The United States Polo Team Defeats England 15-9 in FIP World Polo Championship Semi-Final, Will Play Host Nation Chile in Final
United States' polo team member Remy Muller playing the ball off the ground at the FIP World Polo Championship in Santiago, Chile. The United States defeated England 15-9 in the semi-final match with Muller scoring 2 goals.Click here for high-resolution version · Marketwired

LAKE WORTH, FL--(Marketwired - March 31, 2015) - The United States Polo Association® (USPA) today announced that the United States defeated England today 15-9 in a semi-final match at the 10th Federation of International Polo (FIP) World Polo Championship, being held in Santiago, Chile. Chile defeated Brazil 11-10 in the other semi-final match to set the stage for the tournament's two remaining undefeated teams to meet in Wednesday's final.

The United States national polo team, known as Team USPA consists of seven players, all under the age of 30. Taking the field today versus England is the same team that prevailed against defending champion Argentina and world polo power Brazil in the tournament's opening round:

Jesse Bray (5-goal) from Indio, California, age 22
Remy Muller (2-goal) from Santa Barbara, CA, age 22
Patrick Uretz (3-goal) from Malibu, CA, age 23
Felipe Viana (4-goal) from Charlottesville, VA, age 25

The United States dominated the game from the outset and never trailed, leading 4-0 early in the second chukker and 7-1 by the end of the second chukker. The score was 10-3 by the beginning of the fourth chukker with back and forth scoring through the fifth and sixth, with the game ending in favor of the United States 15-9. All members of Team USPA scored, with the tournament's leading scorer Jesse Bray scoring 7 (to raise his tournament-leading total to 19 goals in three games so far), Felipe Viana scoring 4, Patrick Uretz scoring 2 and Remy Muller scoring 2.

"I'm so excited for the guys -- they just played their hearts out. They won I think about 90% of the plays they went to, they had their man, they were playing for each other," said Joel Baker, Head Coach of Team USPA. "Our team has maintained a positive attitude throughout this world championship and it really showed today. Making it to the finals is truly amazing and our play throughout this tournament has earned us the right to be playing for the world championship tomorrow."

"Today's match is a true testimony of the hard work and dedication our team has put into this world championship tournament," said Peter Rizzo, Chief Executive Officer of the United States Polo Association. "England is a strong competitor that has earned the respect of teams worldwide. We are extremely proud of our team and today's accomplishment and look forward to a great final tomorrow."

This year's field of six teams was divided by random draw into two brackets, Zone A, consisting of Chile, Pakistan, and England, and Zone B, consisting of Argentina, USA and Brazil. In the FIP World Polo Championship, each team plays the other two in its bracket and the two teams with the best records from each bracket will advance to a single-elimination semi-final round, followed by the semi-final winners playing a single match for the world championship.