Fri, Jun 06, 2003 - Page 17 News List

Join the team

The `Taipei Times' offers a primer to some of the island's amateur sporting leagues and associations

By David Momphard  /  STAFF REPORTER

Taiwan's Renegade Province Ultimate Frisbee team enjoys a spin.

PHOTO COURTESY OF MICHAEL MCMANUS

Sharpen your cleats, lace your running shoes, practice your swing or clean out your tackle box. As the weather warms and Taiwan begins to unmask from SARS, people are looking to get outdoors and get active. And in a country which has traditionally placed little emphasis on sport, many amateur leagues and associations have been fielded by the expatriate community.

But that's nothing new. Foreigners have been playing sports throughout Asia since they first arrived. The most famous of expatriate sporting associations is likely the Hash House Harriers. It was founded in 1938, came to Taiwan in 1973 and is run here in the same manner as the hundreds of other hashes in countries around the world: Based on the British hare-and-hounds tradition, one runner is given a head start and marks a trail with flour. The pack of "hounds" then runs after, trying to catch him. At the end of the run, and in keeping with tradition, a lot of beer is consumed -- the perfect weekend workout.

Taiwan now has five Hashes run on a regular basis across the island. The Taipei Hash, is a men's club that boasts upwards of 600 members who, surprisingly, never tire of running around the Taiwan countryside. Most of the other hashes are mixed groups of men and women, Taiwanese and expatriate.

Kevin Meyer has been running hashes since he first came to Taiwan in 1988. "I'll run 30 to 40 hashes a year and very rarely have I run the same trail twice," he said. "It's a great way to become familiar with the island and find some nice places."

If you're interested in something a bit more competitive than chasing after some poor geezer pretending to be a rabbit, then sign up for a team sport. The most popular teams in Taiwan are playing rugby, cricket and football (the one where you use your feet). Most are active year-round, training, competing and collectively keeping the island's several sports bars in business. In some cases, they own a sports bar of their own.

"It's the way it happens all around Asia, I imagine; a guy is new to a city and he goes to the local sports bar to find out where the teams are," said Max Murphy, one of the owners of Taipei's newest sports bar, The Brass Monkey. But long before there was the Monkey, Max was a Baboon.

The Baboons are Taiwan's best established amateur rugby team by virtue of the fact that they've been around for years and they're the only ones to have competed overseas in the Manila 10s, and in Bali and Phuket. They've taken home the silverware on more than one occasion. While the team is well established, it remains open to anyone interested in playing or otherwise supporting the team, even inviting them to their tournaments overseas.

Like the Baboons, the Formosa Cricket Club is equally open to newcomers, according to one of the team's founding members, Dwight Johnson. "Everyone is welcome," he told the Taipei Times, and invited anyone interested to inquire at the team's sponsor, My Other Place. And if they don't know how to play cricket? "We'll teach them," he said.

And he's serious. In recent years, cricket has been promoted among amateurs perhaps more than any other sport in Taiwan. While other sports have long enjoyed wide support, cricket has slogged on year after year with a small handful of teams. The oldest of them, the Taipei Cricket Association, is composed of mostly Indian players and is widely seen as the team to beat.

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