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Polo princes

By Mike Peters and Zhang Tao | China Daily | Updated: 2011-07-10 07:54

 Polo princes

Young France (brown jerseys) drives the ball toward the goalposts with Young England defenders in hot pursuit. Photos by Zhang Tao / China Daily

 Polo princes

Sunday's action was fast and horses made quick turns as players charged to keep control of the ball.

Polo princes 

On the sidelines, hat-watching became a second spectator sport.

 Polo princes

Young England's Charlie Walton, Ralph Richardson, Tommy Beresford, William Batchelor and Tim Pearce-May celebrate.

Two squads of teenagers from England and France faced off on a Tianjin polofield last weekend. Mike Peters and Zhang Tao galloped along for the ride.

China's monarchy has been gone for a century, but the sport of kings took Tianjin by storm last weekend as the Metropolitan Polo Club hosted the first international under-18 game played in China. The Goldin Gold Cup 2011 actually began a day earlier, when two teams of professionals - Le Polo Club du Domaine de Chantilly and Hong Kong Goldin-slogged it out on a slow field still waterlogged after a storm.

But the weather turned glorious, and by Sunday the teams of Young England and Young France were savoring a bright blue sky and fast, dry turf. That fed the competitive spirit of the teenagers who galloped under their nations' colors, and they battled for four chukkas, or periods, to a 7-3 win for the Brits.

"This is not a sport just for the riders - it's a social event," says Harvey Lee, Goldin's freshly recruited vice-chairman who presented the trophy to the winning English riders and consolation awards to their good-natured French opponents. Besides hosting its third Goldin Cup on the weekend, the club formally opened a luxury hotel with seven restaurants and seven bars and clubs. "And we just bought two wineries in Napa Valley," says Lee. "So your looking at a lifestyle concept: Food, wine, entertainment, sports - all in one package here in China."

Lee has high hopes for polo, eager for the day "down the road" when his club might host a top, internationally sanctioned tournament - with a national Chinese team to vie for the winner's cup.

This month the club is beginning a residential summer camp for regional teens, who will learn stable management, horse care, basic riding skills and how to handle a mallet.

Sunday's under-18 contest was a high-profile way to demystify polo, says Lee.

The captain of the Young England squad, Britain's William Batchelor couldn't agree more.

"We're here to show Chinese people that this isn't a game just for kings or old, rich guys," he says.

(China Daily 07/10/2011 page6)

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