Bangladesh rolls out welcome for unusual sport on skates | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Bangladesh rolls out welcome for unusual sport on skates

In this Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017 photo, Aija Apsipe, left, of Latvia dribbles the ball during the 4th Roll Ball World Cup quarterfinal match against India at Shaheed Sohrawardi Indoor Stadium in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Bangladesh hosted the championship for an unusual sport, roll ball, where players on roller skates dribble and pass a basketball-sized ball that they try to throw into a small soccer-type goal. About 750 players from 40 countries around the world took part. Top honors, both for men and women, went to India, where the sport was invented. (AP Photo/A.M. Ahad)

DHAKA, Bangladesh - If basketball and soccer had a baby and put it on skates, it might look like roll ball, a little-known sport whose top performers worldwide vied for the championship in Bangladesh over the past week.

Played on a basketball court, with a small soccer-type goal in lieu of a basket, roll ball requires players on roller skates to dribble and pass a basketball-sized ball as they try to score.

Some 750 competitors from 40 countries, including hosts Bangladesh, participated in the meet at three venues in Dhaka, the capital. Most were from Asia or Africa, but Europe, South America and the South Pacific island nation of Fiji were also represented. All participating nations sent men's teams and 27 sent women.

Uganda had initially been expected to host the fourth Roll Ball World Cup, but Bangladesh stepped in after the African nation declined it, said Ahmed Asiful Hasan, general secretary of the Bangladesh Roller Skating Federation.

"This is a little known game in the country. Hosting such a big tournament gives us an opportunity to make it known," he said. "The amount of support we got from the government's top level and the public is amazing."

Roll ball originated in neighbouring India, as the results might suggest. In the finals Wednesday, both the Indian men and women won their respective championships, in each case defeating teams from Iran.

Bangladesh's men reached the semifinals, and team captain Mohammad Asif Iqbal said his country's hosting of the tournament will help the sport grow.

"Roll ball is now a known game in Bangladesh and it has good prospect in the future," he said.

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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