The Gentleman Magazine Issue 2 | April/May 2017 | Page 52

Born in a blizzard “It had snowed all night and you would never have guessed there was a polo field beneath all that snow’ says Reto Gaudenzi, reminiscing about that Saturday, 26 of January 1985. For two years, he had worked hard to make the first polo tournament on snow happen; he had convinced innovators, won over sceptics and ignored notorious grousers. And now, his «baby» was about to be buried under a pile of snow: “There was far too much for it to be compressed. And the town’s large and heavy snowblowers would simply have cracked through the ice on the lake.” Polo players are fighters and Reto Gaudenzi would not let himself be disheartened: “Thank goodness, Engadine people are known for not letting you down. We all started making telephone calls at the crack of dawn and by seven o’clock, two dozen locals had arrived to help clear the field with their small private snowblowers” It was hard going for the volunteers but after six hours of strenuous effort, they had finally managed to clear a field measuring a respectable 40 by 80 meters—the world premiere of snow polo could begin. Where else but in St. Moritz? The idea of snow polo was born some two years previously. Hanspeter Danuser, St. Moritz’s legendary tourism director, quizzed Reto Gaudenzi on whether it would in fact be possible to play polo on snow. At first glance, there appeared to be no reason why it could not be done. So, Danuser went ahead and announced that St. Moritz would be holding the world’s first snow polo tournament. 52 | The Gentleman Magazine Given that horse races had been held on the frozen lake since the early 1900’s—as well