.111111111111111111111111111B1111111116. ill11%. 111111111111111111111111. 1111111111111111111111 111111111111111111111111111 ■1■ going out and buying a 'made' polo pony" The term "polo pony" is ac- tually a misnomer, left over from the early days of polo when small horses were used. Thoroughbreds and quarter horses make the best polo horses, but the name "pony" has stuck. "Polo is 60 to 70 percent horse," says Kalt. "You take a mediocre-type player and put him on a bad horse, he's out of the - game. In the same respect, if you can give him a good horse, that person will be able to look really good:' But the horse must be led by the rider. "Contrary to popular belief," says Gray, "the horse does not follow the ball. Some of them will ride straight and true - and they'll look like they're following the ball. But they're just finely tuned horses and they're guided by the rider's leg motions, the shifting of the weight." Since horses require care year-round, polo is an expen- sive sport. Training your horses helps minimize the cost. But Gray estimates that to play polo in Michigan, with a five-month season, the cost ranges from $5,000 to $100,000. The variables in- clude the number of horses, the number of people who work with the horses and the qualifications of those people. In warmer climates, polo is played year-round. Gray, a chiropractor, recently took a two-year sabbatical, moved to Arizona and did little but play polo. He returned to Michigan this year. "I like polo that much," he explains. "I just wanted to take the time off while I was still young enough to enjoy it." Polo players can compete in- to their 70s, because the horse is a player's legs. "Unless you have very bad arthritis of the knees or something like that, you can keep going on in- definitely," says Gray. Gray points out another unique aspect of polo. "You can own a football or a baseball team, but you can't go on the field and play with them. The advantage to polo is, say somebody's got a lot of money, they can field a very competitive, internationally and/or nationally ranked team and be on that team. That's one of the attractions of the game — you're playing with professional players. Even as an amateur, I still play with professional players. So the competition is keen?' Glazer, a family practice physician, says polo is good aerobic exercise. "I would compare a game, which lasts the better part of an hour, to a pretty intermediate game of racquetball of maybe a good tennis match?' He also enjoys "the physical relaxation, the involvement with the horses and various other benefits of hoige activity." On the negative side, polo can be dangerous. "Anything you do on top of a horse," says Glazer, "You have a risk of coming off and that is the number one risk involved. We've all been hit by the ball. If you're hit on the hand, the bones in the hand are broken very easily." Polo players wear helmets and knee pads. Face masks are optional. Glazer compares the rate of injury to that of ice hockey. There are no special ties between polo and the Jewish community. "There are Jewish people all over the country that are playing" says Glazer. Jewish membership in the Detroit Polo Club has been a steady 15 to 20 percent of its 20-25 member field in recent years. -- "It's not a game for everybody," says Gray. "You have to really like horses, number one. I think that's the premier aspect of the game. And the competition — you have to really like competi- tion in real life." Despite its dangerous aspects, the sport does have a genteel side. Clubs such as the Detroit Polo Club put on many benefits. The crowd at such benefits is a bit more dressy than the typical, tailgating polo audience. There is also a more refined image in U.S. polo due, says Glazer. "There is a definite aristocratic influence that has come into the sport. And our club has changed over the 19 or 20 years that I've been involved. We're constructing a new image, of sorts, to match up with a - lot of the clubs around the country . . . It's less blue jeans and cowboy boots and more jodhpurs and field boots." Although the aristocratic image may not play well in a blue-collar city like Detroit, polo's halftime tradition makes it more down-to-earth. At the half, the polo fans walk onto the field to stomp down divots made by the horses' hooves. This tradition knows no aristocratic bounds. "Even the Queen of England goes out and stomps divots," says Kalt. Fans enjoy the tradition, he says, adding, "You just have to be very careful to be sure it's a divot." ❑ Free ennis An one MUM ...I / / // // ././ 2 1/ / N1111111111111•11111111.M ■ •111 r -' 4 11111 111 111111 • 111111 111" " Tennis is back! . . . In the newly completed Edward and Shirley Rosenberg Recreation Complex. Come and tour our newest facility at the Jewish Community Center and if you join the center as a member in October you can receive up to 6 free hours of Court Time (A Value of up to $150) !! • Promotion good during October 1989 only • Must not have been a member in the past 12 months • Non-transferable • Tennis court time must be used by November 30th, 1989 • Payment plans available • JPM & Social memberships not included For more information contact the Membership Office at 661-1000, ext. 265, 266. .•11•111111111.m. 411 ■■ 11MOIMIIM a ■■■ essa ■ as. u ■■ mm••• ■111■0■1, s■i■ 11111.•• ■■ 1111alli 11111111•MOM111110111111111 imull1111111111111111111111111111 goasessumMOMBIll M■ m IMMI ■.■1 is■■NII■■ ■ BIE■•■•■ 1111 JI to ■s■ lla ■ ■ • 1 11111.11.1111 ■••■ „ow , e■■ •11111 ■■.•■■ ••• •■■■ •111 ■■ 111 ■ 11. ftwamm. ■ Give every NEWBORN the advantage Support the March of Dimes NORBERT H. KETAI, DP.M. 131P 11 - I DEFECTS F OUNDAT ION ••• ROBERT S. KETAI, DIM. DRS. KETAI, RC. ACT PODIATRISTS - FOOT SURGEONS 7) Unique Gifts For All Ages ( u, ca. THAT PERSONALIZED TOUCH 2 Customized Imprinting . Always 20% OFF! Towels, Place Cards i ; Napkins, Cake Guest g Boxes and Matches. c p- CD CD -a cn go cn C fi Bev and Sue 661 - 0177 • invitations For All Occasions • Announce the relocation of their office 26206 W. 12 Mile Rd. Suite 106 Southfield, MI 48034 In the Franklin Medical Building (Formerly at the Tel-12 Mall) 354-2262 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 53