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While Ellerstina was trying to capture
Argentina’s Triple Crown, La Dolfina,
led by Adolfo Cambiaso, was determined not
to suffer defeat. Since the team’s creation six
years ago, La Dolfina has made it to the final
each year but won only once before. Joining
Cambiaso were his brother-in-law, Lolo
Castagnola, and Mariano Aguerre and
Luquitas Monteverde.
Facundo joined up with his brother,
Gonzalo Jr., and cousins Pablo and Matias
Mac Donough to form the Ellerstina team.
The team was mowing down the
competition, mostly experienced polo
squads, with the skill and sharpness of a
chainsaw cutting a sapling. After pocketing
both the Tortugas and Hurlingham Opens,
many people thought they had a good
chance of taking the Argentine Open and
thus Argentina’s Triple Crown.
Still, there were those who weren’t so
sure, given their youthful inexperience in
such a high-pressure tournament. The team
played together the previous year but lost to
La Aguada in the final of the Tortugas. They
didn’t make the final in either the
Hurlingham or Palermo Opens. Facundo,
with his flashy style, played well last year, and
many people compared him to Adolfo
Cambiaso. But, like Cambiaso, he was more
of an individual superstar rather than a
team player.
Realizing the difficulty in teaching your
own children how to play polo despite your
own past successes, Gonzalo Pieres turned to
an unlikely rival. He hired 9-goal Memo. Gracida, his longtime opponent from his
days playing with White Birch in the United
States. It spoke volumes for Pieres’ respect
for Gracida, who held a 10-goal rating for 21
consecutive years. Gracida has often been
referred to as “el Capitan” because of his
organization skills both on and off the field.
Pieres brought in Gracida to serve as coach
to the team of young guns.
Gracida seemed to be able to get the
Ellerstina players to focus as a team.
Facundo, playing No. 1, didn’t lose any of his luster, but he began to become more of
a team player. Gonzalito, it turns out, may
not have the flashy style of his brother but is
a workhorse and, creating plays at No. 3,
emulates his father.
La Dolfina was the only other team with
a 3-0 record going into the final, but the
media coverage favored Ellerstina. Still, La
Dolfina had played a good tournament and
earned their spot in the final. With much
anticipation the final match was underway.
It wasn’t long before La Dolfina began showing their strengths as they went ahead
9-5 at the end of the third period and 11-8
after four. Ellerstina, with Gonzalo Pieres
Jr. leading and Matias Mac Donough taking
the penalties, rallied to narrow the gap and
by the sixth chukker had equalized the
score at 15. Monteverde and Aguerre
effectively marked Gonzalo Pieres and
Pablo Mac Donough, preventing Facundo,
who was being marked by Castagnola, from
getting passes.
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With still two chukkers left (they play
eight chukkers in Argentina) Ellerstina
seemed to have the pony advantage, but
Cambiaso had the support and
encouragement of the spectators in the
Dorrego stands, the most popular seats. In
the last minutes of the eighth chukker,
Aguerre’s first goal of the match put La
Dolfina ahead 19-18, but Matias Mac
Donough converted a 40-yard penalty at the
warning bell to tie the game once again.
Cambiaso, who seemed unstoppable,
shouldered the responsibility for winning
the game. With just 20 seconds left on the
clock, it looked like he might have done just
that. He shot at goal but hit the post, and
the ball ricocheted out of bounds. The goal
judge signaled a goal, but the umpires correctly overruled it. The 19-19 game would
be decided in overtime.
In the extra chukker, with what must have
surely seemed like the weight of the world on
his shoulders, Matias Mac Donough took a
60-yard penalty but was unable to convert it.
Moments later, Ellerstina was awarded a
midfield penalty. Matias hold onto the ball,
but with Cambiaso marking him tightly, the
ball ricocheted off the leg of Cambiaso’s
horse. Cambiaso wasted no time, turning his
horse and racing downfield with the ball.
Cambiaso wasn’t about to let his chance slip.
Once he passed midfield, the spectators leapt
to their feet watching as he stroked the ball
through the goal. With the goal judge waving
the flag, Cambiaso threw his mallet in the air
and jumped off his horse to embrace his wife,
friends and grooms. The spectators burst
into applause and the Ellerstina team hung
their heads in disbelief. Visitors said it was
one of the best games in a long time and as
spectators milled about after the game,
Cambiaso was all people could talk about.
Still it was a team effort and Cambiaso
couldn’t have done it without Aguerre,
Castagnola and Monteverde.
The 112th playing of the Argentine Open had begun a few weeks prior. In the opening
match, Indios Chapaleufú II’s Escue Alberto
Heguy, Marcos Di Paola, Milo Fernández
Araujo and Eduardo Heguy came out against
Centauros Beaufort in a choppy match
riddled with fouls. Di Paolo was filling in for
Nachi Heguy, who was suspended since the
Hurlingham match.
The foreigners’ squad—the first team
lining up all foreign players in 39 years,
included English brothers Luke and Mark
Tomlinson, Chilean Jaime García Huidobro
and Australian Jack Baillieu. They played a
good game before losing 12-6.
The story was completely different in
Field No. 1 as La Dolfina took on El Paraíso’s
Agustín, Sebastián and Juan Ignacio Merlos
and Mike Azzaro, filling in for an injured
Paco de Narvaez. The match became a duel
between the two powerful forwards,
Cambiaso and Agustin “Tincho” Merlos,
but Cambiaso prevailed with the support of
his teammates.
The next day, La Aguada Telmex—Javier,
Eduardo, Miguel and Ignacio Novillo Astrada—got off to a terrific start with an 11-
6 win over El Metejón’s Lucas Criado,
Santiago Chavanne, Alejandro Agote and
Mariano González.
That afternoon on Palermo’s No. 1 field
(referred to as “the Cathedral”) Ellerstina’s
Pieres and Mac Donough brothers defeated
the Chapi I team’s Bautista Heguy, Juan
Martín Nero, Horacio and Marcos Heguy 14-
13. While the favored Ellerstina team had a
better start, Chapa I, led by an outstanding
Bauti Heguy together with Nero’s great
performance, began overcoming the
Tortugas’ and Hurlingham’s winners to lead
9-5 in the fourth chukker. However,
Facundo Pieres’ stick work, added to some
bad luck for Chapi I, changed the results of
the match.
The second weekend, brought a surprise:
The polo family had been enlarged. Between
the fourth and the fifth chukkers of the
match between La Dolfina and Centauros
Beaufort, Cambiaso was told that his wife,
María Vázquez, was in labor. La Dolfina’s
No. 1, played one more chukker, scoring two more goals, before heading to Clínica
Otamendi to see his new son, Adolfo III. With
Alejandro Muzzio substituting, his team
managed to get a clear-cut, 27-7 victory.
The next game, Agustín Merlos lead El
Paraíso to a victory over Indios Chapaleufú II
19-13. Tincho was the trump card of the
orange-shirt team that played with De
Narváez back in the lineup. Tincho’s
defining moments were in two offensive
bursts—four goals in the third chukker and
three in the fifth.
The next day was a surprise. Ellerstina
started playing the final chukker against El
Metejón, their division’s lowest handicap
team, down 14-12. Headed by Santiago
Chavanne, the red-and-black-shirted El
Metejón team was close to winning, but
Ellerstina’s all-out effort and a couple of
controversial calls allowed the scoreboard to
change in Ellerstina’s favor, 15-14.
La Aguada rallied to leave Chapi I behind
12-9 in their next outing. In the beginning,
Chapaleufú I was beating the Novillo
Astradas 4-0 during the second chukker. But
La Aguada began putting pressure on their
opponents, preventing them from scoring a
goal for 24 minutes, to take the win.
In the third and last weekend before the
final, El Paraíso defeated Centauros 16-9 in a
match that lost its rhythm while rain started
falling heavily. Consequently, the next
match, Group A’s final game between La
Dolfina and Indios Chapaleufú II, had to be
put off until the following Monday.
Fortunately, the sun shone on Sunday,
allowing the regularly scheduled games to be played. At Field 2, El Metejón enjoyed a great
victory after defeating Indiecito 10-9. This
meant the end of a forgettable Open for the
Heguys’ squad, which, seriously affected by
the lack of ponies, was eliminated in the first
round for just the second time in 22 years.
At the main field, Ellerstina, after its close
call against El Metejón, played with a whole
different attitude against La Aguada. In a
superb match, with a continuous exchange
of shots, there was a four-goal burst during
the fifth chukker and the same at the end of
the game resulting in an 18-14 score that
gave Ellerstina the ticket to the final.
On Monday, the final playoff game was La
Dolfina against Indios Chapaleufú II, whom
they defeated 13-12, in the most lackluster
game of the tournament. It was the first
game back for Chapi II’s Nachi Heguy after
he was suspended from play after colliding
with El Paraiso’s Francisco de Narvaez in the
Hurlingham tournament. Chapi II needed to
win the match by 11 goals. If they won by
fewer, El Paraiso would advance to the final,
while a win for La Dolfina meant La Dolfina
earned a top spot. It was unlikely that
Chapaleufú II would beat La Dolfina by so
many goals, and with some bad feelings still
lingering between Chapi II and El Paraiso,
Chapi II wasn’t about to send El Paraiso to
the final. The whisper in the stands was the
game was fixed for La Dolfina to win, and
they certainly played like it was. Neither team
wanted to hurt their horses, so it was like
watching a practice game.
AIKEN CURA
THE ARGENTINE OPEN’S TOP HORSE
Aiken Cura, the multiprized
stallion in the
2005 Argentine Open,
has definitely entered in
the record of one of
polo’s greatest horses.
According to 10-goal
great Adolfo Cambiaso,
“This stallion is
astounding … it is indeed
a marvelous horse.”
Others agree, as the
AACCP (Argentine Polo
Breeders Association)
agreed, awarding Aiken
Cura the best Argentine-bred horse
playing in the 2005 Argentine Open and
the AAP (Argentine Polo Association)
named him the best horse playing in the
tournament.
Aiken Cura comes from the well-known
polo breed of Ricardo Santamarina. His
sire was Alma de Bacan (by Crown Thy
Good), while his dam was Lady Nun. In
1996, at just 6 months old, Aiken Cura
was acquired by Eduardo Bérèterbide
who trained him for polo at his ranch in
Carmen de Areco. “It was such a beautiful
horse, so well built and it came from such
an excellent breed that I decided to keep
him as a stallion,” Eduardo Bérèterbide
told us beaming with pride. “Curita [as he
refers to Aiken Cura] was a rapid learner
with an amazing intelligence; in fact I
played with Curita some chukkers when
he was just 2 years old, while my son
Luciano started playing Curita in
tournaments at the age of 3. From the
early beginning I knew he was headed to
be a polo crack.”
When the horse was 5 Eduardo sold
Aiken Cura to his close friend Salvador
Socas, who played it for two years before
selling him to his half-brother Adolfo
Cambiaso. From then on an unbeatable
polo duo was born: Cura-Cambiaso.
Together with Cambiaso Aiken Cura
played in the Open for the first time in
2004. But undoubtedly, Cura’s crowning
year was 2005 when he played in the three
big opens, Tortugas, Hurlingham and
Palermo, between two or three chukkers
per match. He carried
Cambiaso to score six
goals in the Argentine
Open final against
Ellerstina. After his
r e m a r k a b l e
performance, he was
awarded with all the
possible prizes, including
the Lady Susan Townley
Cup, for being the best
polo horse of the
tournament; AACCP
prize for being the best
pony among the
registered Argentine polo products; and
the Argentine Rural Society.
The Lady Susan Townley Prize has
been awarded since 1908. In 1908 the
River Plate Polo Association, created the
Lady Susan Townley Cup to be awarded
every year to the best polo horse played in
the Argentine Open Polo Championship.
This cup was donated by Walter Townley,
British minister with an office in Buenos
Aires, who named this cup after his wife.
Once the Argentine Polo Association was
organized in 1922, it continued giving the
Lady Susan Townley Cup every year, as it
still does, to the horse that exhibits the
best qualities in a polo horse during the
most difficult and prestigious
tournament.
Aiken Cura is the first stallion in
history to be awarded any such prizes in
the Argentine Open and is the first horse
in history to receive all three prizes at
once. Interestingly enough, players were
forbidden to play stallions in the
Argentine Open until 1954. Now, many
players play stallions. And once proven to
be good polo ponies, they are used for
breeding.
For Eduardo Bérèterbide, Aiken Cura
“represents the authentic Argentine polo
horse: fast, short, quick and extremely
good-tempered.” For Adolfo Cambiaso,
“Cura’s principal characteristic is his
acceleration and endurance.” We will
likely see more of Aiken Cura in the
future and eventually may even see some
of his progeny playing. |
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