Water
Polo History
Although modern
water polo was invented in the late nineteenth century in Great Britain
by William
Wilson, the game resembles an early African rite of passage into
manhood played in rivers (often at the end the river was stained red
with blood). The modern game originated as a form of rugby football
played in rivers and lakes in
England
and
Scotland
with a ball
constructed of Indian rubber. This "water rugby" came to be called
"water polo" based on the English pronunciation of the Balti word
for ball, pulu. Early play allowed brute strength, wrestling and
holding opposing players underwater to recover the ball; the goalie
stood outside the playing area and defended the goal by jumping in on
any opponent attempting to score by placing the ball on the deck. By
the 1880's, the game evolved to include fast-paced team play with a
soccer-sized ball that emphasized swimming, passing, and scoring by
shooting into a goal net; players could only be tackled when holding
the ball and could not be taken under water. Water polo is now played
in many countries around the world, notably Hungary and
the former Yugoslavia.
The present-day game involves teams of seven players (plus up to six
substitutes), with a water polo ball
similar in size to a soccer ball but constructed of waterproof nylon.
Click picture for video.
Olympic
competition
Men's water polo at the
Olympics was the among the first team sports introduced at the 1900 games
(along with cricket, rugby, football (soccer), polo (with horses),
rowing and tug of war). Women's water polo became an Olympic sport at
the 2000
Sydney Olympic Games after political protests from the
Australian women's team. Such protests were rewarded when Australia won
the gold medal match against the United States with a "buzzer-beater"
last-minute goal, taken from outside the seven meter line. Some of the
best ever include Spain's Manuel Estiarte
who played in a record six Olympics and led in scoring for four of
them. Dezső
Gyarmati of Hungary won water polo medals at five successive
Olympic Games (gold 1952, 1956, 1964; silver 1948; bronze 1960), a
record that has never been matched in any Olympic sport. Another major
figure in the sport was Tamas Farago,
who led Hungary
to Olympic Medals in 1972, 1976 and 1980. The play of American Terry
Schroeder led the United States to its first Olympic silver medals in
1984 and 1988.
The most famous
water polo match in history is probably the 1956 Summer Olympics
semi-final match between
Hungary
and the Soviet
Union. As the athletes left for the games, the 1956 Hungarian
revolution began, and a 200,000 strong Soviet army crushed a
small uprising of Hungarian insurgents. Many of the Hungarian athletes
vowed never to return home, and felt their only means of fighting back
was by victory in the pool. The confrontation was the most bloody and
violent water polo game in history, in which the pool reputedly turned
red from blood. The Hungarians defeated the Soviets 4-0 before the game
was called off in the final minute to prevent angry Hungarians in the
crowd reacting to Valentin Prokopov punching Ervin Zador's
eye open. The Hungarians went on to win the Olympic gold medal by
defeating Yugoslavia
2-1 in the final. Half of the Hungarian Olympic delegation defected
after the games. A documentary by Lucy Liu, Freedom's Fury,
premiered in April 2006, recounting the events of the 1956 Hungarian
uprising and climaxing with this politicized game.
International
play
Every
2 to 4 years since 1973, a men's Water Polo World
Championship is played together with the World Swimming
Championship, under the auspices of FINA. Women's
water polo was added in 1986. A second tournament series, the FINA
Water Polo World Cup, has been held every other year since 1979. In
2002, FINA organized the sport's first international league, the FINA Water Polo
World League, in which the best national teams compete against
one another in an annual season format with nearly half a million
dollar purse.
Internationally,
the biggest water polo competition in the world is played in the
Netherlands.
Prince William of
England
was the captain of his collegiate water polo team at St Andrew's
University,
Scotland. The annual Varsity Match
between Oxford
and Cambridge
Universities
is the sport's longest running rivalry, first played in 1891.
US
colleges and clubs
Today club water
polo is gaining popularity in the United States.
Though the majority of domestic club teams are based in California, Florida, Illinois, andTexas, New England
and Missouri
preparatory high schools also often field teams. Club water polo teams
in the
United
States often compete in national
championships such as Junior Olympics, National Club Championships, and
the Speedo Cup. Club teams from Washington, Oregon, Utah, and Michigan were
entered at the 2005 USWP Junior Olympics. Water polo club coaches such
as Johnny Bega and Rich Corso often lead age group athletes to win
gold, silver, and bronze medals at such prestigious tournaments.
Teams from
California
dominate at the collegiate level. In the
United States,
water polo players tend to have prestigious academic backgrounds as
well. A number of players, including former USA team captain Wolf Wigo,
who retired after Athens 2004, Jacqueline Frank
DeLuca, bronze
medal Olympic goalie, and international phenom Tony Azevedo
attended Stanford
University. The sport's most notable balancing act to date
includes Omar Amr, who played on the US National Team while attending Harvard Medical
School and recovering from a near career ending knee injury in
2001.
In the 2006 NCAA Women's Water
Polo Championship, UCLA beat USC 9-8, defending their
championship title after beating Stanford in 2005. In the 2005 Men's NCAA
Finals, the USC Trojans defeated the Stanford Cardinal 3-2. In
1999, the Peter
J. Cutino Award was established by the San Francisco Olympic
Club, and is presented annually to the top American male and female
collegiate water polo player. Two USC players, Juraj Zatovic
and Lauren
Wenger won the 2006 Cutino awards.
Aniko Pelle (
Hungary)
and Sofia Konoukh (
Russia)
were among the first of an increasing number of international players
competing in
U.S.
collegiate women's water polo. Because of water polo's increased
popularity globally, the influence of international coaches like USC's Jovan
Vavic from the former Yugoslavia, and the perks of attending an
American college, international players are attracted to the premier US
colleges. The 2005 Hawaii
womens' water polo team, coached by Canadian Michel
Roy,
has nine international players, the most of any team in the nation
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