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Juan Carlos Harriott Jr
Handicap Rating
Biography
Juan Carlos Harriott Jr carries one of polo's most storied surnames, the son of the legendary Juan Carlos "Juancito" Harriott — himself considered one of the greatest players of the twentieth century — and a distinguished player in his own right who extended the Harriott dynasty into the late twentieth and early twenty-first century era of Argentine polo. Growing up in the shadow of his father's extraordinary reputation could have been suffocating, but Harriott Jr embraced the inheritance with evident pride, working to develop a playing style that honoured the family tradition while establishing his own identity on the field. His achievement of the 10-goal handicap confirmed that the Harriott talent was genuinely generational. His career spanned a period of profound transformation in Argentine polo, as the Cambiaso era began reshaping what was possible at the sport's highest level. Competing during this period required constant adaptation and tactical evolution, and Harriott Jr's longevity at the top of the game reflected his willingness to evolve alongside the sport. The Harriott family name — associated with Coronel Suárez and the legendary polo traditions of the Buenos Aires province — carries enormous weight in Argentine sporting culture. Juan Carlos Harriott Jr's contributions ensured that weight was honoured and extended, maintaining the family's position at the heart of Argentine polo history across two remarkable generations.
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Player Details
Country
Argentina
Handicap
N/A(peak: 10)
Status
Historic Legend
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