logo
Ancient Myanmar ball game battles for survival in troubled nation

Ancient Myanmar ball game battles for survival in troubled nation

Yahoo03-06-2025
A man weaves cane into a traditional Myanmar chinlone ball at a workshop in Hinthada township in the Irrawaddy delta (Sai Aung MAIN)
Mastering control of the rising and falling rattan chinlone ball teaches patience, says a veteran of the traditional Myanmar sport -- a quality dearly needed in the long-suffering nation.
"Once you get into playing the game you forget everything," says 74-year-old Win Tint.
Advertisement
"You concentrate only on your touch and you concentrate only on your style."
Chinlone is Myanmar's national game and dates back centuries. Branded a blend of sport and art, it is often played to music, and is typically practised differently by men and women.
Male teams in skimpy shorts stand in a circle using stylised strokes of their feet, knees and heads to pass the ball in a game of "keepy-uppy", with a scoring system impenetrable to outsiders.
Women play solo like circus performers -- kicking the ball tens of thousands of times per session while walking tightropes, twirling umbrellas and perching on chairs balanced atop beer bottles.
Advertisement
Teen prodigy Phyu Sin Phyo hones her skills at the court in Yangon, toe-bouncing a burning ball while spinning a hula-hoop -- also on fire.
"I play even when I am sick," says the 16-year-old. "It is important to be patient to become a good chinlone player."
But play has plunged in recent years, with the Covid-19 pandemic followed by the 2021 military coup and subsequent civil war.
Poverty rates are shooting up and craftsmen face increasing problems sourcing materials to make balls.
But the rising and falling rhythm of the game offers its practitioners a respite.
"When you hear the sound of kicking the ball it's like music," Win Tint, vice-chairman of the Myanmar Chinlone Federation, told AFP.
Advertisement
"So when you play chinlone, you feel like dancing."
- 'Play day is happy' -
Different versions of the hands-free sport known as "caneball" are widely played across Southeast Asia.
In Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia players kick and head the ball over a net in the volleyball-style "sepak takraw".
In Laos it is known as "kataw" while Filipinos play "sipa" -- meaning kick.
Myanmar's iteration dates back 1,500 years, according to popular belief.
Some cite a French archaeologist's discovery of a replica silver chinlone ball at a pagoda built in the Pyu era of 200 BC to 900 AD.
Advertisement
It was initially practised as a casual pastime, a fitness activity and for royal entertainment.
But in 1953 the game was given rules and a scoring system, as part of an effort to codify Myanmar's national culture after independence from Britain.
"No one else will preserve Myanmar's traditional heritage unless the Myanmar people do it," said player Min Naing, 42.
Despite the conflict, players still gather under motorway overpasses, around street lamps blighted with wartime blackouts and on dedicated chinlone courts -- often ramshackle open-sided metal sheds with concrete floors.
"For a chinlone man, the day he plays is always a happy day. I am happy, and I sleep well at night," says Min Naing.
Advertisement
"On the days I don't play it, I feel I am missing something."
- 'Respect the chinlone' -
But Win Tint is concerned that participation rates are falling.
"I worry about this sport disappearing," says master chinlone ball maker Pe Thein, toiling in a sweltering workshop in Hinthada, 110 kilometres (70 miles) northwest of Yangon.
"That's the reason we are passing it on through our handiwork."
Cross-legged men shave cane into strips, curve them with a hand crank and deftly weave them into a melon-sized ball with pentagonal holes, boiled in a vat of water to seal its strength.
Advertisement
"We check our chinlone's quality as if we're checking diamonds or gemstones," adds the 64-year-old Pe Thein.
"As we respect the chinlone, it respects us back."
Each ball takes around two hours to make and earns business-owner Maung Kaw $2.40 apiece.
But supplies of the best-quality rattan he covets from nearby Rakhine are dwindling.
There is fierce fighting in the state between the military and opposition groups that now control almost all of it.
Farmers are too fearful to plunge into the jungle battleground to cut cane, says Maung Kaw, endangering his profession.
"It should not be that we have players but no chinlone makers," says the 72-year-old.
"I want to work as well as I can for as long as I can."
bur-jts/pdw/slb/dh
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yankees GM Brian Cashman Defends Aaron Boone as Team Struggles Continue
Yankees GM Brian Cashman Defends Aaron Boone as Team Struggles Continue

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Yankees GM Brian Cashman Defends Aaron Boone as Team Struggles Continue

The New York Yankees have struggled in the second half of the season after the All-Star break. They've now fallen into third place in the American League East and enter Saturday 6 1/2 games back of the Toronto Blue Jays, who are in first. As cries for manager Aaron Boone to be fired grow louder, general manager Brian Cashman is defending Boone and doesn't appear ready to make a change. WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - MARCH 12: New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman talks with manager Aaron Boone prior to a Grapefruit League spring training game against the Washington Nationals at FITTEAM Ballpark of... WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - MARCH 12: New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman talks with manager Aaron Boone prior to a Grapefruit League spring training game against the Washington Nationals at FITTEAM Ballpark of The Palm Beaches on March 12, 2020 in West Palm Beach, Florida. Many professional and college sports are canceling or postponing their games due to the ongoing threat of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. More"One thing that people maybe really forget is that we play in a market that holds you — maybe Boston and Philly, too — that holds you more accountable automatically," Cashman told Chris Kirschner and Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic. "The market already provides instant accountability. In many cases, today's world is so much different than maybe generations before. I think leaders, managers, coaches are more inclined to try to support and help players that are going through a lot as they try to navigate their struggles. Struggles are part of the game. It's just louder in a bigger market." That is correct. New York is obviously a bigger market compared to smaller ones even within the same division such as Toronto and Tampa Bay. However, market size has nothing to do with performances, and the Yankees have been one of baseball's worst teams since the All-Star break. Catching up within the division is going to be difficult for the Bronx Bombers to do. However, Cashman believes Boone is the guy to lead them through the chase. "He knows how tough this sport is," Cashman told The Athletic about Boone. "He's invested in these guys heavily, as we all are. Trying to explain away a difficult play or a bad performance for some time while the storm is upon us is not an easy task to navigate or deal with and remain cool, calm and collected. He's obviously done an amazing job of working through that. ... We're the defending American League champs trying to re-defend that. Obviously, right now, we're not in control of the division. Our first goal is try to win the American League East and automatically punch the ticket that way. If not, we'll be fighting to punch a ticket a different way. We have a lot of time on the clock, but not enough time at the same time. I don't want to misrepresent (that) there's not urgency, because there is." There needs to be a little more urgency for the final six weeks of the regular season. New York holds just a 1 1/2-game lead over the Cleveland Guardians for the final wildcard spot. Cashman might have a different stance if/when the Yankees are eliminated from the playoffs. More MLB: Fernando Tatis Jr. on Padres-Dodgers Rivalry: 'It's What We Play For'

Wolfsburg routs 5th-tier team Hemelingen 9-0 in German Cup
Wolfsburg routs 5th-tier team Hemelingen 9-0 in German Cup

San Francisco Chronicle​

time3 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Wolfsburg routs 5th-tier team Hemelingen 9-0 in German Cup

BERLIN (AP) — Wolfsburg routed fifth-tier SV Hemelingen 9-0 in the first round of the German Cup on Saturday, when other Bundesliga teams also enjoyed big wins over lower-league opposition. Two-time champion Leipzig twice came from behind to beat fourth-tier SV Sandhausen 4-2 with new signings Ezechiel Banzuzi and Yan Diomande both scoring. Heidenheim won 5-0 at 10-man fourth-tier Bahlinger SC and Hoffenheim won 4-0 at third-division Hansa Rostock. Hamburger SV, which clinched its return to the Bundesliga last season, survived a scare at fifth-tier Pirmasens, equalizing late to send the match to extra time, where Ransford-Yeboah Königsdörffer headed the winner for 2-1. Königsdörffer was only playing for Hamburg because a proposed early August move to Nice broke down after his medical check with the French team.

How to Watch Monaco vs. Le Havre: Live Stream Ligue 1, TV Channel
How to Watch Monaco vs. Le Havre: Live Stream Ligue 1, TV Channel

Newsweek

time4 hours ago

  • Newsweek

How to Watch Monaco vs. Le Havre: Live Stream Ligue 1, TV Channel

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Ligue 1 returns this weekend as Monaco gets its campaign rolling with a visit from lowly Le Havre on Saturday. Monaco's Dutch defender #04 Jordan Teze (L) fights for the ball with Le Havre's French midfielder #21 Antoine Joujou during the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC and AS Monaco at the Stade... Monaco's Dutch defender #04 Jordan Teze (L) fights for the ball with Le Havre's French midfielder #21 Antoine Joujou during the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC and AS Monaco at the Stade Oceane in Le Havre, north-western France, on April 26, 2025. More Photo by LOU BENOIST/AFP via Getty Images How to Watch Monaco vs. Le Havre Date: Saturday, August 16, 2025 Time: 1:00 PM EDT Location: Stade Louis-II, Monaco, France Channel: beIN SPORTS, beIN SPORTS En Español Stream: Fubo (Start your subscription now) Le Havre escaped relegation from Ligue 1 by the skin of its teeth last term and will have its work cut out from the beginning of the new campaign as it travels to Monaco on Saturday. Le Club Doyen finished one point off the relegation places in May after winning on the last day of the season, but visits the Stade Louis-II hoping to start with one foot forward this time around. Les Monegasques, on the other hand, were one of the few teams to give champion Paris Saint-Germain a run for its money in the hunt for last season's Ligue 1 crown. For a time, at least, as they aim to topple Luis Enrique's side from the throne this term and win a first league title in nine years. Monaco has operated with a shoestring budget in the transfer market this summer, but that doesn't mean there isn't a lot to be excited about in their latest recruits. Potentially most intriguing is the return of free agent Paul Pogba, the World Cup-winner who hasn't played a competitive game since September 2023 due to a ban over alleged drug offenses. Adi Hutter's side has also signed Spain gem Ansu Fati on loan from Barcelona, while Eric Dier has also signed as a free agent after leaving Bayern Munich. Le Havre has been similarly frugal and has not spent a cent on new signings, though no fewer than nine new faces could make their Ligue 1 debuts for the club. Live stream Monaco vs. Le Havre on beIN SPORTS or beIN SPORTS En Español with Fubo: Start your subscription now! Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store