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| Korfball - a sport for men and women together |
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| Written by Bernie DeKoven | |
| Wednesday, 04 July 2007 | |
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Here is what Wikipedia says: "Nico Broekhuysen, a Dutch school teacher, learned a game called ring boll on a visit to Sweden in 1902. Points are scored in ringboll by throwing the ball through a ring attached to a 3 meter high post. After Broekhuysen returned to the Nederlands, he replaced the ring with a basket (for which the Dutch word is korf) and simplified the rules. As his school was co-educational, he created a system which enabled men and women to play together, with one another, at the same time. Thus, korfball was born." According to explanations found through the clearly authoritative, and English, Korfball.com, in the game of Korfball one does not dribble, nor does one run with the ball, nor does one engage in deliberate physical contact with another one. To shoot, one must also be free of one's defender. One's defender must be of the same gender.
Korfball is clearly related to the American game of basketball. It is also different enough to suggest rule modifications that can be used to change many more sports into sports that are whole, and new, perhaps more enlightened, and even more importantly, perhaps more light-hearted. Especially the idea of mixed teams. Of designing a sport that is specifically to be played with both men and women, or boys and girls. Or, perhaps with men, women, boys and girls - mixed genders, mixed ages. Or perhaps even with mixed abilities. If it's fun, and sportlike to be playing with both genders, it must be at least as fun, and at least as sportlike to play with the whole range of human abilities and characteristics. Discuss this article on the forums. (0 posts)
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 04 July 2007 ) |
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