Rajputs have been keen equestrian and they take to the horses like a fish to   water. Their taking to polo in big way was only natural. Their association with   polo dates back to the Mughal period and miniature paintings at the Mehrangarh   Fort bear testimony to this early introduction to the game. However, Polo did   not become a passion until the British period when it became a natural and a   marvelous peacetime pursuit.
It was in 1889, when the colourful Prime   Minister of Jodhpur Sir Partap Singh invited the Bengal Lancers to raise the   Jodhpur Lancers; Polo was introduced to Jodhpur in its current modern form.   Three years later Jodhpur raised its Polo Team, which won many accolades home   and abroad. In 1897, when Sir Pratap travelled to London for Queen Victoria's   Diamond Jubilee, he took his polo team along, amongst the very first Indian   teams to travel abroad, and, for that matter, foreign teams to invade England   and create history. 
They won many matches there, at Hurlingham and   Ranelagh, and returned with their reputation enhanced; the finest Indian team   during those years. Rajasthan produced many great Polo players, which include   Sir Partap Singh, Rao Raja Hanut Singh, Thakur Hari Singh and the colourful   Maharaja Man Singh II of Jaipur, who took over the pride of jodhpur as an   inevitable gift by being the suave son in law of Jodhpur. Thus the best of the   players and the finest of the polo ponies were shifted to the royal house of   Jaipur, the rest is history. 
This   super premium category sport still thrives in Rajasthan and has seen a quantum   jump in its popularity as a life style sport. It has attracted attention from   corporate houses for sponsorship. It has also attracted interest of the Prime   Minister of India, many celebrities and the army. Today, polo is not just   restricted to the royalty and the Indian Army, many companies and firms too   patronise the sport. Polo facilities are on the rise and polo holidays in India   too are in vogue. Especially in Rajasthan. 
The superb synchronization   between man and his horse, the amazing speed, the brute power, with the backdrop   of green arena makes for most exclusive and glorious sport of all. Rajasthan   also gave the game its Royal Tradition with patronage of the Maharajas, which   earns it the nicknames The Game of Kings-The King of Games. Rajasthan still   stages exciting Polo games and is treat for the tourist to watch this game that   demands extreme physical and mental condition. 
 Rajasthan Tourism