10 Most Bizarre Sports
Published on 7/2/2007
Combining
both intellect and physical prowess is the wonderful world of chess boxing. If
you can afford the price of a pair of boxing gloves and the expenditure of a
few brain cells, then this is the sport for you. The game, brainchild of Dutch
participant Iepe the Joker, consists of six rounds of chess interspersed with
five bouts in the ring. Contestants can win either on the board or between the
ropes, with either a check-mate or a knockout being the most convincing of
victories. However, should the referee deem it necessary, he or she can
prematurely finish a bout. Should a participant take too long to move a chess
piece due to unconsciousness, for example, the match is similarly ended. In the
event of a stalemate, the one with the highest boxing score wins. It is indeed
a unique blend of intellectual keenness with physical skill, though veterans of
the sport may find one of the two increasingly difficult after a while.

The
Finns have the great honour of holding the annual Wife Carrying World
Championships. What you do is simply grab a hold of your significant other, and
carry her (or him) to the finish line faster than the other competitors. Cool!
The games are hosted in the small town of Sonkajärvi in upper Savo, in the eastern
part of Finland. The rules say nothing at all about the weight of the wife,
only that she can be yours as well as somebody else's. The Wife Carrying World
Championships website explains the rules further and has an official entry
form. The site also says that this year's World Champions were a couple from
Estonia and that the Estonians actually swept the board, leaving no medals at
all for the poor Finns. Oh dear.
The
game of underwater rugby is played in a swimming pool of approximately 4m
depth. Two teams of 11 players aim to make a goal by getting the weighted ball
in the opposing team's basket. Each basket is at the bottom of the pool. This
is quite an exciting game as normal gravitational rules do not apply to any of
the manoeuvres or tactics you might instinctively seek to employ.
This
is a sport started on a dare... right? The U. S. Association of Rock Paper
Scissors. That's right, U.S. Association... damn proud. The USARPS League is
the official Rock Paper Scissors League of the United States. It is sponsored
by Bud Light. Matti Leshem is the co-commissioner of the USA Rock Paper
Scissors League In April 2006, the inaugural USA Rock Paper Scissors League
Championship was held in Las Vegas, Nevada. Following months of regional
qualifying tournaments held across the US, 257 players were flown to Las Vegas
for a single-elimination tournament at the House of Blues where the winner
received $50,000. The tournament was shown on the A&E Network on June 12,
2006.
In
Wales there's a famous race called the Man Versus Horse Marathon. A cross
country course is laid out, and human competitors pit their stamina against
that of a posse of chosen horses. The course is 22 miles long with many natural
obstacles to overcome. The steep slopes are a great test of the endurance of
both man and beast, and the tricky forestry, which a man may dart through but
which a horse can only travel around, is equally difficult terrain. The ultimate
aim is to run the course and beat the first horse. This was recently done for
the first time by a marine who had been training especially for the event. He
won a large cash prize - a prize that's been getting bigger every year.

Competitors must snorkel through dirty, smelly mud water for two lengths of a
60 yard trench that has been cut through a peat bog. The snorkeler with the
lowest completion time wins. Competitors wear snorkels and flippers (wet suits
are optional) and cannot use conventional swimming strokes. The world record
time of 1min 35sec is held by Phillip John. The 2007 Bog Snorkeling
championships will take place on August 27 in the small town of Llanwrtyd Wells
in Wales.
Also
known as Cheese Rolling, this dangerous sporting event that takes place every
May 22 in Gloucester, England on Cooper's Hill. The event is said to be at
least hundreds of years old. A wheel of cheese weighing about eight pounds is
rolled down a very steep hill, and dozens of contestants go scrambling after it
so hard and fast that broken limbs and other injuries are common. Whoever nabs
the cheese is the champion and they win 15 or so minutes of fame (and the
cheese.)
The
national sport of Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan, buzkashi might take the goat for
most bizarre sport of all. It is similar to polo in that players on two teams
sit atop horses, they are trying to move an object toward and into their goal,
and the game can get pretty rough. However, those who play buzkashi do not use
mallets, nor do they use a ball; instead, they use a dead calf or goat whose
head has been cut off. The players grab the dead headless calf or goat, pass it
off to other players, and try to score by getting it in their goal. Serious
buzkashi players train intensively for years, and many of the masters over
forty years old.
Sometimes,
games involving large, toothless Canadians armed with wooden sticks can seem a
bit too easy. So how do you make ice hockey more difficult? Play it on
unicycles! Following the same basic rules as ice hockey, “uni-hockey” enjoyed
scattered success for nearly 25 years in America, Europe, and Asia. Leagues
even formed in Germany and Great Britain. Then the new millennium arrived,
complete with plenty of flashing lights and pretty zeroes. Distracted by all
the excitement, the few remaining enthusiasts climbed aboard their one-wheel
chariots and rode off into the sunset.
A
popular sport in Malaysia and elsewhere in Asia, this one is not bizarre for
weirdness as much as for the sheer athleticism involved – the athletic skills
required might put even Michael Jordan to shame. Sepak Takraw resembles soccer,
volleyball and gymnastics all in one game. The Takraw ball is about the size of
a 16” softball and usually made of rattan or hard plastic stems. There are
three players per team, and players stand on opposing sides of a net and use
their feet, knees, shoulders or head to hit – actually smash is a more
appropriate term – to the opposite side. No hands or arms are allowed. It is
common to see players front-flipping, back-flipping and moving their bodies in
other impossible ways to hit the ball and score points.
Kilde : http://www.oddee.com/