HUA
HIN, Thailand - Looking tough yet regal atop their giant
steeds, the players in this year's clash of the titans
rode their elephants onto the field like a group of
warriors headed to battle. Within moments of securing
their positions, the elephants and their riders were
thundering across the pitch to a series of cheers and
chuckles from the ever-jubilant crowd. After meeting in
a manic midfield muddle, where two opposing players
locked mallets in a duel for the tiny white ball, the
fight for the King's Cup title had officially begun.
Despite the occasional under-the-trunk shot or
the thrill that follows when a sweeping two-meter-long
mallet makes contact with the ball, the fourth annual
2004 King's Cup Elephant Polo Tournament in this
sea-side town is more wacky and bizarre than it is fast
and furious. Yet with players including a duke, a top
Thai actress and model, a former Winter Olympian and an
entire team composed of former New Zealand rugby stars,
the tournament is anything but dull.
After a week of matches that grew
more heated as the competition narrowed, the tournament
ended on Sunday with Thailand's Mobile Easy, one of three teams
from the home country, claiming
victory over Australia's Sandalford Winery, in a
first-ever win for Thailand.
In the final
seconds of the match, as polo rookie Churo Pellegrini of
Argentina hung virtually upside down on his elephant in
an effort to defend his team's 6-4 lead, commentator
Peter Prentice belted out his excitement over the
loudspeaker system.
"This is like a hockey match
it's going so fast," Prentice said, referring to
Sandalford's and Mobile Easy's rush toward the ball.
With only minutes remaining and Thailand with a
two-point lead, three elephants - each topped by a
driver (mahout) and his accompanying player -
closed in on the tiny white target. The muddle that
ensued - a classic scrum in elephant polo - became a
mash of trunks and mallets. Within moments the group was
enveloped in a thin cloud of dust causing the ball to
practically disappear from view.
Sticks were
swung with a force and vigor that was absorbed by the
ground or an opposing player's mallet. In the second
chukka, or half, Sandalford plowed through three sticks
in as many minutes in a supreme effort to gain the lead.
But despite an epic battle, when the closing gong
sounded, it was the Thai team which raised its sticks in
victory. "The nation of Thailand will be swinging in the
aisles tonight," Prentice chimed.
It goes
without saying that a weeklong battle atop two-ton
pachyderms adds a new twist to a sport more commonly
played on horseback. But then the King's Cup tournament
is more than just a
sporting event; it is also a cultural affair, a
lesson in international relations and an elitist
gathering on par with its equine cousin.
With
mahouts settled just behind the elephants' ears
prodding them to move faster, and lithe players hanging
like Spiderman from atop the giant pachyderms, elephant
polo is as unique a sport as the people who play it.
This year's tournament, which opened on
September 6 after a midday elephant blessing, matched
some of the world's most experienced horse and elephant
polo players with a smattering of polo novices, many of
whom found themselves engaging in tenacious duels,
despite never before having been on an elephant.
Chivas Regal captain - and sometime commentator
- Peter Prentice, holder of two World Elephant Polo
Association (WEPA) world championship medals, a WEPA
World Series Grand Slam title and the record for the
fastest goal ever scored (4.5 seconds), has been playing
elephant polo for 17 years. His team of WEPA legends
also includes Torquhil Ian Campbell, the 13th Duke of
Argyll. Mercedes Benz Thailand, winner of the 2002 and
2003 King's Cup trophies, boasts Oliver Winter, the man
who brought polo back to Thailand; while both Mobile
Easy and Sandalford Winery lay claim to several
experienced sportsmen.
These teams went
head-to-head with newcomers the All Blacks - former New
Zealand rugby stars - the British Airways Cavalry team
and the DBS Bank Ladies. The gathering was significant
not only because it was the biggest elephant polo
gathering ever held - with 14 teams taking part from
around the world - but because it was the first such
tournament to host two women's teams, as well as a
transvestite team, the Screwless Tuskers.
"We're
very much a part of this tournament," said Samantha
Prentice, who scored seven goals in seven minutes while
playing as a novice in the Tiger Tops' Millennium
Tournament, and who led the DBS team. The Bangkok Bank
ladies were captained by Margie McDougal, the world's
most experienced female elephant polo player.
The King's Cup tournament was first brought to
Thailand in 2001 by Christopher Stafford, a Swedish polo
player and vice president and general manager of
Anantara Resorts and Spas, the host of the tournament.
The founding of the game, however, extends back to 1982,
when British ex-winter Olympian James Manclark created
the rules for the game, along with polo expert Jim
Edwards.
The rules, while similar to horse polo,
were amended to take the size and speed (or lack
thereof) of the elephant into account. Mullis Capital's
Ken McMillan, who has years of experience playing horse
polo, explains that what makes elephant polo unique
among many things is that there are so many more
variables involved when playing polo on an elephant. The
ears, the trunk, the size and speed of the elephant all
have to be taken into account, he said.
Practice
also poses a challenge. Many of the teams combine
players from all over the world and training in between
tournaments is nearly impossible without access to an
elephant - though some players have found more creative
ways of honing their skills. Germans Hugo and Dirk Goetz
of the Mercedes Benz team learned their elephant polo
skills from atop a Hummvee. One of the brothers would
drive while the other would sit on a large foam box
mounted to the vehicle's roof and practice hitting balls
using an elephant polo mallet. Inventive, perhaps, but
still not quite the same as riding an actual elephant.
For one, in a country were elephants are
revered, "all the players and mahouts must ensure
that the animals are treated with enormous sensitivity,"
McMillan said.
Throughout Thailand's history
elephants have served as laborers in the logging
industry, and long ago were considered an essential
requisite for a strong army. In 1921, elephants were
declared the country's first protected species. The
Asian elephant is Thailand's national mascot. White
elephants, meantime, have had a legendary influence on
Thailand's history and have become a sign of royalty.
That the tournament was held in the Thai resort town of
Hua Hin seems only fitting, as it is here that the
revered king keeps his most auspicious white elephant.
In addition to being part of the WEPA World
Series, the King's Cup elephant polo tournament helps
raise money for the National Elephant Institute's Thai
Elephant Conservation Center in Lampang, northern
Thailand. To date, the event has raised around US$65,000
for the institute, which cares for Thailand's 1,500 wild
and 2,500 domesticated elephants. Before the games even
began this year three corporate donations worth $11,000
had already been made.
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Sep 15, 2004
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