Berliner Boersenzeitung - The Japanese snowball fight game vying to be an Olympic sport

EUR -
AED 4.196324
AFN 73.117812
ALL 94.196413
AMD 420.495074
ANG 2.045469
AOA 1048.202431
ARS 1692.405459
AUD 1.658821
AWG 2.056434
AZN 1.945511
BAM 1.959244
BBD 2.301045
BDT 140.807509
BGN 1.931769
BHD 0.430743
BIF 3404.540347
BMD 1.142463
BND 1.477785
BOB 7.911734
BRL 5.928473
BSD 1.142508
BTN 107.951393
BWP 15.525952
BYN 3.313295
BYR 22392.278791
BZD 2.297719
CAD 1.623383
CDF 2599.10328
CHF 0.922762
CLF 0.026771
CLP 1053.648097
CNY 7.761838
CNH 7.768504
COP 3936.665433
CRC 518.206359
CUC 1.142463
CUP 30.275275
CVE 110.676093
CZK 24.256205
DJF 203.038993
DKK 7.474911
DOP 68.310893
DZD 152.059524
EGP 56.196682
ERN 17.136948
ETB 181.594277
FJD 2.567401
FKP 0.865824
GBP 0.86196
GEL 3.016205
GGP 0.865824
GHS 12.938339
GIP 0.865824
GMD 84.025154
GNF 10025.11436
GTQ 8.716245
GYD 238.974837
HKD 8.958568
HNL 30.52654
HRK 7.535117
HTG 149.321167
HUF 353.758587
IDR 20390.683258
ILS 3.413166
IMP 0.865824
INR 108.345502
IQD 1497.198028
IRR 1572029.367811
ISK 144.007811
JEP 0.865824
JMD 179.896219
JOD 0.809985
JPY 185.019663
KES 147.94454
KGS 99.90825
KHR 4581.277771
KMF 493.543996
KPW 1028.217283
KRW 1760.295931
KWD 0.353672
KYD 0.952053
KZT 554.70291
LAK 25511.203317
LBP 102307.579764
LKR 384.151894
LRD 208.281864
LSL 18.759347
LTL 3.373397
LVL 0.691065
LYD 7.323954
MAD 10.722048
MDL 20.193053
MGA 4846.905497
MKD 61.643536
MMK 2398.772464
MNT 4089.935383
MOP 9.229021
MRU 45.870413
MUR 53.981472
MVR 17.662036
MWK 1984.457943
MXN 19.962147
MYR 4.651085
MZN 72.946072
NAD 18.758928
NGN 1579.181328
NIO 41.837276
NOK 11.322942
NPR 172.7241
NZD 2.021041
OMR 0.439274
PAB 1.142483
PEN 3.899226
PGK 5.015817
PHP 69.858246
PKR 317.661762
PLN 4.289304
PYG 6957.229307
QAR 4.164853
RON 5.242427
RSD 117.399692
RUB 87.969977
RWF 1673.708593
SAR 4.290295
SBD 9.19906
SCR 16.708513
SDG 686.053276
SEK 11.101486
SGD 1.477321
SHP 0.852964
SLE 28.335922
SLL 23956.886335
SOS 652.917592
SRD 42.836086
STD 23646.681691
STN 24.962821
SVC 9.996528
SYP 126.278854
SZL 18.852507
THB 37.998785
TJS 10.590484
TMT 4.010046
TND 3.365982
TOP 2.750778
TRY 53.260953
TTD 7.766584
TWD 36.415783
TZS 2998.969301
UAH 51.274329
UGX 4187.360476
USD 1.142463
UYU 45.970807
UZS 13769.203286
VES 710.890326
VND 30035.357623
VUV 136.157944
WST 3.177056
XAF 657.106299
XAG 0.019598
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.087564
XCG 2.059001
XDR 0.818428
XOF 655.208831
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.594812
ZAR 18.793745
ZMK 10283.545779
ZMW 20.683905
ZWL 367.872685
  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    61.5

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.06

    +0.59%

  • CMSD

    0.1300

    21.9

    +0.59%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    62.74

    -0.03%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.81

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    2.5400

    190.95

    +1.33%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    83.76

    +0.9%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    94.29

    +0.58%

  • BP

    0.2200

    37.35

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.6600

    22.26

    -2.96%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    31.29

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -1.7600

    79.26

    -2.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    18.75

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.86

    +0.54%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    13.69

    -1.46%

The Japanese snowball fight game vying to be an Olympic sport
The Japanese snowball fight game vying to be an Olympic sport / Photo: Yuichi YAMAZAKI - AFP

The Japanese snowball fight game vying to be an Olympic sport

At the foot of an active volcano in northern Japan, shouts ring out, competitors size each other up and snowballs whistle through the air in a very serious game of "yukigassen" -- a sport with Olympic dreams.

Text size:

The competition taking place this weekend is held every year in Sobetsu, a town on the main northern island of Hokkaido, where this game -- essentially a snowball fight -- became a sport 37 years ago.

On the field, brute strength isn't enough. Japan's yukigassen federation emphasises the "mental challenge" posed by the game, in which players on both teams pelt their opponents while taking cover behind shelters.

The goal: hit all seven players on the opposing team using perfectly spherical snowballs made with a special machine, or capture their flag.

"When you get hit, it hurts, but it's mostly your pride that takes the blow," said Toshihiro Takahashi, a 48-year-old civil servant dripping with sweat after his match.

The idea of turning yukigassen into a sport was born out of a crisis in Sobetsu.

While visitors once flocked to the town to enjoy its hot springs, the eruption of Mount Usu in 1977 brought tourism in the area to an abrupt halt.

Residents, looking for ways to put their town back on the map, had a flash of inspiration when they saw a group of tourists having fun during a snowball fight and thought: what if this children's game could save the town?

"It's a primitive sport, almost instinctive for human beings," Yuji Ano, president of the tournament's organising committee, told AFP.

"Our ancestors were surely doing the same thing. It's the oldest winter sport in human history: long before skating or skiing, humans were already throwing snowballs at each other. That's its biggest appeal."

All that remained was to put rules down on paper, develop special helmets and invent a machine to mould the snowballs.

Yukigassen -- which means snowball fight in Japanese -- was born, and the first international tournament took place in 1989.

- From snow to beach -

The sport spread to Australia three years later, then to Finland, which set up a national federation in 1995.

After that it caught on elsewhere in Scandinavia, as well as in Russia and North America, and is now played in 13 countries, according to Ano.

Keen to capitalise on the international expansion, officials want to turn yukigassen into an Olympic sport.

Ano noted that there are very few team sports at this year's Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, which are wrapping up on Sunday.

This year, more than a thousand players came to compete in Sobetsu, but not a single foreign team is among the 118 entrants.

Atasu, a 55-year-old who has been playing yukigassen for over thirty years and chose to give only his nickname, admitted it had become very challenging to recruit players.

"The (Japanese) population is shrinking, and there are also fewer people playing. We have to promote yukigassen and try to attract people," he said.

"That's the hardest thing right now."

To boost the number of registered players and try to win over the International Olympic Committee, the sport has, paradoxically, had to step away from snow.

Artificial balls have been developed so it can be played in gyms or on the beach, turning a seasonal battle into a global sport playable year-round.

But Ano warned another major problem stands in the way of the Olympic dream: complex officiating that makes it difficult to train new referees.

"Eight referees watch each match, where 180 snowballs can be flying" during a three-minute set, he explained.

"Judging accurately is almost impossible. As long as we haven't solved that issue, it will be difficult" to stake a claim for the Olympics.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)