Beach shorts over thermal underwear, wool hats instead of bikinis and not a grain of sand in sight: A new sport has emerged in the Alps and it is called snow volleyball.
Think of it as beach volleyball at 2,000m, played on white powder with skiers whizzing by. Casually, the sport has been around for years, but organizers of the Snow Volleyball Tour — set up in 2009 and now including stops in Austria, Germany, Italy and Switzerland — hope it could soon become a competitive event.
As winter sports fanatics enjoyed the last runs of the season, the Austrian ski resort of Sankt Anton hosted the final of the Tour earlier this month in a beach-like atmosphere.
Photo: AFP
Players dug, set and spiked, surrounded by potted palm trees and peppy cheerleaders. Instead of bikinis, the choice of attire was a little heavier and warmer than usual, with football boots de rigueur to guard against frozen toes.
“It’s a mad setting. I went skiing yesterday and it was an incredible feeling to ski to the ‘beach volleyball’ court,” said German player Ulrike Pfletschinger, who made it to the final in her first snow volleyball tournament.
“The tactics are exactly the same. You also plan everything beforehand, but the movements are completely different. You slip an awful lot, you can’t really brake, so you don’t jump as high, but it’s a great challenge, it’s super!” Pfletschinger said.
Photo: AFP
About 50 teams from around the world, including active beach volleyball and indoor volleyball players, took part in this year’s Snow Volleyball Tour, held last month and this month.
Past participants have included Olympic, world championship and European championship medalists.
“People have always set up a net [in winter], but marketing it this way, as a professional event with an international tour in the Alps, that’s never been done before. We’re unique,” said Martin Kaswurm, one of the masterminds of the tournament.
Photo: AFP
The Austrian volleyball association (OeVV) has already recognized the sport and talks are under way to get a green light from the German and Swiss authorities.
“We want to become an official sport in the alpine region, and then perhaps one day we can become an Olympic sport,” Kaswurm said with a grin.
Amid sunshine and springlike temperatures and with a DJ pumping out dance music between points, several hundred volleyball fans and relaxing skiers cheered on the players.
Over the whole tour, organizers said they attracted about 15,000 spectators.
“It’s a fun idea,” said Kristine Kindler, a German tourist taking a break from skiing with friends.
She said she could imagine this becoming a bigger attraction in years to come, much like ski halfpipe or snowboard slopestyle, which made their Olympic debuts this year in Sochi.
“A lot of sports weren’t taken seriously, but then established themselves... I think if you want to reach young people, you need to offer this kind of thing,” she said.
For OeVV head Peter Kleinmann, “snow volleyball is definitely a nice plus for alpine countries,” as well as a potential boost for tourism.
Held before the start of the beach volleyball season, the Tour already offers a good training opportunity for players and a useful preview of the competition.
“It’s good to see how they improved during the winter... We will figure out who is better, who is worse and then we will know the tactics,” Czech player David Kufa joked.
Since the Snow Volleyball Tour began, other tournaments have followed in Slovenia, Spain, the US and Canada.
“That’s great for us because the more people play this sport, the more recognition we will get from international associations,” Kaswurm said. “And that’s our goal in the long run: to really make it a widespread sport in the next five to 10 years.”
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