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Playing the sport
of king
by
Anna Barron Billingley
For
Tareq Salahi and many others these days, the sport of
kings has royal attractions. Where else can you
go at speeds of 40 to 45 mph and hit a ball at 110 mph
with 2,000 pounds of thrust? The owner of Oasis
Winery in Hume is hooked. A self-professed polo addict,
hes been playing the sport sort of a hockey
on horseback half his life. Salahi, 33, grew
up in Virginias hunt country and has been around
horses since birth.
Hes
a member of the U.S. polo team, which regularly tours
England and Scotland. Salahi also travels the local
polo circuit with his vineyard team, playing frequently
on a field at a nearby winery. He says the sport, one
of the oldest in the world and rooted in royalty, is
becoming more affordable and more accessible throughout
the state and not just among the horsey set.
You dont have to be involved in horses to
understand the game, says Angie Abbasi, a longtime
polo enthusiast. Like soccer, polo is quickly creating
a whole new set of fans. After people watch it,
they get caught up, she says. They pick
players and follow teams.
What
snares them is the sheer excitement and majesty of a
match. In about the time theyd spend watching
a movie, polo fans see eight thoroughbreds gallop at
lightning speed over an area equal to 10 football fields
as agile riders pivot and turn, using bamboo and hardwood
mallets to try and smack a little white ball through
a goal post.
But
the action on the field is only a fraction of the lure.
Food and fellowship abound, with each tailgate trying
to top the next. And at halftime, theres the traditional
divot-stomping, when spectators roam the playing field
to not only meet and greet, but also pound the mounds
of earth (divots) torn up by the horses hooves.
Some
polo events, like Goochland Countys Cadillac Commonwealth
Cup, feature such classy add-ons as a horse-drawn carriage
parade, wine-tastings and dog agility trials. The match
itself pits homegrown players against a team of Brits.
Theres
little dispute among polo aficionados that the Commonwealth
Cup, now in its 18th year, is the most highly attended
polo event in the country. We attract more people
than the U.S. [Polo] Open, says Abbasi, who chairs
the Commonwealth Cup and remembers the first, lean years
when only friends and family turned out. Attendance
has grown more than tenfold with between 4,000 and 5,000
spectators expected for this years match, to be
held Sept. 15, according to event coordinator Donna
Goff.
Corporations,
too, are cashing in on polos popularity. Many
of the more celebrated matches are fundraisers for health-care
or social-welfare groups. By being a sponsor, businesses
can do a good deed, get premiere publicity and entertain
clients and guests.
Many
new polo fans dont just want to watch, though;
they want to play. For $75 and an hour of their time,
Juan Salinas-Bentley can get them on a horse and teach
basic hitting techniques and riding skills. Salinas-Bentley
is the manager of polo at Great Meadow, a 175-acre outdoors
center in The Plains in Fauquier County. This
is really the heart of amateur polo in Virginia,
he says. Great Meadow polo school classes run at capacity,
with about 20 students, ranging in age from 8 to 60.
Many
are first exposed during the twilight polo matches held
at Great Meadow each Friday from June through Sept.
13. Families come with picnic suppers and the atmosphere
is inviting, not off-putting, says Great
Meadow Executive Director Leslie VanSant. Great Meadow
features arena polo, played on a smaller outdoor field
or indoors, with three players per team instead of four.
The University of Virginia mens and womens
polo teams, both of which have been national collegiate
champions, play arena-style on Friday nights at the
Virginia Polo Club in Charlottesville.
With
Virginias volume and variety of polo events, says
Salinas-Bentley, Polo is here and its something
thats for everybody.
Return
to Virginia Business - September 2002
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