Catamount
Beats Bendabout To Lead Quartet Into Semifinals In Stanford Financial
Group - 100th U.S. Open Polo Championship At International Polo Club
Palm Beach
WELLINGTON,
Florida Nine-goaler Carlos Gracida raised his game to a higher
level, scoring seven goals to lead Catamount over arch-rival Bendabout
10-4 in the quarterfinals of the historic Stanford Financial Group
100th U.S. Open Polo Championship at the International Polo
Club Palm Beach.
In
other quarterfinals on Sunday, sentimental favorite Isla Carroll
upset Division I winner Las Monjitas 12-11 in overtime, 2003 finalist
Lechuza defeated Pony Express 13-11 as 10-goaler Pite Merlos scored
seven goals and three-time finalist White Birch topped Old Pueblo
10-8 as 10-goaler Mariano Aguerre scored four goals.
The
semifinals are Wednesday with a doubleheader as Isla Carroll (3-2)
plays Lechuza (4-1) at noon followed by Catamount (3-2) against
White Birch (4-1) at 3 p.m. The winners of the semifinals advance
to Sundays championship game at 3 p.m.
This
was the third time Scott Devons Catamount has beaten Gillian
Johnstons Bendabout in crucial games, including the final
of the 22-goal Joe Barry Memorial in late January and the 26-goal
C.V. Whitney Cup championship match on March 21.
Bendabout
won their previous encounter, 7-5, during the first round of the
U.S. Open. Catamounts Mike Azzaro, one of only two American
10-goalers, played that game despite a herniated disk and could
not recover in time for Sundays quarterfinal. He was replaced
by 10-goaler Adolfo Cambiaso of Argentina, generally regarded as
the best player in the world.
Cambiaso,
who will team with Azzaro during the prestigious high-goal Argentine
season, scored one goal and had three assists. He left immediately
after the game for Europe to fulfill a previous commitment, skipping
the post-match awards ceremony to catch a plane.
Bendabout
scored the games first goal, a near-side by Adam Snow with
4:56 left in the first chukker, but the team was never effective
in the second half.
Ive
been there (to the U.S. Open semifinals) many times and it doesnt
mean anything, said Gracida, who has won the U.S. Open nine
times. If you lose, youre out.
After
the game Azzaro said he will be at least 80 percent
for the semifinals.
Hes
a warrior, said Devon, referring to Azzaro. And Carlos
is at the top of his game.
Gracida
leads the team with 20 goals and Azzaro has scored 11 goals. Devon
and 21-year-old Pelon Escapite, a 4-goaler, added one goal each
against Bendabout.
Snow,
one of only two American 10-goalers, led Bendabout with three goals
while 10-goaler Miguel Novillo Astrada added one goal. Alejandro
Novillo Astrada and patron Gillian Johnston did not score. Snow
finished with a team-high 20 goals and Miguel Novillo Astrada finished
with 15 goals.
Isla
Carroll jumped out to a 7-1 lead 61 seconds into the fourth chukker
and never trailed, although Las Monjitas rallied to tie the game
at 11-11 on Nacho Novillo Astradas goal with 1:04 left in
the game. Las Monjitas almost won the game but the game-ending horn
sounded before a close shot was taken with the ball landing about
five yards from the Isla Carroll goal.
In
overtime, Isla Carroll withstood a flurry of shots in front of its
goal before coming out of their end. Patron John Goodman tipped
the ball to Memo Gracida who launched a 50-yard forehand through
the uprights 3:54 into overtime.
It
was a very narrow window (to shoot), said Gracida, a 15-time
U.S. Open champion who spent several minutes after the game receiving
oxygen, referring to his game-winning shot. Im very
proud of these guys. This was our best game, but we can be better.
We showed something we need, heart. This team won it with guts.
You need luck and heart to win a championship.
Pancho
Bensadon led Isla Carroll with eight goals while Gracida finished
with two goals and Sugar Erskine and patron John Goodman added one
goal each. Bensadon has a team-high 28 goals.
Javier
Novillo Astrada led Las Monjitas (4-1) with four goals while Eduardo
Novillo Astrada and Nacho Novillo Astrada scored three goals each.
Patron Camilo Bautista added one goal. Javier Novillo Astrada finished
with a team-high 31 goals.
Pony
Express (3-2) led most of the game, which featured just two ties.
Lechuza, which reached the semifinals in 2002, rallied to tie the
game at 9-9 before 10-goaler Sebastian Merlos gave them their first
lead at 10-9 at the end of the fifth chukker. Pony Express responded
to tie the game at 11-11 before Pite Merlos took over.
Pite Merlos, playing in his first full game in more than two weeks,
proved the groin injury did not hurt his scoring touch as he scored
the final two goals to lift Lechuza into the semifinals.
Ten-goaler
Sebastian Merlos finished with four goals while Gaston Urturi added
two goals and Lechuza patron Victor Vargas did not score. Sebastian
Merlos has scored a team-high 27 goals.
Ten-goaler
Bautista Heguy and Sapo Caset scored five goals each to lead 1999
finalist Pony Express. Pablo MacDonough, substituting for an injured
Alex Agote, added one goal while patron Bob Daniels did not score.
Heguy finished with a team-high 24 goals.
Perennial
powerhouse White Birch, which reached the finals in 1997, 1995 and
1994, got off to a slow start, trailing 3-0 before scoring five
consecutive in the second chukker, three by Aguerre.
Old
Pueblo, trying to win the 100th U.S. Open after winning the 100th
Silver Cup, responded with four unanswered goals, two each by 8-goalers
Jeff Hall and Facundo Pieres, to re-take the lead.
The
second half, however, belonged to White Birch, as it outscored Old
Pueblo 4-1 en route to victory.
Lucas
Criado and Del Walton scored three goals each for White Birch while
patron Peter Brant did not score. Aguerre now has 25 goals to lead
White Birch.
Pieres led Old Pueblo (2-3) with four goals while Hall added three
and patron John Hall scored once. Matias Magrini did not score.
Pieres finished with a team-high 24 goals.
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 Beachs 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. Stanfords
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 a post-match awards presentation.
Individual
tickets for the U.S. Open tournament Wednesdays semifinals
and Sundays 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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