The club has 200 members and 10
playing fields. Even 10 fields aren’t
enough, though, as the club leases two
playing fields and a stick-and-ball field from
the nearby Empire Polo Club. “We are
physically side by side of the Empire club,
and we have been leasing their fields now for
over 10 years,” says Eldorado polo manager
Susan Stovall. “We lease two of their fields,
and so we just overflow into their situation.
So with that we have 12 playing fields, and
then we have one other field that we lease
from them for stick and ball.”
At Eldorado people can play in low-,
medium- and high-goal polo, and in
seniors’ tournaments, ladies’ tournaments
and, for the kids, junior polo. The women
also play a lot in the other leagues and
tournaments with the men.
The club wasn’t always this large. In
1979, the land the club was sitting on, also
in the Coachella Valley, became too
valuable for use as a polo club and it was
sold to developers. Just a couple of years
earlier, in 1977, the club had just 24
members and grossed just $42,000,
according to the 50th anniversary club
magazine recently published by Randy
Russell’s Polo America. The club moved
farther out of town to its present location,
where, again, the land has become
extremely valuable.
 |
Club general manager Alex Jacoy
explained: “It’s the nature of the beast.
The nature of polo clubs, if you look
around, they’re located in a remote
location when it starts and then
everything builds up around them, and
consequently the land’s so valuable that
they do move farther down the road.
Where we were located in Palm Desert off
of Cook Street and 111, where the original
club was when I started running it … the
facility now is one of the most prestigious
country clubs in the desert, called the
Vintage Club. I mean, Bill Gates lives
there. That’s how good it is. And you now,
when we came out here to our current
facility, it was a long way. You know it was
only seven miles, but it was a long way out
here, and there was nothing around. And eventually … there’s no fire sale here.”
The same thing is happening again. A
deal recently fell through to develop the
land into housing, but Jacoy and Stovall say
the club will be sold to developers sooner
or later, but that won’t necessarily be the
end of the club.
“We aren’t going to say ‘have a nice day’
and not build another polo club,” said
Jacoy, who has been manager for 30 years.
“We’ll form a new group and build
another polo club. There’ll always be polo
in the Coachella Valley, in the desert.
There’ll always be an Eldorado. So you’re
going to drive seven to 10 miles down the
road and find another piece of property.
That’s all right. Form a new group. That’s
what happens.”
Stovall concurred that it will be
developed. “Oh, of course. This land is
very valuable. I have been here for 25
years, and Alex has been here about 30.
And the surrounding area, literally all the
way around us, is housing. And that has
come to fruition say in the last five to eight
years. Across the street is a housing
development. They’re all high end. They’re
all $500,000 and up, and Eldorado
certainly will be developed.”
Land was cheap when the club was
founded, in 1957. Then, 11 polo players
got together and bought the original
parcel of land. They were Willie Tevis,
Peter Hitchcock, Erwin Anisz, Willis Allen,
Larry Tailor, L.C. Smith, Gayle Medicott,
Bob Haney, Bill Gilmore, Ted Pierce and
Frank Yturria. They had a meeting in San
Francisco, at the Olympic Club, to
purchase 38 acres from Bob McCulloch
for $500 an acre. McCulloch was the
developer of the Eldorado Country Club.
He had some extra land that didn’t fit into
his master plan. “Fortunately for
thousands of polo players,” says the
Eldorado magazine article written by
Russell, “the land was perfect for polo.”
Each of the men contributed $5,000 to
build the Eldorado Polo Club. Homes
starting in the low millions now occupy the
land the club originally sat on.
It was McCulloch’s idea to name the
club Eldorado. He offered the founders a
membership in his country club if they did
so. “A funny anecdote regarding the free
social memberships came after a polo
game,” Russell wrote. “Five players rode
their horses down the wash over to the
Eldorado Country Club. They tied the
horses to the trees at the main entrance; at
that time there were orange trees at the
club entrance where there are palm trees
today. The five players in dirty shirts,
britches and boots went straight to the bar.
As they relived the game, they had a little
too much to drink and the group became a
little rowdy. As the players partied in the
clubhouse, the horses left their calling
cards at the entrance, and with that came
the flies. The ladies and club members began to arrive after church and were
absolutely disgusted. Several days later Tony
Veen informed them that Mr. McCulloch,
upset over their behavior, had revoked their
social memberships.”
When the Eldorado Country Club
bought the old club in 1979 to build
housing, a new group of owners plus the old
owners bought 180 acres farther out of
town. The new owners were Glen Holden,
John Leary, Henry Trione, John Emery and
Paul Von Gontard. Russell wrote that as the
club grew, an anonymous donor offered to
match money raised to build a new
clubhouse. The late Carlton Beal heard the
news and announced he would match the
amount raised. In the end he and his wife,
Keleen, matched the money put up by a
large group of other donors, and a 3,500-
square-foot clubhouse was constructed.
“We have one clubhouse, and that is it,
other than the stables and the fields,” said
Stovall. “When we have an event, we can
seat up to 500. And obviously there is
fieldside seating, and tailgating, that sort of
thing. We have ... a raised berm, on each
side of the clubhouse. So I’d say it’s about
15 to 20 feet above the level of our No. 1
field, and that is the only place we have that
type of situation.”
The club also built the Cantina in 1981.
Breakfast, lunch and drinks are served
there. The Beals donated the scoreboard on
the field outside the clubhouse in 1986, one
of just two electronic scoreboards in polo at
the time.
In 1986, Prince Charles played polo at
Eldorado and the club hosted the U.S. Open
in 1987, 1992 and 1993. Rain fell just
before the 1987 Open final, and it was
almost canceled that day. But Jacoy came
up with the idea of having a helicopter fly
low over the field to dry it out. It worked,
and the game went on. The Aloha team,
with Bob Fell, Memo and Carlos Gracida
and Warren Scherer won that year. In 1992
it was Hanalei Bay, with Ron Bonaguidi,
Memo and Carlos and Julio Arellano. In
1993 Glen Holden’s team Gehache won.
Backing up Holden were Mike Azzaro,
Memo Gracida and Ruben Gracida.
A 50-year Party
The Eldorado Polo Club threw a huge two-day party for its 50th Birthday Celebration January 6 and 7.
|
 |
| Polo America’s Randy
Russell, who organized the celebration, said about 8,000
people showed up for the hotair
balloon glow the first
night. About 480 stayed for a
b l a ck- t i e - a n d - b l u e - j e a n s
lobster bake afterward. After
dinner there was an audiovisual
presentation of the 50
years of the club. To cap off
the evening, at 9 p.m. there was a
fireworks display.
The only original founding member
there was Frank Yturria, Russell said. All
nine of the other founders have died.
The balloons stayed for the next day,
when the club held a 12-goal polo match
as part of the celebrations.
“We did a 50-horse polo pony charge,”
Russell said. “We closed fields 1, 2, 3 and
4. We took the owners who still like to ride, put them in the center and we had
50 riders, like a little John Wayne cavalry
charge, where we started off at a walk,
then went to a trot, a canter and a charge
right up to the clubhouse. It was great. I
rode in it. Looking right and to the left,
you thought you were in an old movie.
“Preceding the game we did the 50-horse polo pony charge—one mounted
rider for every year Eldorado has been
there. The people who rode in the charge
[included] John Leary, and Karlene
Garber, and Bud and Geri Dardi. It was
great, too. We had 17 riders wearing red,
17 in white, 17 in blue, so it kept with our
red, white and blue theme for the
weekend. We had a big flag coming across
the field.” |
The club has had many charity games
over the years with millions of dollars raised
for good causes. Still played is the Barbara
Sinatra Skins Polo Game, which raises
money for her center for abused and
neglected children. Teams play a tournament to qualify for the skins game
final, in which the winners of each chukker
take $4,000. Usually, said Stovall, the
winners donate one chukker’s worth of
prize money to the Sinatra center. Many
stars have come out to see the event,
including Frank Sinatra, Robert Wagner,
Robert Stack, Gary Collins, Mary Ann
Mobley, Merv Griffin, Jerry Vale, Frank
Gifford, Don Meredith, Stefanie Powers,
William Devane and Jill St. John.
“We have also sponsored great charities
for the College of the Desert, and that is our
local college here,” said Stovall. “It’s a small
state-supported school but very, very active
here in the community.” Club members
have also been very generous to causes
within the polo community. The club
typically raises more than $100,000 each
year for the Polo Training Foundation
through a dinner and auction.
The club is well-known for its fun,
relaxed atmosphere and offers a full social
calendar for its members. Some of the more
fun events include the Governor’s Ball,
“Crash and Burn” parties, cocktail parties
and barbecues. For the 50th anniversary
celebration in January, the club had a
lobster bake, a visual presentation of the
club’s history, a hot-air balloon glow and a
fireworks display.
The club was a club for players right
from the beginning. In its first few years,
members had a hard time mustering eight
players and sometimes played three on
three, Russell wrote. But word spread and
the club began to grow.
In later years, the club’s growth
exploded. Said Jacoy: “At the old club,
when I was there in ’76, ’77, Ambassador Holden was governor of the circuit at that
time, and I think we had like 24 players.
And we used to open in the middle of
January and close in the middle of March.
It was a very short season. And the big
tournament in those days was the
Governor’s Cup. And in fact Santa Barbara
in those days, that was a winter club. And
all the guys used to come from like Santa
Rosa, Santa Barbara, you know, just all
around the circuit to play in the Governor’s
Cup and it just built up over the years. The
one year I had it here was the largest—I had
42 teams. That was in the ’80s ... Now we
get about 24 teams. But the reason for that
is because there is more going on. The high-goal goes on during that time, there is
a 2-goal going on during that time, there’s
a lot of tournaments going on in
conjunction with the Governor’s Cup,
competition wise.”
Even today the club is huge. Said Stovall:
“And as we speak [in early February], last
weekend we had 39 teams playing here, and
that’s all on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
And on Saturday we had 21 polo games, and
on Sunday we had 16. Just so you know how
much polo we have here, at 9:30 on Sunday
morning, which [was] Super Bowl Sunday,
we had nine games starting, and that went
from 16-goal down to 2-goal. That’s a lot of
polo. We are the biggest club in the United
States as far as members, I mean as far as
polo going on. No [other] club has nine
games going on at the same time.”
Eldorado has had just two long-term
managers. Tony Veen managed it from 1959
to 1979, and Jacoy from 1979 to the
present. Veen had been a player since 1939
and played with many Hollywood stars,
including Spencer Tracy, Walt Disney, Errol
Flynn, Jack Warner, Charlie Farrell, Darryl
Zanuck and Robert Stack, Russell wrote.
Veen also was in several John Wayne movies
and drove a chariot during the chariot race
scene in Ben Hur.
Jacoy, too, played polo. “I played polo at
both clubs,” he said. “But once it got to be
such a big business, you now, there was no
more polo. Susan Stovall still plays polo,
and she’s kind of my pulse on the
community in that she works with all of the
polo players and so on. It’s too big of an
operation to be playing polo.”
Jacoy was asked what makes the club
special. “Several things,” he said. “One of
them is the fact that it is the winter capital
of polo in the United States on the West
Coast because of the fact there’s no
competition. You know, Santa Barbara, San
Diego all the summertime clubs are closed
down except for the little arena clubs,
because of the weather, No 1.
“And No. 2, we built this club on the
premise of something for everybody in
terms of polo players, whether it’s the 2-
goal or coaching league or Junior Polo
program or a seniors’ tournament or a
ladies’ tournament or the high-goal or
leagues. I mean there’s always plenty of
polo for everybody.
 |
“And it’s a great family atmosphere. We
encouraged, years ago … if the husband is
playing polo and the wife isn’t happy and
the kids, this guy is not going to be a
returning member year after year. So we
make it so that kids are playing every
Saturday and Sunday at 9 o’clock, and the
husband can play, and a lot of the wives play in the coaching league and the 2-goal. And
also I throw two ladies’ tournaments here.”
Stovall credits the owners with bringing
such a great club to Southern California:
“We have 21 owners. And I think each of
them in their own way have made very
special contributions to our club simply
because they, for the love of polo, they have
made our facility possible for our players.
“We are definitely a lower-goal polo club.
But that’s our sponsors, who have the
economics to play at higher than 10 goals,
but they don’t want to. They really don’t
choose to. They are very, very happy,
convenience-wise and that sort of thing, to
be here. They get to hit the ball.”
Sooner or later, the owners will be made
an offer too good to pass up, and the club
will be sold to a developer and close at its
present site so the land can be developed.
But if Jacoy is right, that will be just
another turn in the history of Eldorado
Polo Club. With 200 members, there is
definitely a demand to keep it going well
into the future.
|