U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP® | U.S. POLO ASSN.

November 11-17, 2024

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

The U.S. Open Women's Handicap final will be available On-Demand on the USPA Polo Network.

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

TOURNAMENT HISTORY

The U.S. Open Women’s Handicap was established in 1979 to showcase women’s polo following the inclusion of women into the United States Polo Association in 1972. The inaugural tournament was held at Carmel Valley Polo Club in Carmel, California. An excerpt from the 1980 USPA Bluebook describes the results, “The Women’s U.S. Handicap, sponsored by the USPA, was won by Carmel Valley. Representatives from five states played on four teams entered. Sunset [Sunny] Hale (age 10), Susie Welker, Sue Sally Hale and Stormie Hale were the champions beating Modesto, Jan Walker, Oatsie Von Gontard, Susan Walton and Bonni Middleton 4-1. Top scoring, Sue Sally Hale—nine for both days.”

A staple in the USPA calendar, the U.S. Open Women’s Handicap was played for 15 consecutive years, primarily at Willow Bend Polo Club in Plano, Texas. During this time American Airlines dominated the competition with a remarkable five-year winning streak (1988-1992), key players Maggie Mitchell and Kim Kelly formed part of each winning team. The tournament then took residence at The Villages Polo Club in The Villages, Florida, throughout the late 90s and early 2000s. Many top women’s players have captured the illustrious title, including Vickie Armour, Alina Carta, Cindy Halle, Carolyn Stimmel, Lesley-Ann Masterton Fong-Yee and Oatsie von Gontard.

From 2003 to 2014 the U.S. Open Women’s Handicap fell into abeyance. It was revived in 2015 at Houston Polo Club (Houston, Texas) with the reemergence of the U.S. Open Women’s Polo Championship. Since relocating to Houston Polo Club, notable repeat champions include Lia Salvo (2015, 2016, 2017), Grace Mudra (2016, 2017, 2022), Carolyn Stimmel (2016, 2017), Joanie Jackson (2019, 2021), Athena Malin (2019, 2021), KC Krueger (2020, 2022), Stephanie Colburn (2020, 2021) and Tiamo Hudspeth (2021, 2024).

In 2023, Lugano Diamonds (Audry Persano, Tiamo Hudspeth, Dayelle Fargey, Kendall Plank) performed under pressure to cut through the competition and best QR Jets (Lily Lequerica, Madison Jordan, KC Krueger, Sarah Wiseman) 6-5. Read article here.

This year's edition of the U.S. Open Women's Handicap will feature three talented teams competing for the title, including numerous returning competitors. Lugano will attempt to defend their title with all four championship teammates uniting for a second consecutive year. 2023 finalists Lily Lequerica and KC Krueger will join forces once more for QR Jets alongside Erica Gandomcar-Sachs and Malia Bryan, as each member of Propaganda will vie to reach the top of the U.S. Open Women's Handicap podium for the first time.

Representing Team USPA is Active Member Sophie Grant (Propaganda) alongside alumnae Tiamo Hudspeth and Audry Persano (Lugano).

Houston Polo Club will be taking advantage of the USPA's Tournament Support Program (TSP) for the U.S. Open Women's Handicap, which provides eligible USPA Member Clubs with waived tournament fees, trophies or trophy reimbursements up to $1,200, one professional umpire and $2,500 in prize money at no extra cost.

The USPA originally created the Tournament Stimulus Package (TSP) to help member clubs host USPA events when the United States was emerging from the first wave of the COVID-19 crisis. The USPA wanted to continue to support member clubs with TSP benefits in 2022. Therefore, it extended and expanded TSP under a new name - the Tournament Support Program. Each USPA Member Club can obtain TSP benefits for two USPA events, with the option of a third under specific circumstances.

2023 U.S. Open Women's Handicap Champions: Lugano Diamonds - Audry Persano, Kendall Plank, Tiamo Hudspeth, Dayelle Fargey, Kendall Plank. ©Kaylee Wroe

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

TOURNAMENT FORMAT

Teams will play two preliminary matches each, with the top two teams automatically advancing to the U.S. Open Women's Handicap final. If two teams have tied records and they have played each other, the tie is broken by who beat who. If three teams have tied records, the tie is broken by a shootout.

TEAMS AND ROSTERS

Bracket I

Bracket II

Bracket III

Bracket IV

Bracket V

Bracket VI

Bracket VII

Bracket VIII

Bracket IX

Bracket X

Lugano (2-1)

player photo
Audry Persano
Women's Outdoor: 5
player photo
Tiamo Hudspeth
Women's Outdoor: 5
player photo
Dayelle Fargey
Women's Outdoor: 7
player photo
Kendall Plank
Women's Outdoor: 3

QR Jets (2-1)

player photo
Lily Lequerica
Women's Outdoor: 4
player photo
KC Krueger
Women's Outdoor: 6
player photo
Erica Gandomcar-Sachs
Women's Outdoor: 5
player photo
Malia Bryan
Women's Outdoor: 5

Propaganda (0-2)

player photo
Sophia DeAngelis
Women's Outdoor: 3
player photo
Jordan Fikes
Women's Outdoor: 3
player photo
Sophie Grant
Women's Outdoor: 5
player photo
Maddie Grant
Women's Outdoor: 6

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

USPA POLO NETWORK

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

USPA POLO NETWORK HIGHLIGHTS

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

TOURNAMENT GAMES

Monday, Nov 11, 2024

November 11

Final

U.S. Open Women's Handicap®

Houston Polo Club

QR Jets logo

QR Jets (2-1)

5

Lugano logo

Lugano (2-1)

3

Tuesday, Nov 12, 2024

November 12

Final

U.S. Open Women's Handicap®

Houston Polo Club

QR Jets logo

QR Jets (2-1)

9

Propaganda logo

Propaganda (0-2)

6

Thursday, Nov 14, 2024

November 14

Final OT

U.S. Open Women's Handicap®

Houston Polo Club

Lugano logo

Lugano (2-1)

10

Propaganda logo

Propaganda (0-2)

9

Sunday, Nov 17, 2024

November 17

Final

U.S. Open Women's Handicap®

Houston Polo Club

QR Jets logo

QR Jets (2-1)

3

Lugano logo

Lugano (2-1)

4

U.S. OPEN WOMEN'S HANDICAP®

THE VENUE

A mere few minutes from downtown Houston, Texas, you will find the Houston Polo Club (HPC) located on 26 manicured acres. Established in 1928, HPC is one of Texas’ oldest clubs, comprised of the Bayou Club’s original fields and stables, as well as a tack shop, stick-and-ball field, hitting cage and covered arena. In addition, HPC has three fields in Brookshire, Texas, and access to over 18 other fields through private ranches. The club has proven to be a mainstay in American polo since its inception and has hosted and produced its fair share of notable professional players over nearly a century.

HPC has been providing the Southwestern Circuit with not only world-class polo, but the opportunity to learn and progress as an individual player. Houston’s league structure is considered to be one of the best in the country, and can accommodate any skill level. The polo school is run by 2-goaler Mark Prinsloo. The Houston Polo School offers an eight-week instructional course in both the spring and fall seasons that strives to nurture players as they develop their skills. Upon graduation from the polo school, players join the Margarita League. The next level in the nationally recognized Step Up Program is the 2-Goal League, followed by the Club League, an intermediate level in which players hire their own polo professional. Once graduated from the Club League, players have opportunities to participate in USPA sanctioned and national tournaments, as well as many tournaments held by the club.

Polo is played almost year-round with the club offering a fall and spring season, followed by summer leagues, winter arena and interscholastic polo. During the fall, HPC hosts numerous USPA tournaments and a week of women’s tournaments highlighted by the U.S. Open Women’s Handicap.


8552 Memorial Dr
Houston, TX 77024
View Map
Club Website Club Profile