World Polo Championship

Polo tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The World Polo Championship is an international polo competition between countries. The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the Federation of International Polo (FIP), and is contested by the national teams. There is no restriction on the gender of the players. The inaugural tournament was held in 1987, hosted by Argentina, and is now contested every three or four years.

SportPolo
Founded1987
No. of teams8 (Finals)
ContinentInternational (FIP)
Quick facts Sport, Founded ...
World Polo Championship
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2022 World Polo Championship
SportPolo
Founded1987
No. of teams8 (Finals)
ContinentInternational (FIP)
Most recent
champion
 Spain (1st title)
Most titles Argentina (5 titles)
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History

In the early 1980s, motivated by a desire to broaden the scope of international polo, as well as to restore the sport's Olympic status, Marcos Uranga, then President of the Argentine Polo Association, proposed that an international organization be formed among the polo-playing countries of the world. The initial meetings took place in Buenos Aires, and by April 1982, the Federation of International Polo, quickly known as “FIP,” was created. FIP's first President was Marcos Uranga.

Mr. Uranga spearheaded the movement for a World Championship and scheduled the first for April 1987 in the Campo Argentino de Polo in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Aware of the relative difficulty of fielding high-goal teams worldwide, the early FIP organizers wisely decided to limit competition to teams rated 10 to 14 goals. In an attempt to nullify the factor of the horses, they devised the then-revolutionary idea of split strings of horses – assigning matched strings of 28 horses to each team by the luck of the draw.

In 1989, the second FIP World Championship was played in Berlin, at Maifeld, the very stadium that had been the site of polo's last appearance in the Olympic Games. The sport had come full-circle, and it underlined the growing influence of FIP in the world polo community. Argentina, Australia, Chile, England, France, Germany, Switzerland and the United States competed in the tournament's second edition.[1] A talented USA team beat England 7–6 in the final.[1] The USA team players were: Horton Schwartz, Julio Arellano, Charley Bostwick and John Wigdahl who scored the winning goal in the sixth chukker. The resulting publicity raised the visibility of the FIP among U.S. polo players.

A match between Argentina and Mexico at the 2011 World Polo Championships

The FIP World Championship III was held in Santiago, Chile in 1992.[2] Argentina outscored the host country 12–7 in the final securing their second World Championship. England beat the US for bronze.[2]

Starting in 1993 Michael Schultz-Tholen, then the FIP delegate to the International Olympic Committee, arranged numerous meetings with IOC representatives including the President of the International Olympic Committee Mr. Juan Antonio Samaranch. Finally at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, the General Assembly of the International Olympic Committee granted the status of an IOC Recognized Sport and accepted the Federation of International Polo as the worldwide governing body for the sport of polo. This decision was confirmed ("outright recognition") two years later.

In 1995, the fourth World Championship was held in Saint Moritz, Switzerland.[3] Brazil fought its way gamely through the early rounds and met Argentina in the final where they pulled off an exciting 11–10 victory to assume the mantle of World Polo Champions.[3]

In 1998, the fifth World Championship was held at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club in Santa Barbara, California.[4] Mr. James Easton, a member of the International Olympic Committee, presented Argentina, the winning team, with a history-making Olympic trophy. This was the first time in 62 years that the winning team of an international polo tournament was so honored.

The FIP World Championship VI held in Melbourne, Australia in 2001 featured eight national teams that qualified through a demanding and highly competitive zone playoff system, which included 24 international teams. Brazil narrowly defeated Australia by one goal (Brazil 10, Australia 9) in the final.[5]

In 2004, the Sixth World Championship was held in Chantilly, France. The tournament included eight teams. 28 countries competed in the qualifying rounds. All of the games were competitive. Brazil defeated England in the final (10–9) in sudden death.[6]

The eighth edition of the World Polo Championship took place in Mexico during May 2008 and was won by Chile.[7]

The ninth edition of the World Polo Championship took place in San Luis Province, Argentina during October 2011.[8] Argentina defeated Brazil in the final and Italy took the third place after defeating England.[8] It was the first time in World Polo Championship that Italy achieved a podium finish.

The tenth edition of the World Polo Championship took place in Santiago, Chile during March and April 2015. The hosts won beating the United States 12–11 in overtime in the final.[9]

In the 2017 World Polo Championship Argentina beat Chile in the final securing their fifth title.[10]

In the twelfth edition of the Championship, Spain clinched an 11–10 win in overtime against the US for their first ever title.[11]

Results (Grass Polo)

Medals

Men (1987–2022)

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Argentina5128
2 Brazil3328
3 Chile2215
4 United States1203
5 Spain1001
6 England0235
7 Mexico0123
8 Australia0101
9 Italy0011
 Uruguay0011
Totals (10 entries)12121236
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Women (2022)

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Argentina1001
2 United States0101
3 England0011
Totals (3 entries)1113
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Ranking

More information Pos., Team ...
Pos. Team Champion Runners-up Third Fourth
1st  Argentina 5 (1987, 1992, 1998, 2011, 2017) 1 (1995) 2 (1989, 2001) 1 (2022)
2nd  Brazil 3 (1995, 2001, 2004) 3 (1998, 2008, 2011) 2 (1987, 2015)
3rd  Chile 2 (2008, 2015) 2 (1992, 2017) 1 (2004) 1 (1989)
4th  United States 1 (1989) 2 (2015, 2022) 3 (1992, 1998, 2017)
5th  Spain 1 (2022) 2 (1987, 2008)
6th  England 2 (1989, 2004) 3 (1992, 1998, 2017) 4 (1995, 2001, 2011, 2015)
7th  Mexico 1 (1987) 2 (1995, 2008)
8th  Australia 1 (2001)
9th  Italy 1 (2011)
10th  Uruguay 1 (2022)
11th  France 1 (2004)
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Nations

More information Country ...
Country 1987 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2008 2011 2015 2017 2022
 Argentina1st3rd1st2nd1st3rdP. round1stP. round1st4th
 Australia5thP. roundP. round2nd1st roundP. roundP. roundP. round
 Brazil3rd1st2nd1st1st2nd2nd3rd
 CanadaP. roundP. round
 Chile4th2nd3rd1stP. round1st2nd
 England2nd3rd4th3rd4th2ndP. round4th4th3rd
 FranceP. round4th
 GermanyP. round
 GuatemalaP. roundP. round
 IndiaP. roundP. roundP. roundP. round
 ItalyP. round3rdP. round
 Mexico2ndP. round3rd1st round3rdP. roundP. round
 New ZealandP. roundP. round
 PakistanP. roundP. roundP. roundP. round
 South AfricaP. round
 Spain4th4thP. round1st
 SwitzerlandP. roundP. round
 United States1st4th4thP. roundP. roundP. round2nd4th2nd
 Uruguay3rd
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Results (FIP Arena Polo World Cup)

  1. 2023, France
  2. 2025, United States

See also

References

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