January 2021 Polo Players' Edition

Page 14

INSTRUCTORS FORUM

Close play Women’s polo requires focus and discipline By Julio Arellano

It is great to see women’s polo really growing. Recently, I’ve had some opportunities to coach women’s teams. It’s not hard to believe, but women are definitely more apt for coaching then men are. While women’s and men’s polo may have differences, I try not to coach differently. The coaching I’ve done for [my daughter], Hope’s teams has been for tournaments like the U.S. Women’s Open and the women’s Texas Open, so I try to get them to play like we do in men’s high-goal polo, playing that style. The difference is you typically don’t have the really big hitters so they are playing a lot closer together, following each other up and doing a lot more rotation. I’ll stay with the basic principles of man-to-man coverage because women have gotten so good, that, like in mixed polo, you don’t want to be chasing your opponent. It is always the player that gets free that will hurt you. Women’s polo is still the same style and uses the same ideas. In women’s polo there is no Tommy Biddle that will hit 150-yard shots so when you are going for the long passes don’t go beyond about 60 yards. If you get beyond the point where the hitter can reach you for a pass, turn around and follow behind. The key is to hit and run. Go to an open area, mark the man and keep the ball moving. Use your horsepower and open the game up. Don’t slow it down and make it into a lower-goal match. In Houston, Hope took some of my old high-goal mares. I would tell her to look for an open area and do a quick release, even if nobody’s there. It is the No. 1s job to get there, it’s not the hitter’s job to find the No. 1 to hit to. Because players are generally marked much closer in women’s polo, the first person might not be able to get the hit, so someone has to be next. Everybody follows in behind and gets a slot. It is similar to when you are driving down the highway and you don’t want to leave an opening where somebody from the next lane can come in. Everybody has got to be matched up with an opponent, following one behind the other—No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 and back. It’s rare that the No. 1 is going to get the ball and run the whole way down the field and score. So, it’s super important to have everybody back each other up. If the No. 1 misses or can’t get to the ball, the No. 2 is right behind her to pick it up, then the No. 3 and then the back. If you 12 POLO P L A Y E R S E D I T I O N

leave an opening between your players, the opponent can come in and get the ball if your player loses it. Women tend to be much more disciplined and you see this when they are both playing with you and against you so take that into consideration when strategizing. The closer marking sometimes bunches the game up a bit so you have to try to open it up. In the higher-goal flights of women’s polo, you generally have two stronger players and two that aren’t as experienced so mark up your players according to ability. As a coach, I put the best player marking the best player on the other team, or the second-best player can mark the best player if they are really well-mounted and can mark another player really well. If the other team has its strongest player at No. 4 and we have a lower-goal player at No. 1, I’m not going to match them up. A lot of women’s polo is played as four chukkers rather than six. That means you can’t have a weak first or second chukker like you do playing a six-chukker match, which allows time to recuperate. If you’re down 3-0 in the first, there is very little chance you are going to come back. You have got to plan out your team’s horses so you don’t have a very weak chukker. There is no warm-up chukker. You’ve got to get right into the game that first chukker, period. Just like in mixed polo, it is difficult to play a horse that is just a runner with no handle, or a horse that is tough to play. Handiness is making a comeback. Even in Argentina, the game is changing in the sense that players need something that can run like a high-goal pony and still be as handy as a six-goal pony. You can’t just have handle without speed, and you can’t have speed without handle. In the higher-levels of both women’s and mixed polo, you have to be, not just wellmounted but, really well-mounted. Overall, game strategy is not much different then in mixed polo. When knocking in, again, you generally don’t have really long-ball hitters so you have to take that into consideration. It makes the field a little smaller and makes it harder. You can’t hold the ball and wait for your players to line up, then hit a 100-yard pass from a standstill. It is a much quicker release. The players are more concentrated, so there are not as many places to go. When Hope knocked in, she would pick one of two sides and look for the No. 2 as long as that player stays


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