Misplaced Pages

Tambo rugby

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Tambo rugby (Japanese 田んぼラグビー tambo ragubii, from 田んぼ tambo 'rice field') is a Japanese form of tag rugby played in flooded (and muddy) rice fields. It is played by men and women, adults and children together. Smaller, lighter players have some advantages, as larger, heavier players tend to sink in the mud. A simple try is worth one point, a diving try is worth two. The playing season is May to August, between rice-harvest and planting.

The game was invented by Nobuyuki Nagate in Fukuchiyama, near the Inland Sea northwest of Kyoto, in 2015, after a typhoon had flooded local rice farms, and many of the first players were farm-women. From Fukuchiyama it spread to neighboring communities, and within a few years Japan's local and national rugby teams joined in, winning about half of their matches. In 2019, 15 events were held nationwide.

References

  1. ^ Rebecca Seales (1 November 2019). "All you need is mud: Japan's new spin on rugby". BBC News.

External links

Rugby football
Rugby union
General
Variations
Comparisons
Related topics
Rugby league
General
Comparisons
Related articles
Football codes
Association
Australian rules
Gridiron
Rugby
Other codes
Hybrid codes
Rules and
regulations
Modern
Former
Ancient games
History
Comparisons
Memorabilia
Related articles
Team sports
Ball sports
Invasion games
Basket sports
Football
codes
Association football
Gridiron codes
Hybrid codes
Medieval/historical
football
codes
Rugby codes
Other related codes
Stick-and-ball
sports
Hockey sports
Polo sports
Other goal sports
Bat-and-ball
games
Baseball variants
Cricket variants
Other games
Net and wall games
Other ball games
Tag sports
Water sports
Other non-ball sports
Categories: