Joe Barry Cup

Grand Champions Polo Club Makes Team Debut Thursday At IPC In Joe Barry Cup

By Arianna Delin, Sharon Robb for Grand Champions Polo Club
Grand Champions Polo Club’s 20-goal team will make its 2017 season debut Thursday at International Polo Club Palm Beach.

The team of Grant Ganzi, 2, Inaki Laprida, 7, Nic Roldan, 8, and Juancito Bollini, 3, playing together for the first time, will compete in the eight-team Joe Barry Cup, the first of three 20-goal tournaments they are scheduled to play.

Grand Champions Polo Club will play Goose Creek (Maureen Brennan, 1, Peke Gonzalez, 4, Mariano Gonzalez, 7, Tomas Garcia Del Rio, 8) in Bracket II play in Thursday’s first game at noon followed by Coca Cola against Postage Stamp Farm at 3 p.m.

Grant Ganzi. Photo by ChukkerTV

The Joe Barry Cup begins on Wednesday with two games. Villa del Lago Modere, coming off Sunday’s Herbie Pennell Cup title, plays La Indiana at 11 a.m.followed by Mt. Brilliant against Tonkawa at 3 p.m.

Other Bracket II teams are Coca Cola and Postage Stamp Farm, runner-up in Sunday’s Herbie Pennell Cup. Bracket I teams are Villa del Lago Modere, La Indiana, Mt. Brilliant and Tonkawa.

Grand Champions’ other pool play games are the featured Sunday game on Engel & Volkers Field against Coca Cola at 3 p.m. and Jan. 12 against Postage Stamp Farm at noon.

Other teams are:

Coca Cola: Gillian Johnston, Julian de Lusarreta, Julio Arellano, Del Walton.

La Indiana: Michael Bickford, Jeff Hall, Mike Azzaro, Ruki Baillieu.

Mt. Brilliant: Bo Goodman, Jason Crowder, Santi Chavanne, Julian Daniels.

Postage Stamp Farm: Annabelle Gundlach, Brandon Phillips, Mariano Aguerre, Kris Kampsen.

Tonkawa: Jeff Hildebrand, Costi Caset, Sapo Caset, Facundo Obregon.

Villa de Lago Modere: Jim Zenni, Agustin Obregon, Hilario Ulloa, Carlucho Arellano.

Last year Ganzi and Roldan played together in the Joe Barry Cup with brothers Freddie and Julian Mannix for Audi-Millarville.

Nic Roldan. File Photo

Ganzi, 18, raised to two goals this year, is one of the youngest players competing. The two-time USPA National Youth Tournament Series champion is a third generation player to win the coveted USPA North American Cup which his grandfather, father and mother also won. He recently made his international debut for Team USA in wins over Canada in the Royal Polo Match and Uruguay in the International Cup in Wellington.

Laprida, 27, is a seven-goaler from Argentina and younger brother of Magoo Laprida. Inaki Laprida made his Argentine Open debut this past season. He started playing the game with his father, Christian, who was a top player on the Revlon team in the early 1990s. He competed with Faraway in the 2016 East Coast Open. He was raised to eight goals in Argentina.

Bollini, 20, is the oldest son of Argentine former 8-goaler Juan Bollini, and rising young star raised to three goals this season. He is a two-time USPA National Youth Tournament Series national champion. He has played in several high goal tournaments including the 26-goal USPA Piaget Gold Cup where he filled in for an injured Marc Ganzi at age 16 and was a member of the winning Audi team in the 2015 East Coast Open in Greenwich.

Roldan, 34, is one of America’s top-rated players at eight goals. He is coming off successful seasons in England with La Indiana and Wellington including helping Team USA win its fifth consecutive International Cup in November at Grand Champions. At 15, he was the youngest player ever to win the U.S. Open 1998 with Escue.

Last year’s Joe Barry Cup winner was Palm Beach Illustrated/Technogym (Nacho Badiola, Jared Zenni, Facundo Obregon, Jesse Bray) with a 14-13 win over Villa del Lago (Jim Zenni, Agustin Obregon, Hilario Ulloa, Gringo Colombres). Facundo Obregon was named MVP.

The tournament, created in 2005, is named after Joe Barry, a big-hitting 9-goal ranked American player, born and raised in Truscott, Tex., and one of the most well-liked players in the game. He dominated polo in the 1960s and 1970s.

Juancito Bollini. Photo by ChukkerTV

The six-time U.S. Open winner was inducted into the Polo Hall of Fame in 1999. He also won three Gold Cups, three Silver Cups as well as Coronation and Camacho Cup trophies. Barry died on May 18, 2002 at age 58.

USPA Polo Network is live streaming the IPC winter season with content from Wellington-based ChukkerTV, leaders in polo broadcasting.