Cecil Smith (polo)
Cecil Smith (February 14, 1904 – January 21, 1999) was an American rancher and polo player.[1][2] BiographyEarly lifeCecil Smith was born on the Moss Ranch near Llano, Texas, on February 14, 1904.[2] In his childhood, he won roping prizes in rodeos.[2] CareerIn 1924, he started playing polo while working for George Miller, a horse trader in Austin, Texas.[2] He also played alongside Albert Buckman Wharton Jr. at his El Ranchito Polo Club on his Waggoner Ranch.[3] He later played polo with Will Rogers, Darryl Zanuck, Walt Disney and Reginald Denny.[2] He was a ten-goal player from 1938 to 1962 -which makes him the American with the longest record to hold the ten-goal status.[1][2][4] He often competed at the Meadow Brook Polo Club in Westbury, New York.[2] He won the Monty Waterbury Cup in 1930 and the U.S. Open Polo Championship five times.[1] He played with the U.S.A. team against Mexico three times.[1] (Quote from New York Times article dated Feb.14, 1999, "Then, starting in 1938, he began a string of 26 years, 25 consecutively (1938-62), in which he was a 10-goal player".) He owned a 100-acre ranch in Boerne, Texas, where he rode and trained horses.[2] Personal lifeHe married Mary Miller in 1935.[2] Their sons, Charles and Sidney, are polo players.[2] DeathHe died on January 21, 1999, in Boerne.[2] LegacyHe was inducted into the Museum of Polo and Hall of Fame in Lake Worth, Florida, on April 6, 1990.[1] References
|
Portal di Ensiklopedia Dunia