Tag Archives: USPA Piaget Gold Cup

Piaget Comeback Falls Short, Loses USPA Piaget Gold Cup Opener to Lechuza Caracas

With Piaget teammate Sapo Caset looking on, 10-goaler Miguel Astrada retrieves the ball out of the air with his mallet. Photos – Alex Pacheco.

WELLINGTON, FL – March 9, 2013 — Behind 10-goalers Sapo Caset and Miguel Astrada, Piaget staged a furious comeback against Lechuza Caracas in the sixth chukker but fell short in its USPA Piaget Gold Cup opener.

Lechuza Caracas, which led for most of the game, held on for a 12-10 victory Saturday at Isla Carroll West.

With Piaget trailing by only one goal in the sixth chukker, 11-10, Caset had a chance to tie the game with 1:43 left in regulation.

Caset took a pass from Astrada and made a hard-charging run full force toward goal only to lose control of the ball in a crowd near the goal mouth.

After the game in the players’ tent, Caset made it a point to apologize to his teammates for missing the goal.

“I can’t believe I missed the goal to tie the game; I am sorry,” Caset said. “We had the momentum in the sixth chukker. I won’t be able to sleep tonight. If I had scored that goal maybe we are talking a different result, but this is polo.

“I think it’s just bad luck,” Caset said. “I think we are going up. The horses are doing better but not 100 percent yet and the team is not 100 percent yet. For the next game we will do better.”

In the final minute, Lechuza Caracas’ Polito Pieres, dribbling the ball from both sides of his pony, scored an insurance goal with 1:10 left in the game.

Piaget's Sapo Caset leans out of the saddle to keep possession of the ball on a run downfield, with Polito Pieres of Lechuza Caracas closely defending
Piaget’s Sapo Caset leans out of the saddle to keep possession of the ball on a run downfield, with Polito Pieres of Lechuza Caracas closely defending

Caset led Piaget’s scoring with five goals, three on penalty shots.

Astrada, who showed no ill effects from a strained groin muscle that forced him out of the sixth chukker of the March 1 Les Armour Cup semifinals, added three goals and 23-year-old Nacho Badiola had two goals and played well defensively including stopping a potential Pieres goal.

Piaget team captain Melissa Ganzi also defended well against Pieres bumping him out of a play on his way to goal in the fourth chukker and took Lechuza Caracas player-padrone Victor Vargas out of several plays.

Pieres finished with seven goals, two on penalty shots. Seven-goaler Francisco Elizalde had three goals and Vargas added two goals. Ten-goaler Juan Martin Nero was scoreless.

“We had a great last chukker,” Piaget coach Joey Casey said. “We had a chance to tie it and we just had some bad luck. We were right there and that’s the good thing.

“The thing is we can play a lot better,” Casey said. “Lechuza played really well today. I think we’re going to be fine. We can improve; that’s the best thing about it. We’ll get better.”

Piaget scored the opening goal of the game when Badiola scored in a crowd at the 5:43 mark after Astrada came up with a big hit to get the ball downfield to Badiola.

The game was close after that with Lechuza Caracas taking a 3-2 lead at the end of the first chukker. Piaget tied the game at 4-4 on Caset’s penalty shot and Vargas came right back with a goal for a 5-4 lead at the end of the second chukker.

The teams kept it close in the third chukker with Piaget missing three scoring opportunities and Lechuza Caracas taking a 7-5 lead at the half.

“We changed some things at halftime and tried to hit the ball a little more,” Casey said. “That seemed to work. We did much better with our throw-ins in the second half and our set plays went better.”

Lechuza Caracas had a three-goal advantage in the fourth and fifth chukkers but Piaget battled back with some heart-stopping heroics in the final chukker.

Sapo Caset outraces Lechuza Caracas players Polito Pieres and Francisco Elizalde to keep possession of the ball
Sapo Caset outraces Lechuza Caracas players Polito Pieres and Francisco Elizalde to keep possession of the ball

With Astrada and Caset taking turns creating plays, Caset scored on a 30-yard penalty shot with 4:41 to trail by only two goals. Forty seconds later Caset unleashed a 120-yard shot to goal with 3:40 left closing the gap to one goal.

“We thought in the last chukker if we scored one more goal things were going to change,” Astrada said. “For being our first game with Nacho we played good. We have to adjust a couple things and we can do a little better.

“They played very well; they were well-organized,” Astrada said. “I think they are one of the favorites. To do well against them is good for us. We are not out of it; we can still do well. We haven’t played too much together so the more we work the better we will get.”

Badiola, 23, the son of former 9-goaler Juan Badiola, is making his IPC 26-goal debut this season.

“I didn’t play well,” Badiola said. “I need to make some adjustments and play better. I have to go back a bit more and try to get a little more rhythm. The team played good but I can do better for sure. Lechuza is always a tough team.”

Vargas was pleased with the win but said his team also can play better. He was also impressed with Grand Champions Polo Club-based Piaget.

“Sapo is a good player; he had that very nice goal in the last chukker and Melissa was playing well,” Vargas said. “We need to play better. For now it’s okay. It is a tough tournament; all these teams are nice and players are good.”

In the other Saturday game, ERG defeated Orchard Hill, 16-11. Nine-goaler Tincho Merlos had a game-high seven goals and Paco de Narvaez added six goals.

Grand Champions Polo Club-based Audi plays C. V. Whitney Cup champion Alegria Sunday at noon on Field 2. The game will pit brothers Gonzalito and Nico Pieres of Audi against brother-in-law Mariano Aguerre of Alegria.

Piaget next plays Orchard Hill on Thursday at 10 a.m. Both teams are 0-1.

First played in 1974, the 26-goal USPA Gold Cup has been played at various polo clubs until it found a home at IPC in 2007.

When the USPA awarded IPC the Gold Cup in 2007, the International Polo Club Palm Beach, home of the 26-goal C. V. Whitney Cup Tournament and U.S. Open Championship, sealed its place in history as host of all three legs of the Triple Crown.

Piaget is saluting IPC’s tenth anniversary with the launch of its new luxury Polo FortyFive Black watch which will join their successful collection of polo watches first introduced in the late 1970s.

USPA PIAGET GOLD CUP AUDI/PIAGET SCHEDULE

Sunday, March 10: Alegria vs. Audi, noon

Thursday, March 14: Piaget vs. Orchard Hill, 10 a.m.; Zacara vs. Audi, 4 p.m.

Sunday, March 17: Valiente vs. Audi, 10 a.m.; Piaget vs. ERG, 3 p.m.

Wednesday, March 20: Piaget Gold Cup Semifinals, 2, 4 p.m.

Thursday, March 21: Butler Handicap Semifinals, Gold Cup subsidiary, 10 a.m., noon

Sunday, March 24: Butler Handicap Final, noon; USPA Piaget Gold Cup Final, 3 p.m.

Tuesday, March 26: U.S. Open begins, schedule, pairings to be announced.

AUDI/PIAGET TOURNAMENT LINEUP

March 7 – March 24, USPA Piaget Gold Cup

March 26 – April 21, 109th Maserati U.S. Open Polo Championship

GRAND CHAMPIONS POLO CLUB

WHERE: On the corner of South Shore Boulevard and Lake Worth Road, Wellington.

INFORMATION: There are great field side views for tournament action at the home base of pro teams Audi and Piaget. Everyone is welcome to watch polo during the spring and fall tournament season and other special events including the Buzz Welker Memorial Junior Tournament, Women’s Championship Tournament and Gay Polo League Tournament.

Sharon Robb for Phelps Media Group, Inc. International

MEDIA CONTACT:
Phelps Media Group, Inc.
12012 South Shore Blvd #105
Wellington, FL 33414
561-753-3389 (phone)
561-753-3386 (fax)
pmginfo@phelpsmediagroup.com
PhelpsMediaGroup.com

Audi Wins Sudden Death Thriller in USPA Piaget Gold Cup Opener over Zorzal, 8-7

Audi’s Gonzalito Pieres taking control of the ball and driving downfield against tight Zorzal defense from Fred Mannix. Photos – Alex Pacheco.

WELLINGTON, FL – March 7, 2013 – In a textbook polo finish, 10-goaler Gonzalito Pieres took the knock-in and drove to the other end of field to score the winning goal and lead Audi to a thrilling 8-7 sudden death victory over Zorzal on opening day of the USPA Piaget Gold Cup.

Pieres showed why he is one of the world’s eight top-ranked players with his ball-control run and deft mallet play scoring just 35 seconds into the overtime period.

The textbook play was mapped out in the players’ tent after regulation play ended with the game tied at 7-7 Thursday at International Polo Club Palm Beach in front of a packed field attendance.

“Their four guys were really deep so we decided to play more individual,” Gonzalito Pieres said. “I was to take the knock-in, Jeff (Hall) went to No. 1, Nico (Pieres) No. 3 and Juancito (Bollini) No. 2 and we would go outside so I could create more speed and it worked.

“Sometimes it doesn’t work, but that time it worked,” Pieres said. “I am happy that we won but I think it’s important that we need to improve to be where we want to be.”

Added Hall, “We’re happy to win, but like Gonzalito said we have a long ways to go. This is definitely a step in a positive direction. Sudden death is sudden death; you need a little bit of luck. Plays like that don’t always work out like that. We had the right guy running to goal, that’s for sure.”

Audi team captain Marc Ganzi watched the game in street clothes after being told by doctors he needed to allow his fractured thumb to heal. Ganzi, who has been playing well despite a knee injury and fractured thumb, expects to be sidelined for at least two weeks.

Wellington High School's Juancito Bollini, 16-year-old substitute player for Audi team captain Marc Ganzi, who sat out the game with a thumb injury
Wellington High School’s Juancito Bollini, 16-year-old substitute player for Audi team captain Marc Ganzi, who sat out the game with a thumb injury

The player-padrone put his faith in 16-year-old Wellington High School student Juancito Bollini, the son of former eight-goaler Juan Bollini, to replace him in the lineup. The young Bollini played beyond his years and held his own against more-experienced and physical players who outweighed him by at least fifty pounds.

“I have known Juancito my whole life,” Ganzi said. “That family is very close to us and we’ve watched these kids grow up. We’ve gotten to watch his development as a player. He is cool in the head and has a lot of intelligence and poise for his age and I think today that’s what he showed us. He had to hit some big back-handers under duress and some big moments of the game. He did awesome today. It was easy to give him this opportunity; he is like another son to me.”

It was the teenager’s 26-goal tournament debut and “opportunity of a lifetime,” he said. Before Thursday’s game, the highest-rated tournament Bollini had competed in was 12 goals.

“I was nervous for three days when they told me I would be playing,” said Bollini, rated at one goal. “I played a practice before the game and that helped me a lot.

“I have learned from a combination of players but mostly my dad,” Bollini said.

No one was prouder than his father, Juan Bollini, who has played and worked with the Ganzi family for fourteen years.

“I tried to tell him as little as possible before the game because I didn’t want to make him nervous,” the elder Bollini said. “I know he is playing with the best player in the world. I prefer Gonzalito to tell him what to do because as a father I don’t want to be like a soccer mom. I respect whatever they tell him.”

Nico Pieres led Audi’s balanced scoring attack with four goals, Gonzalito Pieres had three goals and Hall scored the tying goal with 4:38 left in the sixth chukker after his steal and long run to goal.

“This win was important because we played against a new team with four really good players; we expected a tough game,” Nico Pieres said. “We played quite good; I think we could play a bit better. There are no easy games, never.”

Audi's Nico Pieres reaches for the ball from charging Zorzal defense as Audi teammates Jeff Hall (green helmet) and Gonzalito Pieres follow the play
Audi’s Nico Pieres reaches for the ball from charging Zorzal defense as Audi teammates Jeff Hall (green helmet) and Gonzalito Pieres follow the play

Pieres was impressed with his older brother’s sudden death goal execution.

“We talked about the winning play,” Pieres said. “We wanted him to take the ball with Juancito, Jeff and me to start blocking and then we would see what happens. If Gonzo had a chance to go on his own like he did, that was it. If not then there was a play for me or Jeff.

“This was the first game of the Gold Cup and it’s always important to win the first game,” Pieres said. “Our team is getting better and Juancito played really good. It was a tough game for him because he had to mark 6- and 7-goal players. I remember when I was 16. I didn’t start playing 26-goal until I was 17.”

Zorzal, one of two new teams in the tournament, featured 6-goalers Fred Mannix and Jason Crowder and 7-goalers Marianito Obregon and Mariano Gonzalez.

Obregon led his team’s scoring with three goals, Mannix had two and Gonzalez and Crowder each scored one.

In other Thursday games, Zacara, led by Facundo Pieres’ 10 goals, routed Coca-Cola, 17-7, and Valiente defeated Mt. Brilliant, 15-6. Ten-goalers Adolfo Cambiaso and Pelon Stirling combined for nine goals for Valiente.

Audi’s Grand Champions Polo Club mate Piaget opens play on Saturday at 2 p.m. against Lechuza Caracas. Audi plays again on Sunday against C.V. Whitney Cup champion Alegria at noon.

First played in 1974, the 26-goal USPA Gold Cup has been played at various polo clubs but found a home at IPC in 2007.

When the USPA awarded IPC the Gold Cup in 2007, the International Polo Club Palm Beach, home of the 26-goal C. V. Whitney Cup Tournament and U.S. Open Championship, sealed its place in history as host of all three legs of the Triple Crown.

Piaget is saluting IPC’s tenth anniversary with the launch of its new luxury Polo FortyFive Black watch which will join their successful collection of polo watches first introduced in the late 1970s.

USPA PIAGET GOLD CUP AUDI/PIAGET SCHEDULE

Saturday, March 9: Lechuza Caracas vs. Piaget, 2 p.m.

Sunday, March 10: Alegria vs. Audi, noon

Wednesday, March 13: Piaget vs. Orchard Hill, 4 p.m.

Thursday, March 14: Zacara vs. Audi, 4 p.m.

Sunday, March 17: Valiente vs. Audi, 10 a.m.; Piaget vs. ERG, 3 p.m.

Wednesday, March 20: Piaget Gold Cup Semifinals, 2, 4 p.m.

Thursday, March 21: Butler Handicap Semifinals, Gold Cup subsidiary, 10 a.m., noon

Sunday, March 24: Butler Handicap Final, noon; USPA Piaget Gold Cup Final, 3 p.m.

Tuesday, March 26: U.S. Open begins, schedule, pairings to be announced.

AUDI/PIAGET TOURNAMENT LINEUP

March 7 – March 24, USPA Piaget Gold Cup

March 26 – April 21, 109th Maserati U.S. Open Polo Championship

GRAND CHAMPIONS POLO CLUB

WHERE: On the corner of South Shore Boulevard and Lake Worth Road, Wellington.

INFORMATION: There are great field side views for tournament action at the home base of pro teams Audi and Piaget. Everyone is welcome to watch polo during the spring and fall tournament season and other special events including the Buzz Welker Memorial Junior Tournament, Women’s Championship Tournament and Gay Polo League Tournament.

Sharon Robb for Phelps Media Group, Inc. International

MEDIA CONTACT:
Phelps Media Group, Inc.
12012 South Shore Blvd #105
Wellington, FL 33414
561-753-3389 (phone)
561-753-3386 (fax)
pmginfo@phelpsmediagroup.com
PhelpsMediaGroup.com

Audi, Piaget Begin Second 26-Goal Tournament USPA Piaget Gold Cup Thursday

8-goaler Nico Pieres.

WELLINGTON, FL – March 5, 2013 — With the C. V. Whitney Cup in the books, the second 26 high-goal tournament gets under way Thursday with three games in the USPA Piaget Gold Cup.

Grand Champions Polo Club-based pro teams Audi and Piaget are among favorites in the 11-team tournament, the second jewel of America’s Triple Crown of polo.

It is the sixth consecutive year, Piaget, the luxury Swiss watchmaker, will sponsor the tournament at International Polo Club Palm Beach.

There are three brackets of play with all eight of the world’s 10-goal players competing.

Audi opens play on Thursday against new team Zorzal at 2 p.m.

Audi features 10-goaler Gonzalito Pieres, 8-goaler Nico Pieres, 7-goaler Jeff Hall, one of the highest ranked U.S. players, and team captain Marc Ganzi, rated at one goal.

Zorzal, one of two new teams in the tournament, has 6-goaler Fred Mannix, 6-goaler Jason Crowder, 7-goaler Marianito Obregon and 7-goaler Mariano Gonzalez.

Audi’s tournament bracket includes Coca-Cola and Mt. Brilliant.

Other Thursday games are Valiente vs. Mt. Brilliant at 10 a.m. and Zacara vs. Coca-Cola at 4 p.m.

Piaget opens play on Saturday at 2 p.m. against Lechuza Caracas.

Piaget, one of only two teams with two 10-goalers, features 10-goalers Miguel Astrada and Sapo Caset, 6-goaler Nacho Badiola, making his 26-goal debut at IPC at age 23, and team captain Melissa Ganzi.

10-goaler Miguel Astrada
10-goaler Miguel Astrada

“Piaget is a very good team,” Caset said. “We know we are going to play better than we did in the Whitney Cup. We have a good bracket and we had a week to get ready for the Gold Cup. It’s going to be a great tournament.”

Said Piaget coach Joey Casey, “We got a really good draw, so we’re happy.”

Piaget’s tournament bracket includes Lechuza Caracas, ERG and Orchard Hill.

The other Saturday game is ERG against Orchard Hill at 4 p.m.

Last year’s Piaget Gold Cup champion Valiente II is not competing since team captain Robert Jornayvaz returned to his classes at University of Virginia this past fall. His father Bob Jornayvaz is fielding a team that includes 10-goalers Adolfo Cambiaso and Pelon Stirling, two members of last year’s champion team.

First played in 1974, the 26-goal USPA Gold Cup has been played at various polo clubs but found a home at IPC in 2007.

First introduced at Oakbrook Polo Club in Illinois, it then headed north to Milwaukee Polo Club in 1975 and remained there until 1978. After moving south in 1979, the Gold Cup continued a 17-year stretch at Palm Beach Polo and Country Club and moved to Boca Raton’s Royal Palm Polo & Sports Club in 1996. In 2002, the Gold Cup headed north to Greenwich Polo Club where play resumed until 2004. Aiken, S.C. then hosted the Gold Cup in 2005 and 2006.

When the USPA awarded IPC the Gold Cup in 2007, the International Polo Club Palm Beach, home of the 26-goal C. V. Whitney Cup Tournament and U.S. Open Championship, sealed its place in history as host of all three legs of the Triple Crown.

Piaget is saluting IPC’s tenth anniversary with the launch of its new luxury Polo FortyFive Black watch which will join their successful collection of polo watches first introduced in the late 1970s.

USPA PIAGET GOLD CUP AUDI/PIAGET SCHEDULE

Thursday, March 7: Zorzal vs. Audi, 2 p.m.

Saturday, March 9: Lechuza Caracas vs. Piaget, 2 p.m.

Sunday, March 10: Alegria vs. Audi, noon

Wednesday, March 13: Piaget vs. Orchard Hill, 4 p.m.

Thursday, March 14: Zacara vs. Audi, 4 p.m.

Sunday, March 17: Valiente vs. Audi, 10 a.m.; Piaget vs. ERG, 3 p.m.

Wednesday, March 20: Piaget Gold Cup Semifinals, 2, 4 p.m.

Thursday, March 21: Butler Handicap Semifinals, Gold Cup subsidiary, 10 a.m., noon

Sunday, March 24: Butler Handicap Final, noon; USPA Piaget Gold Cup Final, 3 p.m.

Tuesday, March 26: U.S. Open begins, schedule, pairings to be announced.

AUDI/PIAGET TOURNAMENT LINEUP

March 7 – March 24, USPA Piaget Gold Cup

March 26 – April 21, 109th Maserati U.S. Open Polo Championship

GRAND CHAMPIONS POLO CLUB

WHERE: On the corner of South Shore Boulevard and Lake Worth Road, Wellington.

INFORMATION: There are great field side views for tournament action at the home base of pro teams Audi and Piaget. Everyone is welcome to watch polo during the spring and fall tournament season and other special events including the Buzz Welker Memorial Junior Tournament, Women’s Championship Tournament and Gay Polo League Tournament.

Sharon Robb for Phelps Media Group, Inc. International

MEDIA CONTACT:
Phelps Media Group, Inc.
12012 South Shore Blvd #105
Wellington, FL 33414
561-753-3389 (phone)
561-753-3386 (fax)
pmginfo@phelpsmediagroup.com
PhelpsMediaGroup.com