MEMBERS of the Royal Family completed a clean sweep of wins at Tidworth Polo Club yesterday.

Prince Harry helped the Army team to victory in the main event, The Rundle Cup; his older brother Prince William was a member of the Combined Services team that won Indian Cavalry Officers' Trophy and their cousin Zara Phillips was in the winning team in a charity polo match in which the players rode bicycles instead of horses.

The Army celebrated the 30th anniversary of the Rundle Cup Polo match being played in Britain by winning the annual contest against the Royal Navy by a resounding eight goals to three and a half.

In front of a crowd for more than 4,000 and on a perfect sunny afternoon at Tidworth Polo Club, Prince Harry, now with the Blues and Royals, was the star player, scoring three goals in the annual inter-service tussle.

Earlier in the afternoon the Combined Services Team beat South Africa, five goals to two and a half for the Indian Cavalry Officers' Trophy.

To complete a clean sweep for members of the Royal family, Zara Phillips led a team of eventers in a light-hearted charity match that included a chukka on bicycles rather than ponies. They defeated a team of jockeys that included Richard Johnson, Mark Llewellyn, Tom Scudamore and Luke Harvey from Radio 5 Live.

The victors, all household names in the eventing world, lined up with Clayton and Lucinda Fredericks, Rodney Powell, Mark Corbett and Zara Phillips.

Director of the Rundle Cup John Wright said: "Each year the event gets bigger, better and we are attracting larger and larger crowds. "It is very pleasing to see both Prince William and Prince Harry following in their father's footsteps. He supported polo at Tidworth for many years and we hope that will continue through the Princes and their cousin Zara Phillips for another generation."