Isla
Carroll, White Birch Advance to Title Game of Stanford Financial
Group - 100th U.S.
Open Polo Championship
April 15, 2004
WELLINGTON, Florida - Sentimental favorite
Isla Carroll and perennial powerhouse White Birch each registered
dramatic one-goal victories in the semifinals Thursday to advance
to Sunday’s final of the historic Stanford Financial Group
- 100th U.S. Open Polo Championship at the International Polo
Club Palm Beach.
Pancho Bensadon scored eight goals to lead Isla
Carroll past 2003 finalist Lechuza 12-11 and 10-goaler Mariano Aguerre
scored on a short forehand 35 seconds into overtime to lift three-time
finalist White Birch over Catamount 13-12.
Sunday’s 3 p.m. championship game is a
rematch of the 1997 title contest in which Isla Carroll defeated
White Birch 10-6.
Both semifinal games invoked the little-used
Penalty 7, forcing three-on-three polo instead of the normal four-on-four
because of injuries caused by a penalty.
Jimmy Newman, International Polo Club’s
veteran Polo Manager said he has never seen a day of polo like this.
“What was done was done by the rules,”
said Newman. “Both teams accepted the umpires interpretation.
You hate to see games this important be decided by playing three
a side, but the team fouled has that option.”
John Goodman’s Isla Carroll, with 15-time
U.S. Open champion Memo Gracida forced to sit on the sidelines,
held off a late rally to defeat Lechuza in the first semifinal before
some 2,000 spectators.
Ten-goaler Sebastian Merlos, Lechuza’s
leading scorer, crashed hard to the ground as his horse stumbled
with 27 seconds left in the first chukker. Merlos was taken off
the field and then Newman, the umpires and the two teams discussed
their options. Lechuza could either find a substitute for Merlos
or choose one of Isla Carroll’s players to sit out.
Play resumed after a 57-minute delay with three
players per side.
Since Merlos could not continue because he injured
an elbow and both shoulders in the fall, Lechuza chose to put Gracida,
a 9-goaler, on the sidelines. With Isla Carroll at 17 goals, Lechuza
substituted 5-goaler Jorge Rodriguez for 3-goaler Gaston Urturi
to raise its handicap to 17 goals.
When play resumed in the second chukker, Lechuza
scored the next two goals to go ahead 4-2 before Isla Carroll got
organized and took control with three consecutive goals, including
a near-side by Sugar Erskine with 14 seconds left in the first half
to give them a 5-4 lead.
Isla Carroll steadily built a lead, never allowing
Lechuza closer than two goals, except for the final margin when
10-goaler Pite Merlos converted a 60-yard penalty with 12 seconds
remaining.
“It’s a lot more nerve-wracking watching,”
said Gracida, who spent most of the game alone near the end line
between the goal posts and team tent, his boots and knee pads still
on and a white baseball hat replacing his familiar yellow helmet.
“There’s nothing you can do watching.”
Isla Carroll’s leading scorer, Pancho Bensadon,
who has 36 goals in six games, praised Gracida.
“He’s (Memo) the coach outside the
lines and inside the lines,” said Bensadon, who scored a team-high
eight goals in the semifinals. “He deserves to win the 100th
U.S. Open.”
“I’m very proud of the team,”
said Gracida. “We’ve only been together for one and
a half months and we just clicked. There’s mutual respect
between the players.”
White Birch and Catamount also invoked the Penalty
7 rule when 3-goaler Del Walton of White Birch crashed into the
sideboards less than two minutes into the fourth chukker. Walton
was knocked out and slightly injured his shoulder and could not
continue.
When a substitute could not be found, the game
continued with three players per team after a 19-minute delay. At
the beginning of the fifth chukker, 4-goaler Carlucho Arellano replaced
White Birch patron Peter Brant.
“He’s a better forward than I am,”
explained Brant, whose team reached the U.S. Open finals in 1997,
1995 and 1994. “But I thought it might be a mistake because
he was coming in cold.”
There were four ties in the last two chukkers,
the final one at 12-12 when White Birch’s Lucas Criado scored
with 45 seconds left in the game.
Walton is expected to play in the final as is
Brant.
The 26-goal tournament culminates with the championship
match between Isla Carroll and White Birch Sunday at 3 p.m. There
is also a consolation final between Lechuza and Catamount Saturday
at 3 p.m. It is doubtful that Sebastian Merlos will play.
Thirteen teams, featuring 10 10-goalers, 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 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
is being played on the International Polo Club Palm Beach’s
five world-class Bermuda-grass playing fields.
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, Roderer Estate, Kubota 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 a post-match awards presentation.
Individual tickets for the U.S. Open tournament
Wednesday’s semifinals and Sunday’s title game 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.
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