Memo Gracida (born 1956, Mexico City, Mexico) is a Mexican polo player considered the best of his generation. He held a number of records in the sport and was part of a distinguished polo-playing family.
Gracida grew up on polo—his father, Guillermo (“Memo”) Gracida, Sr., and uncles won the U.S. Open in 1946, and his cousins and younger brother Carlos all became distinguished professional polo players. The young Gracidas played on a rough polo practice field they nicknamed “La Luna” for its pockmarked moonlike surface, and the dedicated, almost obsessive Memo, Jr., rarely traveled far from it. Such a polo-centred upbringing not only honed his considerable talent but also instilled in him the desire to keep vital the future of the sport.
In 1976 he and his father helped Mexico upset the United States in the Camacho Cup, and later that same year the younger Gracida moved to the United States. One year after his American polo debut, he won his first U.S. Open, and by 1982 he was a 10-goal player. For the next 15 years he dominated the sport with a combination of smooth riding, seemingly effortless strokes, and, most of all, the sort of intangible, innate sense of the game exhibited by players who reach their sport’s pantheon. During this period he won six World Cups, three USPA Gold Cups, two Camacho Cups, and the 1982 Argentine Open. In 1997, the same year that he won his 15th U.S. Open in 20 years, he was inducted into the Polo Hall of Fame.
The next year, however, Gracida’s Carroll team lost the U.S. Polo Open, ending his six-year Open winning streak and leading to speculation that he may have finally passed his peak. Indeed, he did not claim another U.S. Open victory until 2004; with 16 wins, he is the record holder for that event. In 2009 he helped the Mexican team, which included his son, Julio, win the Camacho Cup. Gracida also won the player of the year award five times, a record that he shares with his brother.