
Santa Barbara’s high-goal season lasts for
seven weeks and includes three 20-goal
events—the Robert Skene Memorial, the
America Cup and finally the Pacific Coast
Open. Seven teams competed this season,
including Geoff Palmer’s and Dan Walker’s
Antelope/Long Beach, Pat Nesbitt’s Windsor
Capital, Ben Soleimani’s Mansour, Andy
Busch’s and Justin Klentner’s Grant’s
Farm/Klentner Ranch, Mike Hakan’s
Duende, Marc and Melissa Ganzi’s Audi Polo
and Lyndon Lea’s and Michael Rothbard’s
Jimmy Choo/Los Toros. For Audi Polo,
Melissa Ganzi played the America Cup while
husband Marc played the other two
tournaments. For Jimmy Choo, Rothbard
and 7-goaler Mariano Fassetta played the first
two events before being replaced by Lyndon
Lea and 7-goaler Ruki Baillieu in the Pacific
Coast Open. The remaining teams stayed
largely unchanged throughout the season.
The Pacific Coast Open is played in a
single bracket and includes semifinals
between the top four teams. Teams are
guaranteed two games in each of the first two
events and six games in the third, for a total
of no less than 10 and even more if a team
draws the four-team bracket, or qualifies for
a final or consolation. It can be a grueling
season, especially for the most successful
teams. The teams with the fattest strings of
horses generally do the best, and even so, it’s
extremely difficult to win all three events.
The Skene tournament was named after
legendary 10-goaler and former Santa
Barbara club manager Robert Skene. For
this event the teams were divided between
two brackets—the Ocean and the Mountain—
a reference to the club’s picturesque
location, which is cradled between the Pacific
Ocean and the Santa Ynez Mountain
foothills. Mansour shared the Ocean bracket
with defending champion Antelope and
runner-up Duende. Jimmy Choo/Los Toros,
Grant’s Farm/Klentner Ranch, Windsor
Capital and Audi Polo filled out the
Mountain bracket.
Mansour, featuring Soleimani, 9-goaler
Adam Snow, 6-goaler Julian Daniels and 5-
goaler Martin Zegers, started out the season
strong. They toppled Antelope/Long Beach
17-11 before hammering Duende 18-13 and
advancing to the final. The other finalist,
Jimmy Choo/Los Toros lost to Grants
Farm/Klentner Ranch 11-14 before edging
Windsor Capital 12-11 and Audi 15-14.
Mansour kept their momentum in the final,
toppling Jimmy Choo/Los Toros 14-9. Most
valuable player Snow led all scorers with six
goals, one from the penalty line. Teammate
Zegers scored five goals and Soleimani and
Daniels two each. Soleimani was named
MVP-amateur and his mare Samantha took
best playing pony-amateur. Best playing pony
for a professional went to Chloe, owned by
Snow. Audi beat Antelope/Long Beach in the
consolation final 15-9.
Mansour continued to flex its collective
muscle in the USPA America Cup, winning
all preliminary games before earning the
final spot for the Mountain bracket. They
managed to slip Audi Polo 12-11, Windsor
Capital 16-15 in overtime and Duende 15-11.
In the Ocean bracket, Antelope/Long Beach
wouldn’t settle for the consolation this time
and managed to edge Grant’s Farm Klentner
Ranch 11-10 and Jimmy Choo/Los Toros 15-
14 in overtime to advance to the final against
Mansour.
Last year’s teammates, 7-goaler Luis
Escobar and Mansour’s Snow now faced each
other in the final. This time Escobar teamed
up with 9-goal Pancho Bensadon, 4-goal
Walker and 12-year-old Santiago Torres,
filling in for the 1-goal Palmer. With the help
of Torres, who played remarkably well and
contributed a game-high four goals,
Antelope/Long Beach handed Mansour their
first loss of the season, 9-7, while taking the
win. Torres, who club manager Andy Smith
says is playing 2.8 goals, was named MVPamateur,
while Bensadon was named MVPpro.
Best playing pony-amateur went to
Plumita, played by Torres and owned by him
and his dad, Miguel, while BPP-pro was
Bensadon’s Novia.
Audi once again took the consolation
final, this time by defeating Jimmy Choo/Los
Toros 12-11. Audi’s Kris Kampsen was high
scorer with six goals, all scored from the
penalty line. Kampsen teammates Pablo
Spinacci and Juan Bollini knocked in two
and three goals respectively.
It was on to the season finale Pacific Coast
Open, the final of which would serve as what
is dubbed as the Triple Crown of Polo. The first leg of the Triple Crown is played at the
Sarasota Polo Club in Sarasota, Florida, and is
the final of the Robin Uihlein Memorial. The
second leg is played at the Las Colinas Polo
Club in Dallas, Texas. The Triple Crown title
can be confusing as several tournament series
have been unofficially referred to as the Triple
Crown of Polo: the British Open, the
Argentine Open and the U.S. Open; the
Tortugas, Hurlingham and Argentine Opens;
and the C.V. Whitney, U.S. Open and the
USPA Gold Cup. But that’s not all. No one can
claim this particular Triple Crown title as no
team competed in more than one leg of the
Triple Crown. Nonetheless, the Triple Crown
event certainly added to the excitement, with
impressive sponsor tents lining the field, and
the hyperbolic display of the event trophy’s
arrival in an armored car. Triple Crown
organizer David Lane also managed to get
each leg of the event televised on ESPN2.
Preliminary games were close, so close in
fact that nearly 75 percent of the 21 games
played ended with a two-goal or fewer
difference. About half were decided by just a
goal. After three weeks of playoffs, Jimmy
Choo, led by 8-goal Nick Roldan, who had an
impressive season, finished at the top with five
wins and just one loss. Interestingly enough,
the teams that won the earlier tournaments,
Mansour and Antelope, finished the Pacific
Coast Open in sixth and seventh place
respectively. Antelope could count
only one win to their five losses, while
the middle five teams were tied with 3-
3 records.
After Smith announced the
rankings of the five tied teams, it was
determined the method for breaking
the ties didn’t specifically follow the
tournament conditions as published
in the 2006 USPA Blue Book. The
club requested an official
interpretation from USPA officials.
After considering the official USPA
interpretation of the tournament
tiebreaking procedure, the club
tournament committee named a
revised ranking.
The top four teams advanced to
the semifinals, where Jimmy Choo
took on Windsor Capital and
defending champ Duende met last
year’s runner-up, Grants Farm. In the
first match, the favored Jimmy Choo
started strong, capitalizing on
Windsor’s missteps by converting
three penalties while holding them to
a goal. Windsor fought back in the
second and third, tying the score at 4
at the half. The teams traded goals in the
fourth, but Windsor gained ground in the fifth, holding Jimmy Choo scoreless while
taking a two-goal lead. Windsor extended
their lead in the sixth before Jimmy Choo
started chipping away at it, but time ran out
for them and Windsor advanced to the final.
Just as in last year’s final, the Duende-
Grant’s Farm game was a squeaker. Tied 3-3
after one and 7-7 at the half, it wasn’t until
the fourth chukker that Duende began to
edge ahead. They extended their lead to two
in the fifth and held it through the sixth
chukker to once again overcome Grant’s
Farm, this time14-12 to advance to the final.
With the sidelines bustling with polo fans,
television cameras in position and umpire
Bobby Barry wired with a camera and
microphone offering a unique bird’s eye view
of the action, the final game got underway.
For the second year, Hakan’s Duende
team was led by 10-goaler Agustin Merlos and
9-goaler Paco de Narvaez. Young 1-goaler
Carlito Galindo rounded out the team. For
Nesbitt’s Windsor Capital team, 8-goaler Jeff
Hall and 7-goaler Sugar Erskine made up the
middle while 4-goaler Chris Nevins covered
the Back position. Nesbitt, who previously
underwent hip replacement surgery and has
recently been experiencing some pain, was
replaced by Juan Jose Gonzalez after
halftime. Hall conceded Gonzalez didn’t have
it easy. “It is difficult to jump in after
halftime. It’s not fair to him. By the time he
gets warmed up, the game is over.”
Windsor had beaten Duende the week
prior and planned on using the same
strategy. Hall says: “They are kind of a team
with two [strong players]. They score a lot on
penalties. We wanted to open it up but be
patient when they got the ball. … They play
choppy so the bouncy field helped them. ...”
Duende was the first to get on the
scoreboard when de Narvaez converted a
Penalty 4 after being cross hooked. Windsor
answered with a tally by Hall. Merlos
converted a Penalty 2 for Duende, but
Windsor quickly responded when Nevins
pushed the ball through the goal. Duende’s
Merlos was given a technical halfway through
the first chukker. The players were bunching
up and roughness was increasing. De
Narvaez says: “Everyone wants to win.
Everyone has passion so it is rough. Finals are
more rough than other games.” Hall agrees:
“It’s a final so everyone goes. They wanted to
win, we wanted to win.” Just a minute into
the second, Merlos jumped off his horse after
taking a bad bump. He resumed play soon
after, but the roughness continued.
Barry, along with umpire Darrell Schwetz,
did a remarkable job keeping the conflicts
between the players from escalating. They
acted quickly when, with about a minute and
a half remaining, Erskine and de Narvaez got
into a confrontation. Both players were
ejected from the field for the remainder of
the chukker. A minute later Merlos received
a technical. With all the players back on the
field for the third chukker, de Narvaez scored
an impressive near-side neckshot with the
ball bouncing to put Duende ahead by two.
The lead was short-lived after Hall converted
two penalty shots to tie the match 6.
Though Hall reminded his teammates
during the halftime break to stay with their
man, the players were having difficulty doing
so. Windsor’s only hope was to focus on the
original plan to open the game up, but de
Narvaez and Merlos kept the ball close.
Instead of offensive runs Windsor was forced
to defend and was drawn into making costly
fouls—just what they were trying to avoid.
Adding insult to injury, in an unfortunate
accident Hall’s 14-year-old chestnut mare,
Susie, broke a leg. This particular incident
didn’t involve other players, and according to
Hall it was unusual because he was running
in a straight line, by himself, when it
happened. After being examined by a
veterinarian, the horse had to be humanely euthanised. Hall had her cremated and plans
on bringing her ashes back to the Museum of
Polo and Hall of Fame, which has a life-size
photo of the mare on its wall.
Duende pulled ahead in the fourth with a
pair of penalty conversions and a field goal,
while holding Windsor to a single goal.
Windsor also got slapped with another
technical. Windsor fought back in the fifth,
coming within one, but Merlos’ seventh
penalty conversion and another penalty,
helped in by Carlito Galindo, in the sixth put
the icing on the cake for Duende. It seemed ill
will lingered between the players when Hall
twisted his hand from de Narvaez’s grasp after
an end of game handshake. When asked
about the rough play, de Narvaez said: “It was
intense, physical. Finals are finals but [no one
was] playing with bad intentions.” Hall agreed
saying everyone just wants to win.
The Duende team not only took the win
but most of the prizes as well. This was
Duende’s fourth PCO victory. Most valuable
player-amateur went to Hakan, while his grey
horse Piojo took BPP honors. MVP-pro went
to Merlos, and de Narvaez’ dark bay mare
Galleta took BPP-pro. Jimmy Choo’s Nick
Roldan won the Robert Skene Outstanding
Player Award for the high-goal season, while
teammate Lyndon Lea won the Linfoot Most
Improved Player award. This was Hall’s fourth
attempt at the Pacific Coast Open. He looks
forward to trying again next year.
The consolation match, played as the
Western Badge and Trophy, was taken by
Grant’s Farm/Klentner Ranch 13-10 over
Jimmy Choo. Grant’s Farm held the lead until
the fifth chukker when Ruki Baillieu
hammered in four goals and Nick Roldan one
to tie the match at 10 all. It seems as though
Jimmy Choo used up all they had as Grant’s
Farm held them scoreless and put in three
more goals, two from the penalty line, to take
the win. The match to determine fifth and
sixth place wasn’t played.
In conjunction with the PCO, more than
225 guests attended the PCO ball at the
Montecito Country Club. Polo club
members, players and sponsors, including
Tiffany & Co., Hub International and Lexus,
sipped cocktails while enjoying the beautiful
Pacific sunset before an awards presentation,
dinner and dancing. Overall, according to
Smith, the high-goal season was a great
success. Players enjoy playing at the facility
because of the competition, the social events
and so many things to do on the off days.
With the club’s close proximity to the ocean,
players have the opportunity to ride the
horses in the ocean, surf, fish, swim, whale
watch and more. The club is very family
friendly and on any given day you’ll be sure
to see swarms of kids out having fun. |