Polocrosse, King of the One Horse Sports, is a joyful mixture
of polo, lacrosse and netball and is the most fun you can have on a horse.
It is played by both sex's, from the age of six, to spirited
souls in their seventies, and is one of the few sports where females compete on
an equal footing with their male counterparts. It is a true family sport, and it
has been known for three generations of one family to play, not always in the
same team though.

Polocrosse is a true team sport. No one player can take charge
of the game and no player can canter prettily about on the outskirts of play and
take no part.
The polo element is reflected by the fact that the game is
played on horseback, with a ball which, instead of being made of wood, is sponge
rubber with a rubber coating. There is a pair of goalposts at each end of the
field and periods of play are called chukkas. Most of the rules are concerned
with horse and rider safety. About there, the similarity between the two sports
ends.
The lacrosse part comes from the racquet, a meter long reinforced bamboo stick with a squash racquet head and loose
net.
The netball element is the field. It is divided into unequal
thirds, and the attack player (number 1) and the opposing defense player (number 3) are the only ones allowed into the goal scoring
thirds which are marked by a penalty line 27.5m from the end of the field. The
ball must not be in the racquet when the rider is traveling over the penalty
line and must be bounced or passed over the line. The number 2 player is
restricted to the midfield.

A goal can be scored from within the 27.5m area and outside
the 10m diameter half circle in front of the goal posts. The field is 145.5 m
long making the game very easy, from a spectator point of view, to watch. All
the action can be easily seen, and action there is aplenty!
There are six players to a team, which plays in two sections
of three, playing in alternate chukkas. The game is divided into four to eight
chukkas of six or eight minute’s duration.
Play commences with a line out, similar to that in rugby, but the referee throws
in the ball. It is caught in the racquet or picked up from the ground. Once the
ball is in the racquet it must be carried on the right side of the horse in the
case of a right handed player, or on the left for a left handed player. The ball
is not allowed to cross the center line of the horse while it is being carried.
A player can attempt to knock the ball out of an opponent's racquet, or force a
cross of the center line, by using his own racquet in an upward direction to
dislodge the ball. Riding off is allowed but it must be shoulder to shoulder.
One of the appealing aspects of Polocrosse is that each player
can use only one horse, substitution only being allowed in the event of an
injury. Thus, a rider already equipped with a horse and gear only needs a
racquet to start playing.

Polocrosse ponies come in all shapes and sizes, from true
ponies for the youngsters to hacks up to 15.3 hh. All breeds are used for the
sport, the thoroughbred the most popular, while the Quarter Horse and the
Australian Stock Horse also feature strongly.
Well trained Polocrosse ponies are extremely responsive
athletes, and of course need to be fit, as in all horse sports.
Polocrosse looks exciting and dangerous to the uninitiated. It
is certainly exciting, but it is no more dangerous than any other sport and less
so than some. Above all, it is fun! An ideal game, which helps build confidence
and riding skills. |