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A D V E N T U R E
S P O R T
Jumbo Polo
at
Meghauly
World Elephant Polo Championships 2008
By Dinesh Rai
The
elephants are all lined up at the touch line where the players
of the two teams preparing for the up coming game are gathered.
Some players are choosing sticks which are a few metres long.
Others are sizing up the elephant they are about to mount. One
after the other, the elephants sit down on the ground to let the
player climb up. Once up on the elephant’s back, it is time
to decide which stick to use, judging from how comfortable it
feels to swing it from that high perch. It’s not an easy
task, hitting a ball from that height with a long flexible stick.
Of course some of the playing elephants are almost half the size
of the big ones and the sticks used are considerably shorter.
Nevertheless, a certain amount of skill has to be acquired before
one is able to accurately hit a ball and send it in the intended
direction. Some accomplished players do score a few goals from
25 yards out, inciting loud cheers from the spectators.
There were a few rule changes in this edition of the World Elephant
Polo Championships at Meghauly organized by Tiger Tops, Chitwan
from 30 November to 6 December. The playing field was a little
smaller than in previous years which consequently led to goals
being scored more quickly. It therefore also made the game more
exciting. The Umpire (usually Prabal Thapa; relieved occasionally
by Yadav Bantawa) sits on the tallest elephant controlling the
game. The game begins when the Umpire throws the ball between
the two teams at the centre of the field and each half of the
game (chukka) lasts for ten minutes with a fifteen minute break
between the two chukkas. Both elephants and sides are changed
at half time to ensure neither team gets the advantage of having
swifter or smarter elephants. The pachyderms are controlled by
their mahouts while the players sit behind them. The games can
be anything from a one sided thumping to a fiercely contested
one where one team looses by a goal. In fact one of the matches
was decided by a goal in the last few seconds and another by a
golden goal.
A team from England won the World Elephant Polo Championships
this year. The English ‘Air Tusker’ team, captained
by Robert McKenzie, raised the Tiger Tops World Cup Trophy after
defeating Chivas Scotland in an epic encounter. In another encounter,
Kristjan Edwards led the Tiger Tops Tuskers to last gasp victory
in The Chivas Olympic Quaich.
England had beaten Nepal National Parks (6-4) to reach the final
while Chivas Scotland had narrowly ousted Australia Pukka Chukkas
(6-5) in the other exciting Semi-final. On the other
hand, Tiger Tops Tuskers beat the British Gurkhas team (16-6)
to reach the final of the Chivas Olympic Quaiche while the New
York Blues defeated the Indian Tigers (6-1) to meet the Tuskers
in the final.
World Elephant Polo Championships was started in 1982 by co-founders
Jim Edwards, Chairman of Tiger Mountain Group of Companies and
James Manclark of Scotland and registered in Nepal as World Elephant
Polo Association (WEPA). The game is also played in Thailand and
Sri Lanka under WEPA rules and regulations.
Eight teams from around the world took part in the thrilling Polo
Championships this year. The games were attended by the Duke of
Argyll, who also took part in the competition, the Minister of
Forestry, Kiran Gurung and the British Ambassador to Nepal, Andrew
Hall. The games were telecast to a worldwide audience by B.B.C.
Television. Each year, the Polo Championship raises money for
charity, brings world attention to Nepal, entertains a crowd of
people and attracts players from around the world. The players
and guests put away their mobiles, and enjoy a week of polo, safari
and camaraderie in the Chitwan National Park hosted by Tiger Tops.
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