation‘s largest  polo club celebrating its 16th anniversary, and Santa Rita Polo Farm is the largest and most unique private 102-acre polo facility in Wellington with 212 stalls in nine self-contained barns, two tracks, five climate-controlled tack rooms, vet room, staff quarters, guest house and four polo fields with state-of-the-art underground irrigation and short work arena. The club has 13 well-manicured fields including nine world-class fields at GCPC and four at Santa Rita.

During the winter polo season, Grand Champions, the nation‘s largest and most innovative USPA-sanctioned polo club, nestled in the heart of the world‘s winter equestrian capital, is hosting  tournaments: 6, 8, 12, 20, and 26-goal leagues, WCT Finals, Polo School Women‘s Weekly League play and 26-goal WPL tournaments at both Grand Champions and Santa Rita.

Remaining season highlights for 2023 are the John T. Oxley Memorial, $100,000 World Cup Tournament and special events including Great Futures Celebrity Polo, WCT Finals, WPL Polo Pride and Sunset Chukkers & Cocktails.

The winter season is being live-streamed locally and worldwide on Wellington-based ChukkerTV (CTV Sports).

Grand Champions Polo Club caters to men, women and youth polo players at all levels. Its‘ expert staff can customize a complete playing experience including horses, pros and certified umpires in addition to lessons and practice sessions as part of its‘ Polo On Demand program.

The Polo School, now located at the former Pony Express facility, operates in Wellington January through May and September through November. The stand-alone USPA-sanctioned polo club, is thriving. It is dedicated to teaching polo to all ages, particularly grass roots youth. Its mission is to provide individuals opportunities in polo at every economic and ability level. November. The Polo School has nurtured several junior, men and women polo players now playing in the pro and amateur ranks since its inception.

For more information on leagues or Polo School contact Director of Operations Juan Bollini at  561-346-1099 or General Manager Cale Newman at 561-876-2930.

By Sharon Robb
Photos by Candace Ferreira

“We are all horsemen, and it is only natural that we want to share this passion with others through the media”.

The RB Presse Agency, which was founded in 1994 by Pascal Renauldon (the R), journalist, and Sophie Bienaimé (the B), equestrian and artistic director of the Grandes Écuries de Chantilly and well-known personality in the world of polo. RB Presse oversee the press releases for prestigious tournaments such as the Hublot Gold Cup in Gstaad, Switzerland, the Gold Cup in Deauville and the French Open in Chantilly, France. The agency also partners with various publishers, like POLO+10, and provide reports and PR articles, including stunning photographs, to promote their clients’ events, clubs or businesses; in this issue of the magazine they produced the Argentine Open coverage.

How did you get into the Public Relations business sector?

Really by chance. I‘m a journalist at heart. But in 1991, after meeting ATP officials at Roland Garros, I created the world ranking of show jumpers, which I was able to develop and launch with a Dutch marketing agency, BCM, who asked me to promote it to the press. BCM also organized several showjumping competitions and oversaw the press offices for the biggest equestrian event in the world, the CHIO Aachen, and asked me to join the press team as an editor. Then the Jumping de La Baule was organizing the European Championships that year and asked me to run the relations with foreign television stations, which were numerous at that time for equestrian events. Then, in 1994, I came back to France and met my wife, Sophie Bienaimé, who was a rider but also press officer for the Musée vivant du Cheval (Living Museum of the Horse) in Chantilly and we created R&B and very quickly the clients came by themselves, first of all the very prestigious Jumping International de Bordeaux of which we are still in charge of their press relations 28 years later. 

You created R&B with your future wife, today you work with your daughter Adèle, who is also an excellent photographer for your agency: is R&B a family business?

Yes, today I work with my two daughters (Adèle and Sophie Jr. who are both communication graduates) and Sophie, my wife, keeps a keen eye on the agency. Having had several employees, I can tell you that it is much more pleasant and productive to work as a family because everyone is really involved and takes initiative (and ownership). 

Does your agency only specialize in the equestrian sector?

Essentially, yes, although we do touch on tourism, arts and entertainment with the activities of the Grandes Écuries de Chantilly. We are all horsemen, and it is only natural that we want to share this passion with others through the media.

Are you also a polo player?

Yes, this is probably my last „life“ as a rider. I started with a first career in eventing thanks to a stable that my father had set up in Normandy and which enabled us to reach the best national level in France. Then I went to live in Germany between 1983 and 1993 where I did a lot of show jumping up to „S“ level (highest level in German show jumping). I loved competing in Germany, it was both very competitive and very friendly and the system allowed me to compete with great German riders like Ludger Beerbaum or Franke Sloothaak. One day, in 1984 I think, I found myself in a class with three World Champions: Hans-Günther Winkler, Norbert Koof and Gert Wiltfang, it was impressive. Then I came back to France and continued showjumping a bit, but it was less fun than in Germany. As I was in Chantilly, I went to the club which offered me to run the media relations for the French Open which took place in 2000 for the first time. That‘s how I gradually got into polo. But it is in this discipline that I am clearly the least brilliant and the least successful. Adèle is following my footsteps and she is doing much better than me, fortunately. She was silver medalist at the first European Women‘s Championship in 2017 and won the Ladies Cup in Deauville with Lia Salvo.

Is your wife also a rider?

Of course, she is a rider in the Compagnie équestre des Grandes Écuries de Chantilly. As their equestrian and artistic director, she writes and runs 2 big shows every year which attract over 60,000 spectators across the  in 140 performances under the dome of the Grandes Écuries which can accommodate 600 people at a time.

Sophie also manages a team of 8 riders with various artistic talents (singers for example) who star in the shows and 4 grooms and she is responsible for the purchasing and training of a stable of 40 horses. She even brings on some of the horses herself from a novice to high school levels.

What do you like about polo?

The same thing as in show jumping: the ‘polo spirit’ of performing at high riding standards and the presentations and shows it offers; the constant search for excellence, the rigor, and the work of the breeders behind it all and seeing the quality of the horses constantly improve. And then the adrenalin of sport: an undecided game that is decided in an extra chukker or the jump-off of a Grand Prix that is decided in a few hundredths of a second. I was lucky enough to live in the era of Adolfo Cambiaso, who is surely the greatest player of all time. My job allows me to be in contact with these great players like him or the Pieres, the Heguy or these great riders like Nelson Pessoa, Marcus Ehning, Ludger Beerbaum who are legends of their sports. This all excites me.

And what I like the most, is the ability to spend time with my daughter around the horses. For us, taking good care of our horses, training them, caring for their well-being and the relationship with them is almost more important than the game itself.

So, you go to Argentina every year to follow the Abierto?

Absolutely, since 2001. That year I started to take an interest in polo. My wife always looks for inspiration for her shows and uses our trips to gather specific, authentic materials, like props, riding gear, costumes,  to give her shows originality. Thanks to horses and polo, we have been able to go on fabulous trips and meet fantastic people in India, Mongolia, China, Africa or Russia. In 2001 we went to Argentina because Sophie wanted to put on a show called ‘Polo Tango’. That year, when we arrived in an Argentina it was in the middle of the big Argentine Crisis, but we were still able to attend a game of the Abierto, my first match in Palermo with the Chapa Uno. I was fascinated and vowed to return to Buenos Aires every year. Over the years I was able to approach all the great players, interviewing them for different magazines. I remember being invited to a private asado by the Heguy of Indios Chapaleufù II and shared only by them, Pepe, Ruso and Nachi, their parents and Milo Fernandez in the emblematic club of Los Indios. A great memory. That year they won the Abierto against their cousins.

Text Julia Riewald  
photography RB Presse

POLO+10 will again produce the big special edition in the 2023/2024 season. Don‘t miss the chance to reach an exclusive top target group with your ad.

Rousing world-class polo, inspiring personalities and an unmistakable, vibrant lifestyle: just three of the key examples of what has closely linked POLO PARK ZÜRICH and POLO+10 for many years.

A connection that will continue to inspire polo fans in the future: „I am delighted that, after almost twenty years of successful collaboration, we will continue to tread common paths and publish the new club magazine for POLO PARK ZÜRICH in the 2023/2024 season,“ says POLO+10 editor Thomas Wirth.

„POLO+10 stands for the highest quality and is the largest and highest-reach polo magazine in the world. That‘s why our club publication for POLO PARK ZURICH is in the best hands with Thomas and his team“, says club president Sébastien Le Page.

You can expect new exciting stories from the world of polo – refined with lots of lifestyle, interviews or business talk. Would you also like to be a part of the new issue of the POLO PARK ZÜRICH club magazine? Then don‘t miss the chance to reach an exclusive top target group with your ad.

DOWNLOAD THE PPZ MEDIA KIT

DOWNLOAD THE PPZ MAGAZINES

2022
2020
2018

PPZ Magazines

Frequency: every two years

Reach: 8.250

Contact
Polo Park & Country Club Zürich Büro Rocio Podesta

Rietstrasse 12
8472 Seuzach
Tel: +41-52 335 0200
info@polopark.ch
www.polopark.ch

By Alexander Nebe

Golden Greens Polo Club (IND) is joining Araucaria Polo Club (ARG), Rincón Polo José Ignacio (URU), Polo Club Mühlen (GER), Polo Schockemöhle (GER) and Evviva Polo St. Moritz (SUI) for the third edition of the POLO RIDER CUP that will be held from 14 to 24 June 2023 at the Polo Club Saint-Tropez – Haras de Gassin.

Golden Greens Polo Club will be taking part in the tournament for the first time with the following players:

Karan Thapar, founder member of Golden Greens Polo Club, comments: ‘’We are thrilled to be entering a team for the POLO RIDER CUP 2023 and to play at the wonderful Saint-Tropez Polo Club. It promises to be an exciting couple of weeks, full of action, both on and off the field, and we look forward to our participation.”

Olivier Godallier, President & Founder of GAME POLO, comments: “We are delighted to welcome an Indian team for the first time with Golden Greens Polo Club joining the POLO RIDER CUP, and we wish them all success in this third edition.’’

KITZBUHEL, Austria, January 15, 2023—-Intocast won the battle of the unbeatens to capture the 20th Bendura Bank Snow Polo World Cup.

Intocast (Matthias Normann, 1, Micky Duggan, 5, Martin Juaregui, 5) rallied in the third chukker for a 10-7 victory over Bendura Bank (Philip de Groot, 1, Adrian Laplacette, 7, Tito Gaudenzi, 3) in front of more than 3,000 fans including 750 in the soldout VIP tent on Sunday.

Argentine Martin Juaregui swept both the Most Valuable Player and Best Playing Pony honors. Juaregui played in the World Polo League for Pampa Norte Biotricity and U.S. Open for Santa Rita and tournaments at Grand Champions. Batucada won the Kitzbuhel Country Club blanket for BPP.

Bentley Berlin (Melissa Ganzi, 0, Alfonso Pieres, 5, Alejandro Novillo Astrada, 7) won its second game of the tournament with a decisive 8-4 victory over Bodvar (Daniel Deistler, 0, Clemente Delfosse, 6, Patrick Maleitzke, 6) to win the Kitzbuhel Country Club Cup as fifth-place finisher. Ganzi, the only woman player in the tournament, scored three more goals to bring her two-day total to six.

Mackage (Hugo Baldwin, 1, Hernan Pieres, 4, Oli Hipwood, 6) edged World Polo League (Peter Cromm, 0, Agustin Wagner, 4, Patricio Neves, 6), 9-8.5, in the Casablanca Cup game for third and fourth places.

Engel & Volkers (Henrique Schalldach, 2, Marcus Schalldach, 2, Leonardo Rodrigues, 7) defeated Veuve Clicquot (Sebastian Schneeberger, 1, Martijn van Scherpenzeel, 2, Valentin Novillo Astrada, 7), 7-5.5 in the Bodvar Rose Cup game for seventh and eighth places.

The players had one final social event with the lavish polo gala that attracted 700 guests in the VIP tent, fine food and drink and entertainment provided by Cookies and Cream.

Founded in 1979, team sponsor Intocast  took over the business activities of Eugen Schwarz Gmbh, who since 1922, had been supplying the German and European steel industry with consumables for iron and steelmaking. The industry leader has a network of 12 German and 19 foreign sites.

The snow polo tournament was started in 2003 by Tito Gaudenzi and his father Reto with four teams and 1,000 fans. It has grown into one of the country‘s major sporting events, eight teams and attracts more than 10,000 fans over three days including a soldout VIP tent of 750 spectators. This year‘s event attracted 10,000 fans over three days.

„What we have created here together with the Kitzbuhel Tourist Association and Bendura Bank despite the conditions is a true sign that we can achieve anything together and that we are an incredible team,“ said Tito Gaudenzi.

„We are happy to have celebrated 20 years of polo in Kitzbuhel and look forward to the next 20 years. We are also in full planning for the first summer tournament in Kitzbuhel.“

Ganzi was the first woman to win the 2018 Bendura Bank Snow Polo World Cup. She was the first woman to win the 35th Snow Polo World Cup St. Moritz in January, 2019. She was also the first woman to compete in the St. Moritz Snow Polo Tournament in 2016 and first woman to make the final in 2017. She is  the first woman to win the St. Regis World Snow Polo Tournament for Flexjet in 2016.

Ganzi will now compete in the Jan. 27-29 St. Moritz event along with her son Grant and Astrada for World Polo League and husband Marc, Nic Roldan and Freddie Mannix for Team Clinique La Prairie.

Jan-Erik Franck, the voice of polo who also announces during the winter season at Grand Champions and Santa Rita Polo Farm, handled the always entertaining announcing in Kitzbuhel and also heads to St. Moritz before heading to South Florida for the 26-goal World Polo League that begins in February in Wellington.

During the winter polo season, Grand Champions, the nation‘s largest and most innovative USPA-sanctioned polo club, nestled in the heart of the world‘s winter equestrian capital, is hosting  tournaments: 6, 8, 12, 20, and 26-goal leagues, WCT Finals, women‘s weekly league play and 26-goal World Polo League tournaments at both Grand Champions.

Grand Champions tournaments attract a large international field of players from all corners of the world including Argentina, India, Mexico, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Canada, Ecuador, Brazil, Switzerland, France, England, Germany, Uruguay, Azerbaijan, South Africa, Venezuela, Chile, and England.

Season highlights for 2023 are the Sterling Cup, $50,000 National 12-Goal Tournament, Sieber Memorial, John T. Oxley Memorial, the inaugural Richard Riemenschneider Memorial Cup and $100,000 World Cup Tournament, a unique 0-40-goal, winner-take-all single-elimination tournament and special events including World Polo League Polo Pride and Sunset Chukkers and Cocktails.

The biggest highlight of the season is the fifth season of the World Polo League, the nation‘s only 26-goal league featuring some of the world‘s top players and team sponsors at Grand Champions. The WPL has been filling  the void created when the U.S. Polo Association, the sport‘s governing body, announced it was lowering high goal polo to 18-22 goals and would not have 26-goal polo.

Grand Champions, the nation‘s largest  polo club celebrating its 16th anniversary, and Santa Rita Polo Farm is the largest and most unique private 102-acre polo facility in Wellington with 212 stalls in nine self-contained barns, two tracks, five climate-controlled tack rooms, vet room, staff quarters, guest house and four polo fields with state-of-the-art underground irrigation and short work arena. The club has 13 well-manicured fields including nine world-class fields at GCPC and Santa Rita Polo Farm.

The winter season will be live-streamed locally and worldwide on Wellington-based ChukkerTV (CTV).

Grand Champions Polo Club caters to men, women and youth polo players at all levels. Its‘ expert staff can customize a complete playing experience including horses, pros and certified umpires in addition to lessons and practice sessions as part of its‘ Polo On Demand program.

The Polo School, now located at the former Pony Express facility, operates in Wellington January through May and September through November. The stand-alone USPA-sanctioned polo club, is thriving. It is dedicated to teaching polo to all ages, particularly grass roots youth. Its mission is to provide individuals opportunities in polo at every economic and ability level. November. The Polo School has nurtured several junior, men and women polo players now playing in the pro and amateur ranks since its inception.

For more information on leagues or Polo School contact Director of Operations Juan Bollini at  561-346-1099 or Cale Newman at 561-876-2930.

Teams 20. Bendura Bank Snow Polo World Cup Kitzbühel

1. Intocast (+11)
Matthias Normann, TC, AUT (+1)
Micky Duggan, ARG (+5)
Martin Juaregui, ARG (+5)

2. Bendura Bank (+11)
Philip de Groot, TC, NED (+1)
Adrian Laplacette Jr., ARG (+7)
Tito Gaudenzi, CH (+3)

3. World Polo League (+10)
Peter Cromm, TC, GER (+0)
Agustin Wagner, ARG (+4)    
Patricio Neves, ARG (+6)

4. Mackage (+11)                 
Hugo Baldwin, TC, ENG (+1)
Hernan Pieres, ARG (+4)
Oli Hipwood, ENG (+6)

5. Bentley (+12)
Melissa Ganzi, TC, USA (+0)
Alfonso Pieres, ARG (+5)
Alejandro Novillo Astrada, ARG (+7)

6. Bodvar (+11)
Henrik Deistler, TC, GER (-1)
Clemente Delfosse, FRA (+6)
Patrick Maleitzke, GER (+6)

7. Engel & Völkers (+11)
Henrique Schalldach, TC, BRA (+2)
Marcus Schalldach, BRA (+2)
Leandro Rodrigues, BRA (+7)  

8. Veuve Clicquot (+10)
Sebastian Schneberger, TC, GER (+1)
Martijn van Scherpenzeel, NED (+2)
Valentin Novillo Astrada, ARG (+7)

Photos by Reinhardt & Sommer Fotografen

Evviva Polo St. Moritz (SUI) returns, joining Araucaria Polo Club (ARG), Rincón Polo José Ignacio (URU), Polo Club Mühlen (GER) and Polo Schockemöhle (GER) for the third edition of the POLO RIDER CUP that will be held from 14 to 24 June 2023 at the Polo Club Saint-Tropez – Haras de Gassin.

This will be Evviva Polo St.Moritz’s third participation in the tournament, with the following players:

Tommy Rinderknecht, Captain of Evviva Polo St. Moritz, comments: “Polo Club Evviva Polo St. Moritz, the home club of the world’s most important winter polo event, the Snow Polo World Cup St. Moritz, is happy to participate for the third time in the POLO RIDER CUP. After having lost the final in 2022, the Evviva Polo St. Moritz team is eager to carry the POLO RIDER CUP home to St. Moritz this year.’’

Olivier Godallier, President & Founder of GAME POLO, comments: “We are very proud to be able to count on Evviva Polo St. Moritz’s participation for the third time. The Swiss team played a great tournament in 2022, reaching the final with Martin Aguerre H as the best scorer and Ignacio Kennedy with the tournament’s best pony. I wish Evviva Polo St Moritz an even better result than in 2022!”

All articles loaded
No more articles to load

POLO+10 PLAYERS LIST

For players only: The biggest players data base in the world. Subscribe now and receive invitations to polo tournaments all over the world.
Subscribe to POLO+10 Newsletter
Newsletter Subscriptions *(Required)

POLO+10 REAL ESTATE

POLO+10 PUBLISHES YOUR TOURNAMENT MAGAZINE!

Would you like to have your own magazine for your tournament?

Feel free to contact us!
POLO+10 produces your tournament magazine.

Please write to
hello@poloplus10.com