Bendabout
Avenges Losses to Catamount with 7-5 Victory in Stanford Financial
Group - 100th U.S. Open Polo Championship
April 6, 2004
WELLINGTON, Florida - In a game featuring
the only two American 10-goalers and two of the pre-tournament favorites,
Bendabout avenged two losses to Catamount with a 7-5 victory in
a first-round game of the Stanford Financial Group - 100th
U.S. Open Polo Championship Tuesday at International Polo Club Palm
Beach. The 12 combined goals is the lowest scoring game of the tournament.
Bendabout’s victory clinched a spot in
Sunday’s quarterfinals against an opponent to be determined.
Catamount’s chances to advance to the quarterfinals depend
on the outcome Wednesday’s San Saba vs. Isla Carroll game.
“We didn’t want to be dependent on
another team, so I played it like a final in terms of horses, and
so did the rest of the team,” said 10-goaler Adam Snow of
Bendabout, referring to the team’s focus and energy.
The win also avenged a 10-9 loss to Catamount
in the 26-goal C.V. Whitney Cup final on March 21 as well as a 13-10
loss to Catamount in the 22-goal Joe Barry Memorial in late January.
“We’re still angry from the previous
finals and we liked to channel our energy in a positive way,”
said Snow. “I felt like we were in control of the game, even
though we were up by only one goal most of the game.”
Bendabout scored the first goal, 1:50 into the
game when 5-goaler Alejandro Novillo Astrada jumped on a loose ball
and tapped it through. Bendabout never trailed, although Catamount
tied it at 1-1 when 9-goaler Carlos Gracida made a nice run from
midfield, dribbling to the goal with 23 seconds left.
Bendabout was able to build leads of two goals
three times, but Catamount cut the margin to one every time. Bendabout
patron Gillian Johnston converted a nice near-side pass from Snow
with 1:44 remaining in the fifth chukker, giving the winners their
largest margin, 7-4.
Gracida quickly cut the lead to 7-5 when he picked
up a loose ball and dribbled in just 18 seconds into the sixth chukker,
but neither team was able to score despite several chances.
Catamount had numerous chances to get back into
the game, but Gracida missed a 40-yard penalty shot with 2:14 left
in the third chukker and 10-goaler Mike Azzaro experienced the same
poor result with 1:20 remaining, both going wide left. Gracida also
missed a 60-yard penalty midway through the fourth chukker.
Catamount also missed other scoring opportunities
throughout the game, either shooting wide or having a horse kick
the ball.
But Catamount, especially Azzaro, did not look
particularly sharp and Snow noticed it at the beginning of the match.
“I heard Mike and Carlos talking to each other at the beginning,”
said Snow. “I felt like there was a little crack in their
armor.”
Snow led Bendabout (3-1) with four goals while
10-goaler Miguel Novillo Astrada, Alejandro Novillo Astrada and
Johnston scored one goal each.
Gracida led Catamount (2-2) with three goals
while Pelon Escapite added two goals. Azzaro, who has been playing
with a herniated disk in his back, and patron Scott Devon did not
score.
High-goal polo action in the Stanford Financial
Group - U.S. Open Polo Championship continues Wednesday with
a tripleheader beginning at 10 a.m. when White Birch (3-0) plays
Everglades (1-2) followed at noon with Orchard Hill (0-3) against
Lechuza (2-1) and concluding at 3 p.m. when San Saba (1-2) plays
Isla Carroll (1-2).
Thirteen teams, featuring nine 10-goalers, have
entered the Stanford Financial Group - U.S. Open Polo Championship,
the most prestigious polo tournament in North America, highlighting
the historic inaugural polo season at the International Polo Club
Palm Beach. The 26-goal tournament culminates with the championship
match on Sunday, April 18 at 3 p.m. Fifteen teams, in 2002, is the
record for teams in a U.S. Open.
The Stanford Financial Group - U.S. Open
will be played on the International Polo Club Palm Beach’s
five world-class Bermuda-grass playing fields and teams will also
take advantage of the many private fields in Wellington.
The Houston-based Stanford Financial Group, a
privately-held global network of affiliated companies, has signed
on as the title sponsor of the 100th U.S. Open Polo Championship
in 2004. Stanford’s family of companies provides international
private banking, trust and brokerage services and real estate development.
Currently, the Stanford organization manages in excess of $17 billion
in deposits and assets, serving clients on six continents. The success
of the group is the result of entrepreneurial spirit and drive spearheaded
by third generation Chairman and CEO R. Allen Stanford.
Like the high-goal teams on the field, the International
Polo Club Palm Beach has amassed a lineup of prestigious sponsors
for the U.S. Open. The Stanford Financial Group - U.S. Open
tournament will feature a different presenting sponsor every Sunday,
including Bombardier Aerospace, Cunard Ltd. and HUMMER, Mitchell-Peck
Jewelers, Piaget and Roder.
As always, there will be a delicious Sunday brunch,
catered by The Breakers, open to the public preceding the featured
stadium match, along with the now traditional and very popular champagne
divot stomp and an post-match awards presentation.
Individual tickets for the U.S. Open tournament
Sunday games range from $15 for general admission to $40 for terrace
lawn seating and are available in advance. For ticket information
for the U.S. Open, please call the club at (561) 204-5687 or visit
online at www.internationalpoloclub.com. Tickets are also available
at the gate.
International Polo Club Palm Beach is located
at 3667 120th Avenue South, between Pierson Road and Lake Worth
Road, in Wellington.
|