
The Piaget Polo Starts a New Chukker
A pair of new iterations of the razor-thin sports watch push its iconic profile in a bold new direction.
Very few timepieces convey a sense of time and place quite like the Piaget Polo does. Equal parts sporty and intricate, it instantly transports to another era—one of sleek cars, sleek watches and a certain jet-set mentality through which an appreciation for the truly beautiful shone. Even now, the various iterations of the Polo to be released over the decades, from the almost Art Deco 1979 to more modern variants such as the Polo Skeleton, convey a timeless sense of class without ever feeling stuffy. They’re pieces equally at home, as the name suggests, on the Polo ground as on the red carpet.
Part of the Polo’s enduring appeal is that it’s explicitly designed to integrate, rather than dominate. It shines when viewed up close, but thanks to its famously thin build, it feels more like a natural extension of the wearer rather than an accessory. The wearer wears it, which isn’t something that can be said of many watches of its price and renown. It glinted invitingly, but never ostentatiously, on De Niro’s wrist in Casino, and Andy Warhol’s in real life.
Most fundamental to the Polo’s identity, as Piaget has stressed since day dot in advertising and indeed through its name, is that the Polo is a sports watch. The ultimate sports watch. For him and her.
However, while the original Polo was famously released with the thinnest quartz movement in the world, a closer look at its various evolutions over the years reveals the exquisite engineering feats that have helped make it a watchmaking icon in its own right. While minimalism on the wrist is core to its identity, the Polo quickly became, and remains, the canvas upon which the maison makes its most significant leaps in horological engineering while remaining within the constraints of its slimline DNA

Perhaps this is best exemplified in modern times through the Polo Skeleton. A variant of the Polo S, itself given a complete remodel back in 2016, it took the line in a radical new aesthetic direction when it was unveiled in 2021—thrusting the model from a sleek option in an increasingly crowded sports watch market into a genuine platform for haute horologie—in doing so resetting multiple bars within the industry for horological excellence. Famously, it boasted the thinnest skeleton movements ever released. A 42mm steel-cased sports watch measuring just 6.5mm thick, and powered by Piaget’s 1200S1 self-winding, manufacture movement—entirely developed and produced in-house—it was nothing short of a wearable work of art.
Fast forward to the present day, and the Piaget Polo remains as relevant as it was when the Polo 79, dressed in the splendour of its iconic gadrooned design, first hit showrooms back in the late ‘80s. The Polo 79 itself, appropriately re-released in 2024 to celebrate the maison’s 150th anniversary, became an overnight hit on red carpets when it was unveiled and has since been hailed as an instant classic.
As dynamic as its wearers, this year the Polo takes a couple of radical leaps forward in design language in its own right, with Piaget releasing not only a white gold variant but also, for the first time, offering it in a larger diameter option. And with collectors discovering a newfound fondness for both its vintage models and new iterations alike, it’s safe to say we should get used to the Polo remaining firmly planted in the limelight for some time to come.


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Courtesy of Patricks









