When Sport really can equal War
This edition of Open Season is being tapped out on a rapidly failing computer on a mountain top somewhere in Nicaragua. No, really.

- Join the discussion
The intention is not to be mysterious but a combination of tropical rain, dark roads, and a little sleep deprivation means I really have little idea where I am.
The good news is that I am on a coffee farm (with buildings somewhat bizarrely built in a Bavarian ski lodge architectural style - don't ask) so a little pick me up is close at hand.
Politics is everywhere you go in Nicaragua. This is perhaps not surprising considering the country was in the throes of civil war just 25 years ago and current president Daniel Ortega is a former Sandinista revolutionary.
The cut and thrust of politics since the 1980s (when Ronald Reagan's US Presidency supported the right-wing Contra revolutionaries) has been all ebb and flow, mimicking an end-to-end football match.
Intriguingly, baseball is the most popular sport in Nicaragua.
Part of the reason is that British railway workers didn't have the influence in Central
America that they did in the rest of Latin America and so soccer floundered.
"I think Nicaragua and maybe Panama have the worst soccer teams in the entire world," said my friend Chico.
I didn't tell him about American Samoa.
Nicaragua is a country split by a mountain range (where I'm now sitting) that entertained strong British influence during the 19th Century. Cricket was the number one sport on the Atlantic coast until a sporting rebel (that word again), American Albert Addlesberg, intervened in Nicaragua's history.
Addlesburg's baseball got the lead on cricket and several years later a league, of sorts, bloomed.
Here's the fun part. The tradition in Nicaragua was to name sports teams after contemporary wars.
One team was known as "Boer" after the conflict in what would become South Africa. "Russia" and "Japan" were also popular teams of the time.
There you go: War = sport.
While George W. Bush once owned a Major league Baseball team, perhaps Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin might enjoy taking up baseball - although he seems at home with judo.
Putin celebrated his 56th birthday this week launching – literally - a how-to-judo DVD. It's title? Let's Learn Judo with Vladimir Putin.
The Russian PM is a black belt and already authored a book on the sport. It puts the sporting aspirations of former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, a cricket tragic, in some perspective.
Howard's, successor may want to take notice.
If Kevin Rudd really wants to make an impact on the world stage he should put the Mandarin books back on the shelf and learn Kung-Fu.
Politicians learning martial arts can only be a step toward world peace. Would the current situation in Iraq be as messy as it is if George W. Bush had a one-on-one throwdown with Saddam Hussein?
Does Putin's judo know-how make him the most powerful man in the world?
And where would US vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, an active hunter, fit into all this?
It's enough to make remaining on top of a mountain in Nicaragua even more appealing.
Amigo - un otra cafe con leche.
Join the discussion
PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.
Most Popular
- World Cup war questions Australia's national identity (53)
- Melbourne: Sporting capital of the world (except for the World Cup) (43)
- Is Park Ji-Sung Asia's best ever? (24)
- Nelson Mandela & the Aussie backyard BBQ (invite only) (23)
- Jolly good show, England (19)
- Socceroos to make the World Cup Final? (15)
- In Istanbul, special is normal (13)
- Gaza and the home ground advantage (12)
- Where to now for rugby league? (10)
- Australia's World Cup bid: sugar, tea, & the truth (10)
About this Blog
Sport, without spin, from around the world. Matthew Hall considers the issues behind the headlines and tells the stories that others don't.
Matthew Hall Sport, without spin, from around the world. Matthew Hall considers the issues behind the headlines and tells the stories that others don't. Matt is a writer, author, and filmmaker, originally from Perth, he now lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Other Blogs
TV
- Living Black
- Italian Food Safari
- Thalassa
- Luke Nguyen's Vietnam
- Behind the Scenes: The 2009 Deadly Awards
- My Family Feast
- Costa's Production Blog
- Eurovision 2011
- Swift and Shift Couriers
- Global Village
- My Bogan Diary
- The Road to the White House
Food
Films
Documentary
- Britt Arthur
- Catharine Lumby
- John Birmingham
- Rory Medcalf
- Mark Jones
- Emily Booth
- Bob Wurth
- Andy Martin
World News Australia
- Ricardo's Business
- 180 degrees
- Reporters' Blog
- The Hashtag
- The Other World Game
- Window on Africa
- Pop, Cultured
- PJ's Notebook
- The Sweet Spot
- Back of the.net
- Source Code
- The Road to 2012
- Candid Canberra
Sport
- The Circus
- The Interchange
- The Hangover
- Lip Service
- Deep in the Dust: On the Dakar trail
- Dakar Dreams
- The Finktank
- Open Season
About SBS
Business
Internet and Technology
Cycling Central
- Rochelle Gilmore
- Matthew Price's Broom Wagon
- Anthony Tan's Velo Files
- Matthew Keenan
- Al Hinds
- Sophie Smith
- Philip Gomes
- Scott Sunderland
- Mike Tomalaris
Wed 23 May 2012 | 

Email to friend
Print
Enlarge text







top
Blog Home 
