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2008 KING'S CUP ELEPHANT POLO TOURNAMENT
March 31 - April 6, 2008
At Anantara Golden Triangle Resort, Chiang Rai
Spectator entrance is free of charge.

 
 
Photos © Cedric Arnold Photo © TAT
Anantara Golden Triangle Trumpets 2008 Elephant Polo
Tournament with Celebrity Kick off Game
Photo © Kris LeBoutillier
Photo © Kris LeBoutillier
Photo © Kris LeBoutillier
 
Thailand’s highly popular King’s Cup Elephant Polo Tournament returns to the hills in 2008. Event organiser Anantara Resorts announced that the 2008 tournament would take place from March 31 to April 6 in the northern-most region of the country known as the Golden Triangle.

This popular event, ranked as the sixth largest event on the Thai tourism calendar was introduced to Thailand in 2001 and is a charitable event that raises money for the country’s National Elephant Institute in Lampang, Northern Thailand. Hosting the event in the far North ensures that the international spotlight is focused onto a very unique and special part of Thailand, showcasing the beauty of the natural landscape of the Golden Triangle region — the natural home of elephants.

Through its own Elephant Camp located within the grounds of the Anantara Resort Golden Triangle, the property’s focus on the future of Thailand’s pachyderm population and forms an integral part of the resort’s operations. On an on-going basis, resident Director of Elephants, John Roberts, works closely with the Thai government’s Elephant Conservation Centre in Lampang to develop Anantara’s camp as an elephant sanctuary. The funds raised from the 2006 tournament are being used to custom-build an elephant-sized ambulance which will be donated to the National Elephant Institute.

To date the tournament has raised over US$175,000 for the National Elephant Institute, which provides medical care, sustenance, employment, welfare and mahout training to Thailand’s elephant population. It is estimated that Thailand has around 2500 domesticated elephants and 1500 wild elephants. This is down from an elephant population of around 50,000 in 1950 and 100,000 in 1900.

The 2006 tournament featured the return of Tom Claytor, a bush pilot who loves to play elephant polo, Margie McDougal, the most experienced female player in the world, Torquhil Ian Campbell, 13th Duke of Argyll, an experienced captain from ThisistheLife.com Scotland, All Blacks team headed by Justin Sampson (Sambo), Bernie Fraser, New Zealand’s former world-ranking rugby player.

Anantara Resort Golden Triangle is located 60km north of Chiang Rai’s international airport.

For enquiries and reservations, please call + 66 (0) 5378 4084 or + 66 (0) 2 477 0760
or e-mail: infogt@anantara.com

For more information, visit www.anantaraelephantpolo.com

ELEPHANT POLO HISTORY AND RULES OF THE GAME
Please click to view

For information on Elephant Polo, please visit the World Elephant Polo Association web site www.elephantpolo.com



RELATED ARTICLES

THE NATIONAL ELEPHANT INSTITUTE (NEI)/
Thai Elephant Conservation Centre

Under The Royal Patronage of HRH Princess Galyani Vadhana, Lampang Province
http://www.tatnews.org/others/1785.asp
Please click to view

For further inquiries and bookings, please contact:
Reservations Department
E-mail: info@anantara.com
Tel: +66 (0) 3252 0250
Fax: +66 (0) 3252 0259

ELEPHANT POLO HISTORY AND RULES OF THE GAME

The World Elephant Polo Association established the governing rules for Elephant Polo in 1982, the association has its headquarters at the Tiger Tops Jungle Lodge in the Royal Chitwan Park in Nepal which is where the World Elephant Polo Tournament is played every year on a grass airfield in Megauly.

One of the games founding fathers, Jim Edwards of ‘Tiger Tops Jungle Lodge’ in Nepal, describes elephant polo as being like "playing golf from the back of a slow — moving Range Rover." It should be pointed out that the World Wildlife Fund has declared that this sport poses no threat to the elephants participating in the games.

In 2001 two new competitions were launched - the King’s Cup Elephant Polo Tournament in Hua Hin Thailand, organised by the Anantara Resort and Spa and held each September and the Ceylon Elephant Polo Association Championships, held on Weligama beach in front of Taprobane Island in southern Sri Lanka each February.

ORGANISATION OF THE GAME

  • In Thailand the game is played with three players on each team on a marked pitch of 100 metres by 60 metres using a standard size polo ball.
  • The game consists of two 7-minute chukkas of playing time, with an interval of 15 minutes. The whistle blown by the referee stops and starts the play.
  • The pitch is marked with a centre line; a circle with a radius of 10 metres in the centre of the field, and a semi-circle, in front of the goals, with a radius of 20 metres, measured from the centre of the goal line at either end of the pitch which is referred to as the D.
  • Elephants and ends are changed at half time.
  • The scoring system awards two points to a winning team and one point apiece to teams which draw.

RULES

The rules are similar to those of horse polo but some key points to note are that the elephants have a player and a mahout, ladies are allowed to use both hands and elongated sticks of around two metres in length are used.

Additionally there are some elephant specific rules:

  • Any team having more than 3 elephants in one half of the pitch is judged to have committed a foul.
  • No more than 2 elephants may be in the D at one time – one from the attacking team and one from the defending team.
  • There are no restrictions as to the height, weight or sex of the elephants.
  • No elephants may lie down in front of the goal mouth. To do so will constitute a foul. A free hit is awarded to the opposing side from the semi-circle in front of the goal.
  • An elephant may not pick up the ball in its trunk during play. To do so constitutes a foul and a free hit is awarded to the opposing team from the spot where the ball was picked up. The defending players must be 15 metres from the spot.
  • Teams are made up from the pool of elephants and balanced out as fairly as possible bearing in mind size and speed of the elephant. Once the pool of elephants has been selected, each elephant is categorized and marked as A,B,C,D, E, F.
  • Sugar cane or rice balls packed with vitamins (molasses and rock salt) shall be given to the elephants at the end of each match and a cold beer, or soft drink, to the elephant drivers and not vice versa.

THE HEALTH AND WELFARE OF THE ELEPHANTS USED IN T.E.P.A. TOURNAMENTS IS OF PRIME CONCERN, ABUSE OF THE ELEPHANT IS CONSIDERED TO BE THE MOST SERIOUS OFFENCE.

HANDICAPPING

Handicaps are assigned by the T.E.P.A. Handicapping Committee and handicapped players may come under one of two categories

  1. Professional horse polo players. The handicap awarded to any registered professional horse polo player shall total half of their horse polo handicap.
  2. Professional and seasoned elephant polo players. A half goal handicap will be assigned to any player who has played in three or more World Series (WEPA, TEPA or CEPA) elephant polo championships anywhere in the world and does not have a horse polo handicap.

Players handicaps are decided before the tournament commences. Player handicaps may not be changed during the tournament.

Should a team's total handicap when summed result in a half goal handicap, the handicap is rounded down.

   
  IMPORTANT
Event dates and programme details may be subject to change.
Many of the festivals and events listed on Thailand's official calendar of annual events are traditional Buddhist or folk festivals, the date of which is either determined by the Buddhist lunar calendar and waxing and waning moon. These are not staged events. The festivals reflect the rhythm of life in rural Thai villages and local traditions as observed in times past.
To ensure you have the most updated information, please reconfirm details prior to travel.

Contact:
Tourism Authority of Thailand
Email:
info@tat.or.th
Website:
www.tat.or.th
Tel: +66 (0) 2250 5500 (120 automatic lines)
Fax: +66 (0) 2250 5511 (two automatic lines)

FOR EVENT INFORMATION,
please call 1672.

Address:
1600 Petchaburi Road, Makkasan, Rajatevee
Bangkok 10400
Thailand

 
 
 

Copyright Tourism Authority of Thailand. All Rights Reserved.