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Wikipedia

Polo

Polo is a ball game played on horseback, a traditional field sport and one of the world's oldest known team sports.[7] The game is played by two opposing teams with the objective of scoring using a long-handled wooden mallet to hit a small hard ball through the opposing team's goal. Each team has four mounted riders, and the game usually lasts one to two hours, divided into periods called chukkas or "chukkers".

Polo
Players playing polo
Highest governing bodyFederation of International Polo
NicknamesThe Sport of Kings[1][2]
Origin
Clubs90+
Characteristics
ContactYes
Team members
  • Field polo: 4
  • Arena: 3
Mixed-sexYes
TypeEquestrian, ball game, team sport
EquipmentPolo pony, mallet, ball, protective wear
VenuePolo field or arena
Presence
Country or regionWorldwide
OlympicNo (since 1934)

Polo has been called "the sport of kings",[8] and has become a spectator sport for equestrians and high society, often supported by sponsorship. The progenitor of the game and its variants existed from the 6th century BCE to the 1st century CE as equestrian games played by nomadic Iranian and Turkic peoples.[4] In Persia, where the sport evolved and developed, it was at first a training game for cavalry units, usually the royal guard or other elite troops.[5] A notable example is Saladin, who was known for being a skilled polo player which contributed to his cavalry training.[9][10] It is now popular around the world, with well over 100 member countries in the Federation of International Polo, played professionally in 16 countries, and was an Olympic sport from 1900 to 1936.

Arena polo is an indoor or semi-outdoor variant with similar rules, and is played with three riders per team. The playing field is smaller, enclosed and usually of compacted sand or fine aggregate, and often indoors. Arena polo has more maneuvering due to space limitations, and uses an air-inflated ball slightly larger than the hard solid ball used in field polo. Standard mallets are used, though slightly larger-head arena mallets are an option.

History

Origins and etymology

 
A Persian miniature from the poem Guy-o Chawgân ("the Ball and the Polo-mallet") during the Safavid dynasty of Persia, showing courtiers on horseback playing polo, 1546 AD

The game's English name derives from the Balti language,[a] from its word for 'ball', polo.[11] It is cognate with the Standard Tibetan pulu, also meaning 'ball'.[11][12]: 25 

Although the exact origins of the game are not certain, many scholars[13] suggest it most likely began as a simple game played by Iranic and Turkic equestrian nomads in Central Asia.[3][4] An archaic variation of polo, regionally referred to as buzkashi or kokpar, is still played in parts of Central Asia.[4] It was developed and formalised in Ancient Iran (Persia) as "chovgan" (čowgān), becoming a national sport played extensively by the nobility. Women played as well as men.[5] During the period of the Parthian Empire (247 BC to 224 AD), the sport had great patronage under the kings and noblemen. According to The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity, the Persian ball game was an important pastime in the court of the Sasanian Empire (224–651).[6] It was also part of the royal education for the Sasanian ruling class.[6] Emperor Shapur II learnt to play polo at age seven in 316 AD.

Middle Ages and Early Modern era

 
Naqsh-e Jahan Square in Isfahan, Iran, is the site of a medieval royal polo field[14]
 
Statue of polo player in Gilgit, Pakistan

Valuable for training cavalry, the game was played from Constantinople, where Emperor Theodosius II constructed a polo ground early in the 5th century,[15] to Japan by the Middle Ages. The game also spread south to Arabia and to India and Tibet.

Abbasid Baghdad had a large polo ground outside its walls, and one of the city's early 13th century gates, the Bab al Halba, was named after these nearby polo grounds. The game continued to be supported by Mongol rulers of Persia in the 13th century, as well as under the Safavid dynasty. In the 17th century, Naqsh-i Jahan Square in Isfahan was built as a polo field by King Abbas I. The game was also learnt by the neighbouring Byzantine Empire at an early date. A tzykanisterion (stadium for playing tzykanion, the Byzantine name for polo) was built by Emperor Theodosius II (r. 408–450) inside the Great Palace of Constantinople.[16] Emperor Basil I (r. 867–886) excelled at it; Emperor Alexander (r. 912–913) died from exhaustion while playing and Emperor John I of Trebizond (r. 1235–1238) died from a fatal injury during a game.[17]

 
Tang dynasty Chinese courtiers on horseback playing a game of polo, 706 AD

After the Muslim conquests to the Ayyubid and Mameluke dynasties of Egypt and the Levant, their elites favoured it above all other sports. Notable sultans such as Saladin and Baybars were known to play it and encourage it in their courts.[18] Polo sticks were featured as one of the suits on the Mamluk precursor to modern-day playing cards. Europeans transformed the polo stick suit into the "clubs" of the "Latin" decks, as polo was little known to them at that time.[19]

 
The Georgians Playing Polo in the Kingdom of Imereti, by Italian missionary Teramo Castelli, 1640.

The game spread to South Asia where it has had a strong presence in the northwestern areas of present-day Pakistan (including Gilgit, Chitral, Hunza and Baltistan) since at least the 15th–16th century.[20] Qutubuddin Aibak (r. 1206–1210), originally a Turkic slave who later founded the Mamluk dynasty (1206–1290) Delhi Sultanate, was accidentally killed during a game of polo when his horse fell and he was impaled on the pommel of his saddle.

Polo likely travelled via the Silk Road to China where it was popular in the Tang dynasty capital of Chang'an, and also played by women, who wore male dress to do so; many Tang dynasty tomb figures of female players survive.[21] According to The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity, the popularity of polo in Tang China was "bolstered, no doubt, by the presence of the Sasanian court in exile".[6] A "polo-obsessed" noblewoman was buried with her donkeys on 6 October 878 in Xi’an, China.[22]

Modern game

India and Britain

The modern, international, game of polo is derived from the form played in Manipur, India, where it was known as sagol kangjei. Also in use in Manipur were the game's Tibetic names, polo or pulu, referring to the wooden ball, and it was these terms, anglicised, which were adopted for the sport's name in its slow spread to the west. A European polo club was established in the town of Silchar in Assam, India, in 1859, the English tea planters having learnt it from Manipuri incomers.[23][24]

 
Manipuri polo players in 1875

The origins of the game in Manipur are traced to yet earlier precursors of sagol kangjei.[25] This was one of three forms of hockey in Manipur, the other ones being field hockey (called khong kangjei) and wrestling-hockey (called mukna kangjei). Local rituals such as those connected to the Ibudhou Marjing, the winged-pony god of polo and the creation-ritual episodes of the Lai Haraoba festival enacting the life of his son, Khoriphaba, the polo-playing god of sports. These may indicate an origin earlier than the historical records of Manipur. Later, according to Cheitharol Kumbaba, a royal chronicle of King Kangba, who ruled Manipur much earlier than Nongda Lairen Pakhangba (33 CE) introduced sagol kangjei ('kangjei on horseback'). Further regular playing of this game commenced in 1605, during the reign of King Khagemba under newly framed rules of the game.

 
Old polo field in Imphal, Manipur

In Manipur, polo is traditionally played with seven players to a side. The players are mounted on the indigenous Manipuri Pony, which stands less than 13 hands (52 inches, 132 cm). There are no goal posts, and a player scores simply by hitting the ball out of either end of the field. Players strike the ball with the long side of the mallet head, not the end.[26] Players are not permitted to carry the ball, although blocking the ball with any part of the body except the open hand is permitted.[27] The sticks are made of cane, and the balls are made from the roots of bamboo. Players protected their legs by attaching leather shields to their saddles and girths.[12]: 26 

 
Polo players of Manipur in Mapal Kangjeibung, the world's oldest polo playground

In Manipur, the game was played even by commoners who owned a pony.[12]: 25  The kings of Manipur had a royal polo ground within the ramparts of their Kangla Fort. Here they played on the manung kangjei bung (lit.'inner polo ground'). Public games were held, as they still are today, at the mapan kangjei bung (lit.'outer polo ground'), a polo ground just outside the Kangla. Weekly games called hapta kangjei (lit.'weekly polo') were also played in a polo ground outside the current palace.

The oldest polo ground in the world is the Imphal Polo Ground in Manipur State. The history of this polo ground is contained in the royal chronicle Cheitharol Kumbaba starting from 33 CE. Lieutenant (later Major General) Joseph Ford Sherer, the father of modern polo, visited the state and played on this polo ground in the 1850s. Lord Curzon, the Viceroy of India visited the state in 1901 and measured the polo ground as "225 yards long and 110 yards wide" (206 m × 101 m).[28]

The Cachar Club, established in 1859,[5][29] is located on Club Road in the heart of Silchar city in Assam. In 1862, the oldest polo club still in existence, Calcutta Polo Club, was established by two British soldiers, Sherer and Captain Robert Stewart.[30] Later they spread the game to their peers in England. Polo was first played in England by the 10th Hussars in 1869.[31] The British are credited with spreading polo worldwide in the late 19th century and the early 20th century at the height of its empire. Military officers imported the game to Britain in the 1860s. The establishment of polo clubs throughout England and western Europe followed after the formal codification of rules.[12]: 26  The 10th Hussars at Aldershot, Hants, introduced polo to England in 1834. The game's governing body in the United Kingdom is the Hurlingham Polo Association, which drew up the first set of formal British rules in 1874, many of which are still in existence.

This version of polo played in the 19th century was different from the faster form that was played in Manipur. The game was slow and methodical, with little passing between players and few set plays that required specific movements by participants without the ball. Neither players nor horses were trained to play a fast, non-stop game. This form of polo lacked the aggressive methods and required fewer equestrian skills. From the 1800s to the 1910s, a host of teams representing Indian principalities dominated the international polo scene.[12]: 26 

The World Champions Polo League was launched in Jaipur in 2016. It is a new version of polo, similar to the Twenty20 format of cricket. The pitch was made smaller and accommodated a large audience. The first event of the World Champions Polo League took place in Bhavnagar, Gujarat, with six teams and room for 10,000 spectators. The rules were changed[32] and the duration of matches made shorter.[33]

Argentina

 
Luis Lacey, former captain of Argentine Polo Team in 1922
 
Argentine Polo Open Championship

British and Irish immigrants in the Argentine pampas started practising polo during their free time. Among them, David Shennan is credited with having organised the first formal polo game of the country in 1875, at Estancia El Negrete, located in Buenos Aires Province.

The sport spread quickly among the skillful gauchos, and several clubs opened in the following years in the towns of Venado Tuerto, Cañada de Gómez, Quilmes, Flores and later (1888) Hurlingham. In 1892 The River Plate Polo Association was founded and constituted the basis for the current Asociación Argentina de Polo. In the Olympic Games held in Paris in 1924 a team composed of Juan Miles, Enrique Padilla, Juan Nelson, Arturo Kenny, G. Brooke Naylor and A. Peña achieved the first gold medal in the nation's Olympic history. The title was defended at the 1936 Berlin Games with players Manuel Andrada, Andrés Gazzotti, Roberto Cavanagh, Luis Duggan, Juan Nelson, Diego Cavanagh, and Enrique Alberdi.

The game spread across the country, and Argentina is credited globally as the capital of polo;[citation needed] Argentina is noted world wide for having the largest contingent of 10 handicap players.

Five teams were able to gather four 10 handicap players each, to make 40 handicap teams: Coronel Suárez, 1975, 1977–1979 (Alberto Heguy, Juan Carlos Harriott, Alfredo Harriot and Horacio Heguy); La Espadaña, 1989–1990 (Carlos Gracida, Gonzalo Pieres, Alfonso Pieres y Ernesto Trotz Jr.); Indios Chapaleufú, 1992–1993 (Bautista Heguy, Gonzalo Heguy, Horacio Heguy Jr. and Marcos Heguy); La Dolfina, 2009–2010 (Adolfo Cambiaso Jr., Lucas Monteverde, Mariano Aguerre y Bartolomé Castagnola); Ellerstina, 2009 (Facundo Pieres, Gonzalo Pieres Jr., Pablo Mac Donough and Juan Martín Nero).

The three major polo tournaments in Argentina, known as "Triple Corona" ("Triple Crown"), are Hurlingham Polo Open, Tortugas Polo Open and Palermo Polo Open. Polo season usually lasts from October to December.[34]

 
Polo player, with referee

Polo has found popularity throughout the rest of the Americas, including Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and the United States of America.[12]: 26–27 [35]

United States

 
A polo match at the Kentucky Horse Park
 
Polo stadium in The Villages, Florida

James Gordon Bennett Jr. on 16 May 1876 organised what was billed as the first polo match in the United States at Dickel's Riding Academy at 39th Street and Fifth Avenue in New York City.[36] The historical record states that James Gordon Bennett established the Westchester Polo Club on 6 May 1876, and on 13 May 1876, the Jerome Park Racetrack in Westchester County (now Bronx County) was the site of the "first" American outdoor polo match.

H. L. Herbert, James Gordon Bennett and August Belmont Jr. financed the original New York Polo Grounds. Herbert stated in a 1913 article[37] that they formed the Westchester Club after the "first" outdoor game was played on 13 May 1876. This contradicts the historical record of the club being established before the Jerome Park game.

There is ample evidence that the first to play polo in America were actually the English Texans. The Galveston News reported on 2 May 1876 that Denison, Texas had a polo club which was before James Gordon Bennett established his Westchester Club or attempted to play the "first" game.[38] The Denison team sent a letter to James Gordon Bennett challenging him to a match. The challenge was published 2 June 1876, in The Galveston Daily News. By the time the article came out on 2 June, the Denison Club had already received a letter from Bennett indicating the challenge was offered before the "first" games in New York.[39]

There is an urban legend that the first game of polo in America was played in Boerne, Texas, at retired British officer Captain Glynn Turquand's famous Balcones Ranch.[40] The Boerne, Texas, legend also has plenty of evidence pointing to the fact that polo was played in Boerne before James Gordon Bennett Jr. ever picked up a polo mallet.[41]

During the early part of the 20th century, under the leadership of Harry Payne Whitney, polo changed to become a high-speed sport in the United States, differing from the game in England, where it involved short passes to move the ball towards the opposition's goal. Whitney and his teammates used the fast break, sending long passes downfield to riders who had broken away from the pack at a full gallop. In 1909 a United States team defeated an English team with ease.[31]

In the late 1950s, champion polo player and Director of the Long Island Polo Association, Walter Scanlon, introduced the "short form", or "European" style, four period match, to the game of polo.[42]

 
Director Walter Scanlon, Bethpage, Long Island

Rules

All tournaments and levels of play and players are organized within and between polo clubs, including membership, rules, safety, fields and arenas.

The rules of polo are written to include the safety of both players and horses. Games are monitored by umpires. A whistle is blown when an infraction occurs, and penalties are awarded. Strategic plays in polo are based on the "line of the ball", an imaginary line that extends through the ball in the line of travel. This line traces the ball's path and extends past the ball along that trajectory. The line of the ball defines rules for players to approach the ball safely. The "line of the ball" changes each time the ball changes direction. The player who hits the ball generally has the right of way, and other players cannot cross the line of the ball in front of that player. As players approach the ball, they ride on either side of the line of the ball giving each access to the ball. A player can cross the line of the ball when it does not create a dangerous situation. Most infractions and penalties are related to players improperly crossing the line of the ball or the right of way. When a player has the line of the ball on their right, they have the right of way. A "ride-off" is when a player moves another player off the line of the ball by making shoulder-to-shoulder contact with the other players' horses.

The defending player has a variety of opportunities for their team to gain possession of the ball. They can push the opponent off the line or steal the ball from the opponent. Another common defensive play is called "hooking." While a player is taking a swing at the ball, their opponent can block the swing by using their mallet to hook the mallet of the player swinging at the ball. A player may hook only if they are on the side where the swing is being made or directly behind an opponent. A player may not purposely touch another player, another player's tack, or a pony with their mallet. Unsafe hooking is a foul that will result in a penalty shot being awarded. For example, it is a foul for a player to reach over an opponent's mount in an attempt to hook.

The other basic defensive play is called the bump or ride-off. It's similar to a body check in hockey. In a ride-off, a player rides their pony alongside an opponent's mount to move an opponent away from the ball or to take them out of a play. It must be executed properly so that it does not endanger the horses or the players. The angle of contact must be safe and can not knock the horses off balance, or harm the horses in any way. Two players following the line of the ball and riding one another off have the right of way over a single man coming from any direction.

Like in hockey or basketball, fouls are potentially dangerous plays that infringe on the rules of the game. To the novice spectator, fouls may be difficult to discern. There are degrees of dangerous and unfair play and penalty shots are awarded depending based on the severity of the foul and where the foul was committed on the polo field. White lines on the polo field indicate where the mid-field, sixty, forty and thirty yard penalties are taken.

The official set of rules and rules interpretations are reviewed and published annually by each country's polo association. Most of the smaller associations follow the rules of the Hurlingham Polo Association, the national governing body of the sport of polo in the United Kingdom, and the United States Polo Association.[43]

Outdoor polo

Outdoor or field polo lasts about one and a half to two hours and consists of four to eight seven-minute chukkas, between or during which players change mounts. At the end of each seven-minute chukka, play continues for an additional 30 seconds or until a stoppage in play, whichever comes first. There is a four-minute interval between chukkas and a ten-minute halftime. Play is continuous and is only stopped for rule infractions (fouls), broken tack (equipment) or injury to horse or player. The object is to score goals by hitting the ball between the goal posts, no matter how high in the air. If the ball goes wide of the goal, the defending team is allowed a free 'knock-in' from the place where the ball crossed the goal line, thus getting ball back into play.[44]

Indoor or arena polo

Arena polo has rules similar to the field version, and is less strenuous for the player. It is played in a 300 by 150 feet (91 by 46 m) enclosed arena, much like those used for other equestrian sports; the minimum size is 150 by 75 feet (46 by 23 m). There are many arena clubs in the United States, and most major polo clubs, including the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club, have active arena programmes. The major differences between the outdoor and indoor games are: speed (outdoor being faster), physicality/roughness (indoor/arena is more physical), ball size (indoor is larger), goal size (because the arena is smaller the goal is smaller), and some penalties. In the United States and Canada, collegiate polo is arena polo; in the UK, collegiate polo is both.[citation needed]

Some of the most important arena polo tournaments held are:

  1. The U.S. Arena Polo Championship, a 12-18 goal tournament, is one of the highest levels of fast version of polo competition currently played in the United States. Its history dates back to 1926, where the first tournament was held and won by the Yale University team of Reddington Barret, Winston Guest and William Mui.
  2. The Arena Polo Grand Prix held in Argentina, promoted by La Carona Polo Club along with the Argentine Polo Association, was organized for the first time in June 2019, and was the start for the Arena Polo in Argentina.
  3. The Arena Polo European Championship. The first tournament of this championship was held in 2015. Alongside the Equestrian Federation of Azerbaijan Republic (ARAF) the tournament was organized by the team of World Polo
 
Polo match between the United Kingdom and Spain at Club Puerta de Hierro, 1922. The English side was represented by Frederick A. Gill and Teignmouth P. Melvill whilst the Spanish were represented by Alfonso XIII and the Duke of Peñaranda amongst others.

Polo ponies

 
Polo ponies waiting for the game to begin

The mounts used are called 'polo ponies', although the term pony is purely traditional and the mount is actually a full-sized horse. They range from 14.2 to 16 hands (58 to 64 inches, 147 to 163 cm) high at the withers, and weigh 900–1,100 pounds (410–500 kg). The polo pony is selected carefully for quick bursts of speed, stamina, agility and manoeuvrability. Temperament is critical; the horse must remain responsive under pressure and not become excited or difficult to control. Many are Thoroughbreds or Thoroughbred crosses. They are trained to be handled with one hand on the reins, and to respond to the rider's leg and weight cues for moving forward, turning and stopping. A well trained horse will carry its rider smoothly and swiftly to the ball and can account for 60 to 75 percent of the player's skill and net worth to their team.[45]

Polo pony training generally begins at age three and lasts from about six months to two years. Most horses reach full physical maturity at about age five, and ponies are at their peak of athleticism and training at around age six or seven. However, without any accidents, polo ponies may have the ability to play until they are 18 to 20 years of age.[citation needed]

Each player must have more than one horse, to allow for tired mounts to be replaced by fresh ones between or even during chukkas. A player's "string" of polo ponies may number two or three in Low Goal matches (with ponies being rested for at least a chukka before reuse), four or more for Medium Goal matches (at least one per chukka), and even more for the highest levels of competition.[citation needed]

Players

 
A girls' polo team, United States

Each team consists of four mounted players, which can be mixed teams of both men and women.

Each position assigned to a player has certain responsibilities:

  • Number One is the most offence-oriented position on the field. The Number One position, which generally covers the opposing team's Number Four, is usually the rookie of the team.[citation needed]
  • Number Two has an important role in offence, either running through and scoring themselves, or passing to the Number One and getting in behind them. Defensively, they will cover the opposing team's Number Three, generally the other team's best player. Given the difficulty of this position, it is not uncommon for the best player on the team to play Number Two so long as another strong player is available to play Three.
  • Number Three is the tactical leader and must be a long powerful hitter to feed balls to Number Two and Number One as well as maintaining a solid defense. The best player on the team is usually the Number Three player, usually wielding the highest handicap.
  • Number Four is the primary defense player. They can move anywhere on the field, but they usually try to prevent scoring. The emphasis on defense by the Number Four allows the Number Three to attempt more offensive plays, since they know that they will be covered if they lose the ball.

Polo must be played right-handed to prevent head-on collisions.[46]

Equipment

 
Polo helmet with face guard
 
Polo mallets and ball
 
Polo player wearing kneepads, "riding off" an opponent

The rules for equipment vary in details between the hosting authorities, but are always for the safety of the players and mounts.

Mandatory equipment includes a protective helmet with chinstrap worn at all times by all players and mounted grooms. They have a rigid exterior and interior protective padding and must be to a locally accepted safety standard, PAS015 (UK), NOCSAE (USA). A faceguard is commonly integral with the helmet.

Polo boots and kneeguards are mandatory in the UK during official play, and boots are recommended for all play everywhere. The UK also recommends goggles, elbow pads and gum shields. A shirt or jersey is required that distinguishes the player's team, and is not black and white stripes like an umpire shirt.

White polo pants or trousers are worn during official play. Polo gloves are commonly worn to protect from working the reins and mallet.

Not permitted is any equipment that may harm horses, such as certain spurs or whips.[47][48]

Ball

The modern outdoor polo ball is made of a high-impact plastic. Historically they have been made of bamboo, leather covered cork, hard rubber, and for many years willow root. Originally the British used a white painted leather covered cricket ball.[49]

The regulation outdoor polo ball is 3 inches (7.6 cm) to 3+12 inches (8.9 cm) in diameter and weighs 3+12 ounces (99 g) to 4+12 ounces (130 g).[50]

Plastic balls were introduced in the 1970s. They are less prone to breakage and much cheaper.[51]

The indoor and arena polo ball is leather-covered and inflated, and is about 4+12 inches (11 cm) in diameter.[citation needed]

It must be not less than 12.5 inches (32 cm) or more than 15 inches (38 cm) in circumference. The weight must be not less than 170 grams (6.0 oz) or more than 182 grams (6.4 oz). In a bounce test from 9 feet (2.7 m) on concrete at 70 °F (21 °C), the rebound should be a minimum of 54 inches (140 cm) and a maximum of 64 inches (160 cm) at the inflation rate specified by the manufacturer. This provides for a hard and lively ball.[citation needed]

Mallet

The polo mallet consists of a cane shaft with a rubber-wrapped grip, a webbed thong, called a sling, for wrapping around the thumb, and a wooden cigar-shaped head. The shaft is made of manau-cane (not bamboo, which is hollow) although a small number of mallets today are made from composite materials. Composite materials are usually not preferred by top players because the shaft of composite mallets can't absorb vibrations as well as traditional cane mallets. The mallet head is generally made from a hardwood called tipa, approximately 914" inches long. The mallet head weighs from 160 g (5.6 oz) to 240 g (8.5 oz), depending on player preference and the type of wood used, and the shaft can vary in weight and flexibility depending on the player's preference. The weight of the mallet head is of important consideration for the more seasoned players. Female players often use lighter mallets than male players. For some polo players, the length of the mallet depends on the size of the horse: the taller the horse, the longer the mallet. However, some players prefer to use a single length of mallet regardless of the height of the horse. Either way, playing horses of differing heights requires some adjustment by the rider. Variable lengths of the mallet typically range from 127 cm (50 in) to 134 cm (53 in). The term mallet is used exclusively in US English; British English prefers the term polo stick. The ball is struck with the broad sides of the mallet head rather than its round and flat tips.

Saddle

 
Polo saddle

Polo saddles are English-style, close contact, similar to jumping saddles; although most polo saddles lack a flap under the billets. Some players will not use a saddle blanket. The saddle has a flat seat and no knee support; the rider adopting a forward-leaning seat and closed knees dissimilar to a classical dressage seat. A breastplate is added, usually attached to the front billet. A standing martingale must be used: so, a breastplate is a necessity for safety. The tie-down is usually supported by a neck strap. Many saddles also have an overgirth. The stirrup irons are heavier than most, and the stirrup leathers are wider and thicker, for added safety when the player stands in the stirrups. The legs of the pony are wrapped with polo wraps from below the knee to the fetlock to minimize pain. Jumping (open front) or gallop boots are sometimes used along with the polo wraps for added protection. Often, these wraps match the team colours. The pony's mane is most often roached (hogged), and its tail is docked or braided so that it will not snag the rider's mallet.

Polo is ridden with double reins for greater accuracy of signals. The bit is frequently a gag bit or Pelham bit. In both cases, the gag or shank rein will be the bottom rein in the rider's hands, while the snaffle rein will be the top rein. If a gag bit is used, there will be a drop noseband in addition to the cavesson, supporting the tie-down. One of the rein sets may alternately be draw reins.

The field

 
Relative sizes of an association football ground and a polo field

The playing field is 300 by 160 yards (270 by 150 m), the area of approximately six soccer fields or nine American football fields (10 acres), while arena polo is 96 x 46 metres. The playing field is carefully maintained with closely mowed turf providing a safe, fast playing surface. Goals are posts which are set eight yards apart, centred at each end of the field. The surface of a polo field requires careful and constant grounds maintenance to keep the surface in good playing condition. During half-time of a match, spectators are invited to go onto the field to participate in a polo tradition called "divot stamping", which was developed not only to help replace the mounds of earth (divots) that are torn up by the horses' hooves, but also to afford spectators the opportunity to walk about and socialise.

Contemporary sport

 
Polo played as a part of the 1900 Summer Olympics

Polo is played professionally in many countries, notably Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Dominican Republic, France, Germany, Iran, India, New Zealand, Mexico, Pakistan, Jamaica, Spain, South Africa, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and is now an active sport in 77 countries.[52] Although its tenure as an Olympic sport was limited to 1900–1939, in 1998 the International Olympic Committee recognised it as a sport with a bona fide international governing body, the Federation of International Polo. The World Polo Championship is held every three years by the Federation.

Polo is unique among team sports in that amateur players, often the team patrons, routinely hire and play alongside the sport's top professionals.

Some of the most important tournaments,[opinion] at club level, are Abierto de Tortugas, Abierto de Hurlingham and Abierto Argentino de Polo, all of them in Argentina (la Triple Corona).[citation needed]

East and Southeast Asia

 
Indonesia plays against Thailand in SEA Games Polo 2007

Polo has been played in Malaysia and Singapore, both of which are former British colonies, since being introduced to Malaya during the late 19th century. Royal Johor Polo Club was formed in 1884 and Singapore Polo Club was formed in 1886. The oldest polo club in the modern country of Malaysia is Selangor Polo Club, founded in 1902.[53] It was largely played by royalty and the political and business elite.[54]

Polo was played at the 2007 Southeast Asian Games, 2017 Southeast Asian Games and 2019 Southeast Asian Games. Nations that competed in the tournament were Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Philippines (2007), Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand (2017) and Indonesia, Brunei, Philippines and Malaysia (2019). The 2007 tournament's gold medal was won by the Malaysian team, followed by Singapore with silver and Thailand with bronze while the 2017 tournament's gold medal was won by Malaysia, followed by Thailand with silver and Brunei with bronze. The 2019 tournament's gold medal was won by Malaysia, followed by the Philippines with silver, and Brunei receiving bronze.[citation needed]

The recent resurgence in south-east Asia has resulted in its popularity in cities such as Pattaya, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta. In Pattaya alone, there are three active polo clubs: Polo Escape, Siam Polo Park and the Thai Polo and Equestrian Club. Indonesia has a polo club (Nusantara Polo Club). More recently, Janek Gazecki and Australian professional Jack "Ruki" Baillieu have organised polo matches in parks "around metropolitan Australia, backed by wealthy sponsors."[55]

A Chinese Equestrian Association has been formed with two new clubs in China itself: the Beijing Sunny Time Polo Club, founded by Xia Yang in 2004[56] and the Nine Dragons Hill Polo Club in Shanghai, founded in 2005.[57]

West Asia

Polo is not widely spread in West Asia, but still counts five active clubs in Iran, four active polo clubs in the UAE, one club in Bahrain[58] and The Royal Jordanian Polo Club in Amman, Jordan.[59]

Polo in Iran is governed by the Polo Federation of Iran. There are five polo clubs in Iran: Ghasr-e Firoozeh, Nowroozabad, Army Ground Forces, Kanoon-e Chogan and Nesf-e Jahan. Iran possesses some of the best grass polo fields in the region. The country currently has over 100 registered players of which approximately 15% are women. Historically, Kurdish and Persian Arabian horses were the most widely used for polo. This was probably also the case in ancient times. Today Thoroughbreds are being increasingly used alongside the Kurdish and Persian Arabian horses. Some players have also been experimenting with Anglo-Arabians. Iranians still refer to the game of polo by its original Persian name of "Chogan", which means mallet. Iranians still maintain some of the ancient rituals of the game in official polo matches.[citation needed]

India

The governing body of polo in India is the Indian Polo Association.

Ireland

Polo first began its Irish history in 1870 with the first official game played on Gormanstown Strand, Co. Meath. Three years later the All Ireland Polo Club was founded by Mr. Horace Rochford in the Phoenix Park.[60] Since then the sport has continued to grow with a further seven clubs opening around the country. The sport has also been made more accessible by these clubs by the creation of more affordable training programmes, such as the beginner to pro programme at Polo Wicklow.[61]

Pakistan

The annual Shandur Polo Festival at Shandur Top in Chitral District is an international event attended by enthusiasts from all over the world.[62] The Shandur polo ground at Shandur Pass is the world's highest, at approximately 3,734 metres (12,251 ft).[63] The governing body of polo in Pakistan is the Pakistan Polo Association. There are more than twenty-one polo clubs in Pakistan[64] and over forty polo championships held all over the country every year.[65] Pakistan has qualified for the preliminary rounds of the World Polo Championship three times. Pakistan's Hissam Ali Haider is the highest capped played in the Asian circuit. He has played for Cartier in the St. Moritz Snow Polo World Cup and the Commonwealth team in the Royal Salute Coronation Cup, both of which were won by his team.[66]

United Kingdom

The governing body in the United Kingdom is the Hurlingham Polo Association, dating from 1875, which amalgamated with the County Polo Association in 1949.[67] The UK Armed Forces Polo Association oversees the sport in the three armed services.

United States

The United States Polo Association (USPA) is the governing body for polo in the U.S. The U.S. is the only country that has separate women's polo, run by the United States Women's Polo Federation.

Variants and related sports

 
An old polocart displayed at City Palace, Jaipur. The museum also displays a "night polo ball" with a rotating platform on which a candle is placed.[68]

These variants are considered sports separate from standard polo because of the differences in the composition of teams, equipment, rules, game facilities, and so on.

Variant forms of arena polo include beach polo, played in many countries between teams of three riders on a sand surface,[69] and cowboy polo, played almost exclusively in the western United States by teams of five riders on a dirt surface.

Another modern variant is snow polo, which is played on compacted snow on flat ground or a frozen lake. The format of snow polo varies depending on the space available. Each team generally consists of three players and a bright coloured light plastic ball is preferred.[70] Snow polo is not the same sport as ice polo, which was popular in the US in the late 1890s. That sport resembled ice hockey and bandy but died out entirely in favour of the Canadian ice hockey rules.

Water polo shares a name with polo, but more closely resembles handball. Sagol kangjei, the polo variety discussed above, is arguably a version of polo though it can also be seen as the precursor of modern outdoor polo.

Variants that are related but clearly diverge from the polo format include:

  • Cowboy polo uses rules similar to regular polo, but riders compete with western saddles, usually in a smaller arena, using an inflatable rubber medicine ball.
  • Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net. The sport is a combination of polo, rugby, and basketball.
  • Pato was played in Argentina for centuries, but is very different from modern polo. No mallets are used, and it is not played on grass.
  • Polocrosse is a combination of polo and lacrosse and is also played on horseback. It was developed in Australia in the late 1930s.

Played on vehicles or other animals

Polo is not played exclusively on horseback. Such polo variants are mostly played for recreational or tourism purposes.

Non-equine variations include:

On other animals

  • Camel polo is played in Mongolia[71]
  • Elephant polo is played in South Asia.
  • Yak polo is played in Mongolia and western China.

On vehicles

A lighthearted variant, hobby horse polo (German: steckenpferdpolo), was devised in 1998 in south western Germany. The Erster Kurfürstlich-Kurpfälzisch Polo-Club in Mannheim was founded in 2002 to organise matches and promote the game. Since then, the variant has gained further interest in other German cities.[74][75] It is played on hobby horses, the toy, instead of polo ponies. While following standard polo rules in part, it has some more unusual rules: Goals, for example, are the height and width of bar stools; and any departure from accepted gameplay standards will attract "penalty sherries" to be consumed by the offending player.[76]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Balti is a Tibetic language still spoken by ethnic Balti people in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan and in Indian-administered Ladakh

References

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  38. ^ (PDF). The Galveston News. 2 May 1876. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2012. Retrieved 2 July 2011. Mr Lane, living near Denison, has 25-acres of wheat headed up and nearly ripe ... Denison has a Polo Club; also counterfeit metal dimes, base ball players and lightning rod men ... This section was visited by the hardest storm of the season Thursday night.
  39. ^ (PDF). The Galveston News. 2 June 1876. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2012. Grayson County:

    "At Denison Monday evening while Messers Harold Gooch and Will Lowe were practicing at the game of polo, quite a serious accident happened to former. Mr. Gooch's saddle turned throwing him into the ground when his horse gave him a severe kick, cutting a gash about five inches long across his head over the right ear. Dr. Berry rendered the necessary medical attention, and Mr. Gooch is doing well.

    "Will Lowe, Secretary of the Denison Polo Club, wrote James Gordon Bennett asking him if arrangements could be made for a match game between the Denison and New York Clubs. Mr. Lowe received a letter from Mr. Bennett Monday, in which he says he will lay the matter before the club at the next meeting. There is little doubt the New York club will invite our boys to play them. The Denison club will go into training at once, as they are confident the game will come off.
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Further reading

  • Penina Meisels; Michael Cronan (1992). Polo. San Francisco: Collins. ISBN 0-00-637796-3.
  • Santiago Novillo-Astrada; Raphael De Oliveira; Uwe Seebacher (2009). Simply Polo. Munich: BookRix. ASIN B00XKVIYOK.

polo, this, article, about, sport, played, horseback, clothing, polo, shirt, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material. This article is about the sport played on horseback For the clothing see polo shirt For other uses see Polo disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Polo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Polo is a ball game played on horseback a traditional field sport and one of the world s oldest known team sports 7 The game is played by two opposing teams with the objective of scoring using a long handled wooden mallet to hit a small hard ball through the opposing team s goal Each team has four mounted riders and the game usually lasts one to two hours divided into periods called chukkas or chukkers PoloPlayers playing poloHighest governing bodyFederation of International PoloNicknamesThe Sport of Kings 1 2 Origin6th C BCE 1st C CE by Eurasian nomadic peoples of Central Asia 3 4 Developed and formalised c 1st C BCE 7th C CE by Persians of the Parthian and Sasanian Empires 5 3 6 Clubs90 CharacteristicsContactYesTeam membersField polo 4Arena 3Mixed sexYesTypeEquestrian ball game team sportEquipmentPolo pony mallet ball protective wearVenuePolo field or arenaPresenceCountry or regionWorldwideOlympicNo since 1934 Polo has been called the sport of kings 8 and has become a spectator sport for equestrians and high society often supported by sponsorship The progenitor of the game and its variants existed from the 6th century BCE to the 1st century CE as equestrian games played by nomadic Iranian and Turkic peoples 4 In Persia where the sport evolved and developed it was at first a training game for cavalry units usually the royal guard or other elite troops 5 A notable example is Saladin who was known for being a skilled polo player which contributed to his cavalry training 9 10 It is now popular around the world with well over 100 member countries in the Federation of International Polo played professionally in 16 countries and was an Olympic sport from 1900 to 1936 Arena polo is an indoor or semi outdoor variant with similar rules and is played with three riders per team The playing field is smaller enclosed and usually of compacted sand or fine aggregate and often indoors Arena polo has more maneuvering due to space limitations and uses an air inflated ball slightly larger than the hard solid ball used in field polo Standard mallets are used though slightly larger head arena mallets are an option Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and etymology 1 1 1 Middle Ages and Early Modern era 1 2 Modern game 1 2 1 India and Britain 1 2 2 Argentina 1 2 3 United States 2 Rules 2 1 Outdoor polo 2 2 Indoor or arena polo 3 Polo ponies 4 Players 5 Equipment 5 1 Ball 5 2 Mallet 5 3 Saddle 6 The field 7 Contemporary sport 7 1 East and Southeast Asia 7 2 West Asia 7 3 India 7 4 Ireland 7 5 Pakistan 7 6 United Kingdom 7 7 United States 8 Variants and related sports 8 1 Played on vehicles or other animals 8 1 1 On other animals 8 1 2 On vehicles 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further readingHistory EditOrigins and etymology Edit A Persian miniature from the poem Guy o Chawgan the Ball and the Polo mallet during the Safavid dynasty of Persia showing courtiers on horseback playing polo 1546 AD The game s English name derives from the Balti language a from its word for ball polo 11 It is cognate with the Standard Tibetan pulu also meaning ball 11 12 25 Although the exact origins of the game are not certain many scholars 13 suggest it most likely began as a simple game played by Iranic and Turkic equestrian nomads in Central Asia 3 4 An archaic variation of polo regionally referred to as buzkashi or kokpar is still played in parts of Central Asia 4 It was developed and formalised in Ancient Iran Persia as chovgan cowgan becoming a national sport played extensively by the nobility Women played as well as men 5 During the period of the Parthian Empire 247 BC to 224 AD the sport had great patronage under the kings and noblemen According to The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity the Persian ball game was an important pastime in the court of the Sasanian Empire 224 651 6 It was also part of the royal education for the Sasanian ruling class 6 Emperor Shapur II learnt to play polo at age seven in 316 AD Middle Ages and Early Modern era Edit Naqsh e Jahan Square in Isfahan Iran is the site of a medieval royal polo field 14 Statue of polo player in Gilgit Pakistan Valuable for training cavalry the game was played from Constantinople where Emperor Theodosius II constructed a polo ground early in the 5th century 15 to Japan by the Middle Ages The game also spread south to Arabia and to India and Tibet Abbasid Baghdad had a large polo ground outside its walls and one of the city s early 13th century gates the Bab al Halba was named after these nearby polo grounds The game continued to be supported by Mongol rulers of Persia in the 13th century as well as under the Safavid dynasty In the 17th century Naqsh i Jahan Square in Isfahan was built as a polo field by King Abbas I The game was also learnt by the neighbouring Byzantine Empire at an early date A tzykanisterion stadium for playing tzykanion the Byzantine name for polo was built by Emperor Theodosius II r 408 450 inside the Great Palace of Constantinople 16 Emperor Basil I r 867 886 excelled at it Emperor Alexander r 912 913 died from exhaustion while playing and Emperor John I of Trebizond r 1235 1238 died from a fatal injury during a game 17 Tang dynasty Chinese courtiers on horseback playing a game of polo 706 AD After the Muslim conquests to the Ayyubid and Mameluke dynasties of Egypt and the Levant their elites favoured it above all other sports Notable sultans such as Saladin and Baybars were known to play it and encourage it in their courts 18 Polo sticks were featured as one of the suits on the Mamluk precursor to modern day playing cards Europeans transformed the polo stick suit into the clubs of the Latin decks as polo was little known to them at that time 19 The Georgians Playing Polo in the Kingdom of Imereti by Italian missionary Teramo Castelli 1640 The game spread to South Asia where it has had a strong presence in the northwestern areas of present day Pakistan including Gilgit Chitral Hunza and Baltistan since at least the 15th 16th century 20 Qutubuddin Aibak r 1206 1210 originally a Turkic slave who later founded the Mamluk dynasty 1206 1290 Delhi Sultanate was accidentally killed during a game of polo when his horse fell and he was impaled on the pommel of his saddle Polo likely travelled via the Silk Road to China where it was popular in the Tang dynasty capital of Chang an and also played by women who wore male dress to do so many Tang dynasty tomb figures of female players survive 21 According to The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity the popularity of polo in Tang China was bolstered no doubt by the presence of the Sasanian court in exile 6 A polo obsessed noblewoman was buried with her donkeys on 6 October 878 in Xi an China 22 Modern game Edit India and Britain Edit The modern international game of polo is derived from the form played in Manipur India where it was known as sagol kangjei Also in use in Manipur were the game s Tibetic names polo or pulu referring to the wooden ball and it was these terms anglicised which were adopted for the sport s name in its slow spread to the west A European polo club was established in the town of Silchar in Assam India in 1859 the English tea planters having learnt it from Manipuri incomers 23 24 Manipuri polo players in 1875 The origins of the game in Manipur are traced to yet earlier precursors of sagol kangjei 25 This was one of three forms of hockey in Manipur the other ones being field hockey called khong kangjei and wrestling hockey called mukna kangjei Local rituals such as those connected to the Ibudhou Marjing the winged pony god of polo and the creation ritual episodes of the Lai Haraoba festival enacting the life of his son Khoriphaba the polo playing god of sports These may indicate an origin earlier than the historical records of Manipur Later according to Cheitharol Kumbaba a royal chronicle of King Kangba who ruled Manipur much earlier than Nongda Lairen Pakhangba 33 CE introduced sagol kangjei kangjei on horseback Further regular playing of this game commenced in 1605 during the reign of King Khagemba under newly framed rules of the game Old polo field in Imphal Manipur In Manipur polo is traditionally played with seven players to a side The players are mounted on the indigenous Manipuri Pony which stands less than 13 hands 52 inches 132 cm There are no goal posts and a player scores simply by hitting the ball out of either end of the field Players strike the ball with the long side of the mallet head not the end 26 Players are not permitted to carry the ball although blocking the ball with any part of the body except the open hand is permitted 27 The sticks are made of cane and the balls are made from the roots of bamboo Players protected their legs by attaching leather shields to their saddles and girths 12 26 Polo players of Manipur in Mapal Kangjeibung the world s oldest polo playground In Manipur the game was played even by commoners who owned a pony 12 25 The kings of Manipur had a royal polo ground within the ramparts of their Kangla Fort Here they played on the manung kangjei bung lit inner polo ground Public games were held as they still are today at the mapan kangjei bung lit outer polo ground a polo ground just outside the Kangla Weekly games called hapta kangjei lit weekly polo were also played in a polo ground outside the current palace The oldest polo ground in the world is the Imphal Polo Ground in Manipur State The history of this polo ground is contained in the royal chronicle Cheitharol Kumbaba starting from 33 CE Lieutenant later Major General Joseph Ford Sherer the father of modern polo visited the state and played on this polo ground in the 1850s Lord Curzon the Viceroy of India visited the state in 1901 and measured the polo ground as 225 yards long and 110 yards wide 206 m 101 m 28 The Cachar Club established in 1859 5 29 is located on Club Road in the heart of Silchar city in Assam In 1862 the oldest polo club still in existence Calcutta Polo Club was established by two British soldiers Sherer and Captain Robert Stewart 30 Later they spread the game to their peers in England Polo was first played in England by the 10th Hussars in 1869 31 The British are credited with spreading polo worldwide in the late 19th century and the early 20th century at the height of its empire Military officers imported the game to Britain in the 1860s The establishment of polo clubs throughout England and western Europe followed after the formal codification of rules 12 26 The 10th Hussars at Aldershot Hants introduced polo to England in 1834 The game s governing body in the United Kingdom is the Hurlingham Polo Association which drew up the first set of formal British rules in 1874 many of which are still in existence This version of polo played in the 19th century was different from the faster form that was played in Manipur The game was slow and methodical with little passing between players and few set plays that required specific movements by participants without the ball Neither players nor horses were trained to play a fast non stop game This form of polo lacked the aggressive methods and required fewer equestrian skills From the 1800s to the 1910s a host of teams representing Indian principalities dominated the international polo scene 12 26 The World Champions Polo League was launched in Jaipur in 2016 It is a new version of polo similar to the Twenty20 format of cricket The pitch was made smaller and accommodated a large audience The first event of the World Champions Polo League took place in Bhavnagar Gujarat with six teams and room for 10 000 spectators The rules were changed 32 and the duration of matches made shorter 33 Argentina Edit Luis Lacey former captain of Argentine Polo Team in 1922 Argentine Polo Open Championship British and Irish immigrants in the Argentine pampas started practising polo during their free time Among them David Shennan is credited with having organised the first formal polo game of the country in 1875 at Estancia El Negrete located in Buenos Aires Province The sport spread quickly among the skillful gauchos and several clubs opened in the following years in the towns of Venado Tuerto Canada de Gomez Quilmes Flores and later 1888 Hurlingham In 1892 The River Plate Polo Association was founded and constituted the basis for the current Asociacion Argentina de Polo In the Olympic Games held in Paris in 1924 a team composed of Juan Miles Enrique Padilla Juan Nelson Arturo Kenny G Brooke Naylor and A Pena achieved the first gold medal in the nation s Olympic history The title was defended at the 1936 Berlin Games with players Manuel Andrada Andres Gazzotti Roberto Cavanagh Luis Duggan Juan Nelson Diego Cavanagh and Enrique Alberdi The game spread across the country and Argentina is credited globally as the capital of polo citation needed Argentina is noted world wide for having the largest contingent of 10 handicap players Five teams were able to gather four 10 handicap players each to make 40 handicap teams Coronel Suarez 1975 1977 1979 Alberto Heguy Juan Carlos Harriott Alfredo Harriot and Horacio Heguy La Espadana 1989 1990 Carlos Gracida Gonzalo Pieres Alfonso Pieres y Ernesto Trotz Jr Indios Chapaleufu 1992 1993 Bautista Heguy Gonzalo Heguy Horacio Heguy Jr and Marcos Heguy La Dolfina 2009 2010 Adolfo Cambiaso Jr Lucas Monteverde Mariano Aguerre y Bartolome Castagnola Ellerstina 2009 Facundo Pieres Gonzalo Pieres Jr Pablo Mac Donough and Juan Martin Nero The three major polo tournaments in Argentina known as Triple Corona Triple Crown are Hurlingham Polo Open Tortugas Polo Open and Palermo Polo Open Polo season usually lasts from October to December 34 Polo player with referee Polo has found popularity throughout the rest of the Americas including Brazil Chile Mexico and the United States of America 12 26 27 35 United States Edit See also United States Polo Association A polo match at the Kentucky Horse Park Polo stadium in The Villages Florida James Gordon Bennett Jr on 16 May 1876 organised what was billed as the first polo match in the United States at Dickel s Riding Academy at 39th Street and Fifth Avenue in New York City 36 The historical record states that James Gordon Bennett established the Westchester Polo Club on 6 May 1876 and on 13 May 1876 the Jerome Park Racetrack in Westchester County now Bronx County was the site of the first American outdoor polo match H L Herbert James Gordon Bennett and August Belmont Jr financed the original New York Polo Grounds Herbert stated in a 1913 article 37 that they formed the Westchester Club after the first outdoor game was played on 13 May 1876 This contradicts the historical record of the club being established before the Jerome Park game There is ample evidence that the first to play polo in America were actually the English Texans The Galveston News reported on 2 May 1876 that Denison Texas had a polo club which was before James Gordon Bennett established his Westchester Club or attempted to play the first game 38 The Denison team sent a letter to James Gordon Bennett challenging him to a match The challenge was published 2 June 1876 in The Galveston Daily News By the time the article came out on 2 June the Denison Club had already received a letter from Bennett indicating the challenge was offered before the first games in New York 39 There is an urban legend that the first game of polo in America was played in Boerne Texas at retired British officer Captain Glynn Turquand s famous Balcones Ranch 40 The Boerne Texas legend also has plenty of evidence pointing to the fact that polo was played in Boerne before James Gordon Bennett Jr ever picked up a polo mallet 41 During the early part of the 20th century under the leadership of Harry Payne Whitney polo changed to become a high speed sport in the United States differing from the game in England where it involved short passes to move the ball towards the opposition s goal Whitney and his teammates used the fast break sending long passes downfield to riders who had broken away from the pack at a full gallop In 1909 a United States team defeated an English team with ease 31 In the late 1950s champion polo player and Director of the Long Island Polo Association Walter Scanlon introduced the short form or European style four period match to the game of polo 42 Director Walter Scanlon Bethpage Long IslandRules EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Polo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message All tournaments and levels of play and players are organized within and between polo clubs including membership rules safety fields and arenas The rules of polo are written to include the safety of both players and horses Games are monitored by umpires A whistle is blown when an infraction occurs and penalties are awarded Strategic plays in polo are based on the line of the ball an imaginary line that extends through the ball in the line of travel This line traces the ball s path and extends past the ball along that trajectory The line of the ball defines rules for players to approach the ball safely The line of the ball changes each time the ball changes direction The player who hits the ball generally has the right of way and other players cannot cross the line of the ball in front of that player As players approach the ball they ride on either side of the line of the ball giving each access to the ball A player can cross the line of the ball when it does not create a dangerous situation Most infractions and penalties are related to players improperly crossing the line of the ball or the right of way When a player has the line of the ball on their right they have the right of way A ride off is when a player moves another player off the line of the ball by making shoulder to shoulder contact with the other players horses The defending player has a variety of opportunities for their team to gain possession of the ball They can push the opponent off the line or steal the ball from the opponent Another common defensive play is called hooking While a player is taking a swing at the ball their opponent can block the swing by using their mallet to hook the mallet of the player swinging at the ball A player may hook only if they are on the side where the swing is being made or directly behind an opponent A player may not purposely touch another player another player s tack or a pony with their mallet Unsafe hooking is a foul that will result in a penalty shot being awarded For example it is a foul for a player to reach over an opponent s mount in an attempt to hook The other basic defensive play is called the bump or ride off It s similar to a body check in hockey In a ride off a player rides their pony alongside an opponent s mount to move an opponent away from the ball or to take them out of a play It must be executed properly so that it does not endanger the horses or the players The angle of contact must be safe and can not knock the horses off balance or harm the horses in any way Two players following the line of the ball and riding one another off have the right of way over a single man coming from any direction Like in hockey or basketball fouls are potentially dangerous plays that infringe on the rules of the game To the novice spectator fouls may be difficult to discern There are degrees of dangerous and unfair play and penalty shots are awarded depending based on the severity of the foul and where the foul was committed on the polo field White lines on the polo field indicate where the mid field sixty forty and thirty yard penalties are taken The official set of rules and rules interpretations are reviewed and published annually by each country s polo association Most of the smaller associations follow the rules of the Hurlingham Polo Association the national governing body of the sport of polo in the United Kingdom and the United States Polo Association 43 Outdoor polo Edit Outdoor or field polo lasts about one and a half to two hours and consists of four to eight seven minute chukkas between or during which players change mounts At the end of each seven minute chukka play continues for an additional 30 seconds or until a stoppage in play whichever comes first There is a four minute interval between chukkas and a ten minute halftime Play is continuous and is only stopped for rule infractions fouls broken tack equipment or injury to horse or player The object is to score goals by hitting the ball between the goal posts no matter how high in the air If the ball goes wide of the goal the defending team is allowed a free knock in from the place where the ball crossed the goal line thus getting ball back into play 44 Indoor or arena polo Edit Arena polo has rules similar to the field version and is less strenuous for the player It is played in a 300 by 150 feet 91 by 46 m enclosed arena much like those used for other equestrian sports the minimum size is 150 by 75 feet 46 by 23 m There are many arena clubs in the United States and most major polo clubs including the Santa Barbara Polo amp Racquet Club have active arena programmes The major differences between the outdoor and indoor games are speed outdoor being faster physicality roughness indoor arena is more physical ball size indoor is larger goal size because the arena is smaller the goal is smaller and some penalties In the United States and Canada collegiate polo is arena polo in the UK collegiate polo is both citation needed Some of the most important arena polo tournaments held are The U S Arena Polo Championship a 12 18 goal tournament is one of the highest levels of fast version of polo competition currently played in the United States Its history dates back to 1926 where the first tournament was held and won by the Yale University team of Reddington Barret Winston Guest and William Mui The Arena Polo Grand Prix held in Argentina promoted by La Carona Polo Club along with the Argentine Polo Association was organized for the first time in June 2019 and was the start for the Arena Polo in Argentina The Arena Polo European Championship The first tournament of this championship was held in 2015 Alongside the Equestrian Federation of Azerbaijan Republic ARAF the tournament was organized by the team of World Polo Polo match between the United Kingdom and Spain at Club Puerta de Hierro 1922 The English side was represented by Frederick A Gill and Teignmouth P Melvill whilst the Spanish were represented by Alfonso XIII and the Duke of Penaranda amongst others Polo ponies EditMain article Polo pony Polo ponies waiting for the game to begin The mounts used are called polo ponies although the term pony is purely traditional and the mount is actually a full sized horse They range from 14 2 to 16 hands 58 to 64 inches 147 to 163 cm high at the withers and weigh 900 1 100 pounds 410 500 kg The polo pony is selected carefully for quick bursts of speed stamina agility and manoeuvrability Temperament is critical the horse must remain responsive under pressure and not become excited or difficult to control Many are Thoroughbreds or Thoroughbred crosses They are trained to be handled with one hand on the reins and to respond to the rider s leg and weight cues for moving forward turning and stopping A well trained horse will carry its rider smoothly and swiftly to the ball and can account for 60 to 75 percent of the player s skill and net worth to their team 45 Polo pony training generally begins at age three and lasts from about six months to two years Most horses reach full physical maturity at about age five and ponies are at their peak of athleticism and training at around age six or seven However without any accidents polo ponies may have the ability to play until they are 18 to 20 years of age citation needed Each player must have more than one horse to allow for tired mounts to be replaced by fresh ones between or even during chukkas A player s string of polo ponies may number two or three in Low Goal matches with ponies being rested for at least a chukka before reuse four or more for Medium Goal matches at least one per chukka and even more for the highest levels of competition citation needed Players Edit A girls polo team United States Each team consists of four mounted players which can be mixed teams of both men and women Each position assigned to a player has certain responsibilities Number One is the most offence oriented position on the field The Number One position which generally covers the opposing team s Number Four is usually the rookie of the team citation needed Number Two has an important role in offence either running through and scoring themselves or passing to the Number One and getting in behind them Defensively they will cover the opposing team s Number Three generally the other team s best player Given the difficulty of this position it is not uncommon for the best player on the team to play Number Two so long as another strong player is available to play Three Number Three is the tactical leader and must be a long powerful hitter to feed balls to Number Two and Number One as well as maintaining a solid defense The best player on the team is usually the Number Three player usually wielding the highest handicap Number Four is the primary defense player They can move anywhere on the field but they usually try to prevent scoring The emphasis on defense by the Number Four allows the Number Three to attempt more offensive plays since they know that they will be covered if they lose the ball Polo must be played right handed to prevent head on collisions 46 Equipment Edit Polo helmet with face guard Polo mallets and ball Polo player wearing kneepads riding off an opponent The rules for equipment vary in details between the hosting authorities but are always for the safety of the players and mounts Mandatory equipment includes a protective helmet with chinstrap worn at all times by all players and mounted grooms They have a rigid exterior and interior protective padding and must be to a locally accepted safety standard PAS015 UK NOCSAE USA A faceguard is commonly integral with the helmet Polo boots and kneeguards are mandatory in the UK during official play and boots are recommended for all play everywhere The UK also recommends goggles elbow pads and gum shields A shirt or jersey is required that distinguishes the player s team and is not black and white stripes like an umpire shirt White polo pants or trousers are worn during official play Polo gloves are commonly worn to protect from working the reins and mallet Not permitted is any equipment that may harm horses such as certain spurs or whips 47 48 Ball Edit The modern outdoor polo ball is made of a high impact plastic Historically they have been made of bamboo leather covered cork hard rubber and for many years willow root Originally the British used a white painted leather covered cricket ball 49 The regulation outdoor polo ball is 3 inches 7 6 cm to 3 1 2 inches 8 9 cm in diameter and weighs 3 1 2 ounces 99 g to 4 1 2 ounces 130 g 50 Plastic balls were introduced in the 1970s They are less prone to breakage and much cheaper 51 The indoor and arena polo ball is leather covered and inflated and is about 4 1 2 inches 11 cm in diameter citation needed It must be not less than 12 5 inches 32 cm or more than 15 inches 38 cm in circumference The weight must be not less than 170 grams 6 0 oz or more than 182 grams 6 4 oz In a bounce test from 9 feet 2 7 m on concrete at 70 F 21 C the rebound should be a minimum of 54 inches 140 cm and a maximum of 64 inches 160 cm at the inflation rate specified by the manufacturer This provides for a hard and lively ball citation needed Mallet Edit The polo mallet consists of a cane shaft with a rubber wrapped grip a webbed thong called a sling for wrapping around the thumb and a wooden cigar shaped head The shaft is made of manau cane not bamboo which is hollow although a small number of mallets today are made from composite materials Composite materials are usually not preferred by top players because the shaft of composite mallets can t absorb vibrations as well as traditional cane mallets The mallet head is generally made from a hardwood called tipa approximately 91 4 inches long The mallet head weighs from 160 g 5 6 oz to 240 g 8 5 oz depending on player preference and the type of wood used and the shaft can vary in weight and flexibility depending on the player s preference The weight of the mallet head is of important consideration for the more seasoned players Female players often use lighter mallets than male players For some polo players the length of the mallet depends on the size of the horse the taller the horse the longer the mallet However some players prefer to use a single length of mallet regardless of the height of the horse Either way playing horses of differing heights requires some adjustment by the rider Variable lengths of the mallet typically range from 127 cm 50 in to 134 cm 53 in The term mallet is used exclusively in US English British English prefers the term polo stick The ball is struck with the broad sides of the mallet head rather than its round and flat tips Saddle Edit Polo saddle Polo saddles are English style close contact similar to jumping saddles although most polo saddles lack a flap under the billets Some players will not use a saddle blanket The saddle has a flat seat and no knee support the rider adopting a forward leaning seat and closed knees dissimilar to a classical dressage seat A breastplate is added usually attached to the front billet A standing martingale must be used so a breastplate is a necessity for safety The tie down is usually supported by a neck strap Many saddles also have an overgirth The stirrup irons are heavier than most and the stirrup leathers are wider and thicker for added safety when the player stands in the stirrups The legs of the pony are wrapped with polo wraps from below the knee to the fetlock to minimize pain Jumping open front or gallop boots are sometimes used along with the polo wraps for added protection Often these wraps match the team colours The pony s mane is most often roached hogged and its tail is docked or braided so that it will not snag the rider s mallet Polo is ridden with double reins for greater accuracy of signals The bit is frequently a gag bit or Pelham bit In both cases the gag or shank rein will be the bottom rein in the rider s hands while the snaffle rein will be the top rein If a gag bit is used there will be a drop noseband in addition to the cavesson supporting the tie down One of the rein sets may alternately be draw reins The field EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Relative sizes of an association football ground and a polo field The playing field is 300 by 160 yards 270 by 150 m the area of approximately six soccer fields or nine American football fields 10 acres while arena polo is 96 x 46 metres The playing field is carefully maintained with closely mowed turf providing a safe fast playing surface Goals are posts which are set eight yards apart centred at each end of the field The surface of a polo field requires careful and constant grounds maintenance to keep the surface in good playing condition During half time of a match spectators are invited to go onto the field to participate in a polo tradition called divot stamping which was developed not only to help replace the mounds of earth divots that are torn up by the horses hooves but also to afford spectators the opportunity to walk about and socialise Contemporary sport Edit Polo played as a part of the 1900 Summer Olympics Polo is played professionally in many countries notably Argentina Australia Brazil Canada Chile Dominican Republic France Germany Iran India New Zealand Mexico Pakistan Jamaica Spain South Africa Switzerland the United Kingdom and the United States and is now an active sport in 77 countries 52 Although its tenure as an Olympic sport was limited to 1900 1939 in 1998 the International Olympic Committee recognised it as a sport with a bona fide international governing body the Federation of International Polo The World Polo Championship is held every three years by the Federation Polo is unique among team sports in that amateur players often the team patrons routinely hire and play alongside the sport s top professionals Some of the most important tournaments opinion at club level are Abierto de Tortugas Abierto de Hurlingham and Abierto Argentino de Polo all of them in Argentina la Triple Corona citation needed East and Southeast Asia Edit Indonesia plays against Thailand in SEA Games Polo 2007 Polo has been played in Malaysia and Singapore both of which are former British colonies since being introduced to Malaya during the late 19th century Royal Johor Polo Club was formed in 1884 and Singapore Polo Club was formed in 1886 The oldest polo club in the modern country of Malaysia is Selangor Polo Club founded in 1902 53 It was largely played by royalty and the political and business elite 54 Polo was played at the 2007 Southeast Asian Games 2017 Southeast Asian Games and 2019 Southeast Asian Games Nations that competed in the tournament were Indonesia Singapore Malaysia Thailand and Philippines 2007 Brunei Malaysia Singapore and Thailand 2017 and Indonesia Brunei Philippines and Malaysia 2019 The 2007 tournament s gold medal was won by the Malaysian team followed by Singapore with silver and Thailand with bronze while the 2017 tournament s gold medal was won by Malaysia followed by Thailand with silver and Brunei with bronze The 2019 tournament s gold medal was won by Malaysia followed by the Philippines with silver and Brunei receiving bronze citation needed The recent resurgence in south east Asia has resulted in its popularity in cities such as Pattaya Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta In Pattaya alone there are three active polo clubs Polo Escape Siam Polo Park and the Thai Polo and Equestrian Club Indonesia has a polo club Nusantara Polo Club More recently Janek Gazecki and Australian professional Jack Ruki Baillieu have organised polo matches in parks around metropolitan Australia backed by wealthy sponsors 55 A Chinese Equestrian Association has been formed with two new clubs in China itself the Beijing Sunny Time Polo Club founded by Xia Yang in 2004 56 and the Nine Dragons Hill Polo Club in Shanghai founded in 2005 57 West Asia Edit Polo is not widely spread in West Asia but still counts five active clubs in Iran four active polo clubs in the UAE one club in Bahrain 58 and The Royal Jordanian Polo Club in Amman Jordan 59 Polo in Iran is governed by the Polo Federation of Iran There are five polo clubs in Iran Ghasr e Firoozeh Nowroozabad Army Ground Forces Kanoon e Chogan and Nesf e Jahan Iran possesses some of the best grass polo fields in the region The country currently has over 100 registered players of which approximately 15 are women Historically Kurdish and Persian Arabian horses were the most widely used for polo This was probably also the case in ancient times Today Thoroughbreds are being increasingly used alongside the Kurdish and Persian Arabian horses Some players have also been experimenting with Anglo Arabians Iranians still refer to the game of polo by its original Persian name of Chogan which means mallet Iranians still maintain some of the ancient rituals of the game in official polo matches citation needed India Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2022 The governing body of polo in India is the Indian Polo Association Ireland Edit Polo first began its Irish history in 1870 with the first official game played on Gormanstown Strand Co Meath Three years later the All Ireland Polo Club was founded by Mr Horace Rochford in the Phoenix Park 60 Since then the sport has continued to grow with a further seven clubs opening around the country The sport has also been made more accessible by these clubs by the creation of more affordable training programmes such as the beginner to pro programme at Polo Wicklow 61 Pakistan Edit The annual Shandur Polo Festival at Shandur Top in Chitral District is an international event attended by enthusiasts from all over the world 62 The Shandur polo ground at Shandur Pass is the world s highest at approximately 3 734 metres 12 251 ft 63 The governing body of polo in Pakistan is the Pakistan Polo Association There are more than twenty one polo clubs in Pakistan 64 and over forty polo championships held all over the country every year 65 Pakistan has qualified for the preliminary rounds of the World Polo Championship three times Pakistan s Hissam Ali Haider is the highest capped played in the Asian circuit He has played for Cartier in the St Moritz Snow Polo World Cup and the Commonwealth team in the Royal Salute Coronation Cup both of which were won by his team 66 United Kingdom Edit The governing body in the United Kingdom is the Hurlingham Polo Association dating from 1875 which amalgamated with the County Polo Association in 1949 67 The UK Armed Forces Polo Association oversees the sport in the three armed services United States Edit The United States Polo Association USPA is the governing body for polo in the U S The U S is the only country that has separate women s polo run by the United States Women s Polo Federation Variants and related sports Edit An old polocart displayed at City Palace Jaipur The museum also displays a night polo ball with a rotating platform on which a candle is placed 68 These variants are considered sports separate from standard polo because of the differences in the composition of teams equipment rules game facilities and so on Variant forms of arena polo include beach polo played in many countries between teams of three riders on a sand surface 69 and cowboy polo played almost exclusively in the western United States by teams of five riders on a dirt surface Another modern variant is snow polo which is played on compacted snow on flat ground or a frozen lake The format of snow polo varies depending on the space available Each team generally consists of three players and a bright coloured light plastic ball is preferred 70 Snow polo is not the same sport as ice polo which was popular in the US in the late 1890s That sport resembled ice hockey and bandy but died out entirely in favour of the Canadian ice hockey rules Water polo shares a name with polo but more closely resembles handball Sagol kangjei the polo variety discussed above is arguably a version of polo though it can also be seen as the precursor of modern outdoor polo Variants that are related but clearly diverge from the polo format include Cowboy polo uses rules similar to regular polo but riders compete with western saddles usually in a smaller arena using an inflatable rubber medicine ball Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net The sport is a combination of polo rugby and basketball Pato was played in Argentina for centuries but is very different from modern polo No mallets are used and it is not played on grass Polocrosse is a combination of polo and lacrosse and is also played on horseback It was developed in Australia in the late 1930s Played on vehicles or other animals Edit Polo is not played exclusively on horseback Such polo variants are mostly played for recreational or tourism purposes Non equine variations include On other animals Edit Camel polo is played in Mongolia 71 Elephant polo is played in South Asia Yak polo is played in Mongolia and western China On vehicles Edit Auto polo was a motorsport invented in the United States in the early 1900s Its rules and equipment were similar to polo but automobiles were used instead of horses 72 Canoe polo is played around the world in kayaks and governed by the International Canoe Federation Cycle polo is a similar game played on bicycles instead of horses A variant of cycle polo is also played on penny farthings 73 Golfcart polo Motoball motorcycle polo was invented in the United States Segway polo originated in the United States A lighthearted variant hobby horse polo German steckenpferdpolo was devised in 1998 in south western Germany The Erster Kurfurstlich Kurpfalzisch Polo Club in Mannheim was founded in 2002 to organise matches and promote the game Since then the variant has gained further interest in other German cities 74 75 It is played on hobby horses the toy instead of polo ponies While following standard polo rules in part it has some more unusual rules Goals for example are the height and width of bar stools and any departure from accepted gameplay standards will attract penalty sherries to be consumed by the offending player 76 See also EditDakyu Commercial animal cloning List of polo players Polo handicap PIPA Polo Instructors and Players Association U S Open Polo ChampionshipNotes Edit Balti is a Tibetic language still spoken by ethnic Balti people in the Gilgit Baltistan region of Pakistan and in Indian administered LadakhReferences Edit Preview The Sport of Kings CBS News Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 5 April 2012 Polo the sport of kings that anyone can play The Telegraph 29 April 2010 a b c Laffaye Horace A 19 January 2010 The Evolution of Polo McFarland pp 5 6 It can be safely assumed that it polo began as a simple folk game played by the nomadic tribes in central Asia Westward and eastward expansion followed to Byzantium and China most likely along the trail of the Silk Road a b c d Hong Fan Mangan J A 18 November 2005 Evolution of Sport in Asian Society Past and Present Routledge pp 309 311 ISBN 978 1 135 76043 4 In all probability polo developed from rough equestrian games played by the mounted nomadic peoples of Central Asia both Iranian and Turkic a b c d Richard C Latham 20 July 1998 Sport Polo Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 23 August 2022 a b c d Canepa Matthew 2018 polo In Nicholson Oliver ed The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 THE HISTORY OF POLO argentinapolo com Heitner Darren The Economics of Polo The Sport of Kings Forbes Retrieved 9 August 2018 Saladin World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 13 August 2020 Azzam Dr Abd al Raḥman 2014 Saladin The Triumph of the Sunni Revival Islamic Texts Society pp 42 50 73 ISBN 978 1 903682 87 6 a b polo Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b c d e f Robert Crego 2003 Sports and Games of the 18th and 19th Centuries Greenwood Publishing Group pp 25 27 ISBN 978 0 313 31610 4 Multiple references Polo The Emperor of Games Asian Games The Art of Contest The Asia Society Retrieved 27 November 2022 Perry John R 2001 Introduction Asian Folklore Studies 60 2 191 202 doi 10 2307 1179053 ISSN 0385 2342 JSTOR 1179053 Willekes Carolyn 2017 A Tale of Two Games Cirit Buzkashi and the Horsemen of the Asiatic Steppe Nomadic Peoples 21 2 286 301 doi 10 3197 np 2017 210206 ISSN 0822 7942 JSTOR 44652688 Retrieved 27 November 2022 Milburn Frank 1994 Polo the emperor of games 1st ed New York Knopf ISBN 978 0394571614 Playing Polo in Historic Naqsh e Jahan Square Payvand com 29 October 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Herrin Judith 2007 Byzantium The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire Penguin pp 50 51 ISBN 978 0713999976 Kelly Christopher 2013 Theodosius II Rethinking the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 4 ISBN 978 1107038585 Kazhdan Alexander Petrovich ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium New York City and Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Touregypt net Touregypt net Retrieved 25 January 2012 Pollett Andrea 2002 Tuman or the 10 000 Cups of the Mamluk Cards The Playing Card 31 1 July August 34 41 Malcolm D Whitman Tennis Origins and Mysteries Published by Courier Dover Publications 2004 ISBN 0 486 43357 9 p 98 Michaelson Carol Gilded Dragons pp 72 73 1999 British Museum Press ISBN 0714114898 Medley Margaret T ang Pottery and Porcelain pp 49 50 1981 Faber amp Faber ISBN 0571109578 Michael Price 16 March 2020 Polo obsessed Chinese noblewoman buried with her donkey steed Science sciencemag org doi 10 1126 science abb7559 S2CID 216498085 The Mists of Time Origins of Polo Indianpolo com Archived from the original on 28 March 2009 Retrieved 28 September 2008 Stephen J K 25 March 2007 Manipur Polo History of Polo in Imphal Indianpolo com Archived from the original on 11 February 2019 Retrieved 25 January 2012 The Guinness book of records 1991 37th ed Enfield Middlesex UK Guinness Publishing 1990 p 288 ISBN 9780851123745 J del Carril editions Carril Justo del March 2009 Introduction Essential Tips Polo p 9 ISBN 978 987 02 7039 3 via Issu Carril Justo del 1 November 2013 Introduction The equipment Essentials Tips Polo Ayacucho Buenos Aires Argentina Editorial Dunken p 13 ISBN 978 987 02 7039 3 Retrieved 3 December 2022 Rule F12 International Rules for Polo PDF Federation of International Polo Archived from the original PDF on 18 August 2018 Retrieved 8 December 2018 History of polo Royal Polo Club Rasnov Archived from the original on 3 December 2017 Retrieved 2 December 2017 The Pony Returns Indian Express Polo Club calcuttapolo com Archived from the original on 3 September 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2017 a b Dale Thomas Francis 1911 Polo In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 11 Das Deepika 19 December 2016 Polo league to kick off in March Deccan Chronicle Retrieved 11 August 2022 Champions Polo League 17 December 2016 India s First Official Polo League Announced in Jaipur Press release PRNewswire Polo Basics Quick facts about Polo blog palosantohotel com Archived from the original on 6 April 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 FIP World Cup VIII 2007 Polobarn com Archived from the original on 25 January 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Polo In The United States And The Ascension Of The Polo Giant USPA www lapolo in Retrieved 19 March 2021 Polo in America has Advanced H L Herbert Tells of the Game from Its Start in This Country PDF The New York Times 19 May 1913 Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2011 State News Grayson County PDF The Galveston News 2 May 1876 Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2011 Mr Lane living near Denison has 25 acres of wheat headed up and nearly ripe Denison has a Polo Club also counterfeit metal dimes base ball players and lightning rod men This section was visited by the hardest storm of the season Thursday night State News Grayson County PDF The Galveston News 2 June 1876 Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2012 Grayson County At Denison Monday evening while Messers Harold Gooch and Will Lowe were practicing at the game of polo quite a serious accident happened to former Mr Gooch s saddle turned throwing him into the ground when his horse gave him a severe kick cutting a gash about five inches long across his head over the right ear Dr Berry rendered the necessary medical attention and Mr Gooch is doing well Will Lowe Secretary of the Denison Polo Club wrote James Gordon Bennett asking him if arrangements could be made for a match game between the Denison and New York Clubs Mr Lowe received a letter from Mr Bennett Monday in which he says he will lay the matter before the club at the next meeting There is little doubt the New York club will invite our boys to play them The Denison club will go into training at once as they are confident the game will come off Gracy Travel Balcones Ranch PDF gracytravel com Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2016 The Texas Polo Club Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Newspaper article from the 1950s the actual article uploaded on Wiki commons USPA Rulebook PDF uspolo org United States Polo Association Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 8 November 2017 RULES OF THE GAME United States Polo Association United States Polo Association United States Polo Association Retrieved 8 November 2017 Henry Miles 3 March 2021 What Horses Are Used For Polo 4 Popular Polo Pony Breeds Horse Racing Sense Left handed Polo Players ryanpemblepolo Archived from the original on 29 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 USPA Rules Sport of Polo Rules of the Game United States Polo Association Retrieved 3 December 2022 2022 USPA Rulebook Organizational documents rules tournament conditions and policies of the U S Polo Association United States Polo Association 2022 retrieved 3 December 2022 via Issuu United States Polo Association Rule Book 2018 PDF United States Polo Association September 2018 archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2022 Rules and Rule Interpretations of the United States Polo Association PDF United States Polo Association 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Hurlingham Polo Association rules Playing Rules Hurlingham Polo Association UK Retrieved 3 December 2022 HPA Rules amp Regulations for Polo 2022 PDF Hurlingham Polo Association archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2022 Hurlingham Polo Association Rule Book 2018 PDF archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2018 retrieved 16 July 2018 Laffaye Horace A 2004 The polo encyclopedia Jefferson N C McFarland p 28 ISBN 0 7864 1724 2 Rules and Rule Interpretations of the United States Polo Association PDF United States Polo Association 2017 p 64 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Outdoor Polo Ball World Polo News 7 October 2015 Archived from the original on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Polo Today Polo Museum www polomuseum com Retrieved 15 May 2021 About the Club Royal Selangor Polo Club Archived from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2016 History of Polo in Malaysia Royal Malaysian Polo Association Archived from the original on 23 March 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2016 David Ceri 23 November 2008 Going Polo Sunday Herald Sun pp Sunday magazine supplement pp 20 21 Eimer David 25 October 2008 The Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2012 NDPpolo com Ndhpolo com Retrieved 25 January 2012 The Country Club Bahrain countryclubbahrain com Retrieved 28 July 2016 Polo amp Riding Life in Jordan The Royal Jordanian Polo Club Retrieved 28 July 2016 All Ireland Polo Club news Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 26 May 2011 Polo Wicklow Index Polo in Ireland Polo Wicklow polowicklow com Archived from the original on 30 June 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Polo match draws all the performers BBC News 18 July 2007 Pakistan Tourism Department notice tourism gov pk Archived from the original on 31 December 2018 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Polo Clubs in Pakistan Retrieved 14 September 2022 Sports Calendar 2021 22 POLO Retrieved 14 September 2022 The level of polo I have already played far exceeds any dreams I had when I started out Interview Click Polo 27 February 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2022 HPA History Hurlingham Polo Association Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 2 June 2020 Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum Night Polo Ball Archived 28 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine The rules Polo on the Beach Watergate Bay Watergate Bay Hotel Ltd Archived from the original on 16 March 2016 Retrieved 15 March 2016 Aspen World Snow Polo Official Website Worldsnowpolo com Retrieved 25 January 2012 McKechnie Steve 19 March 2013 Camel Polo in Mongolia Newsport Port Douglas News Retrieved 27 November 2022 via Port Douglas News Archive Newsport Carlebach Michael 2011 Bain s New York The City in News Pictures 1900 1925 New York Courier p 143 ISBN 9780486478586 Home Penny Farthing Club Retrieved 3 September 2022 Steckenpferdpolo Trendsportart in Dusseldorf im Rheinpark Trendsportart Steckenpferdpolo Ich glaub mein Gaul holzt Spiegel September 2014 Der Spiegel in German 27 September 2014 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Was fehlt lebende Poloponys Die Tageszeitung taz in German 28 September 2014 Spielfeld Regeln und so Polo ist unser Steckenpferd Steckenpferdpolo unser Leben Kurfurstlich Kurpfalzischer Polo Club Mannheim in German Fouls of any kind will be punished with a penalty sherry If you don t like to drink alcohol you will face a delicious Brottrunk Brottrunk fur Antialkoholiker Further reading EditPenina Meisels Michael Cronan 1992 Polo San Francisco Collins ISBN 0 00 637796 3 Santiago Novillo Astrada Raphael De Oliveira Uwe Seebacher 2009 Simply Polo Munich BookRix ASIN B00XKVIYOK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polo amp oldid 1145537432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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