Asian Geographic - 08.2018

(Grace) #1

Sepak takraw – also known as kick volleyball –


has always been a regular feature of the Asian


Games. Its origins are hotly contested among


nine Southeast Asian states, each with its


own regional variation and claims to its true


inception, but there is general agreement that


the sport was first introduced to the region


by the Chinese, who had a similar military


exercise involving players keeping shuttlecocks


airborne with just their feet.


The earliest record of sepak takraw in


Southeast Asia is in the Sejarah Melayu (Malay


Annals), which describes a 15th-century game


in the royal court involving one player hitting


another with a kicked rattan ball. Eighteenth-


century murals in Bangkok’s Phra Kaeo


Temple also depict the Hindu god Hanuman


playing sepak takraw with a group of monkeys.


above Singaporean
players competing in
the national sepak
takraw premier league
in May

right A sepak takraw
player executes an
overhead kick

Sepak takraw may have been around since the 15th century, but


it’s no forgotten relic. We look at the history of this fast-growing


sport – and its bid for Olympic recognition


Alive and Kicking


PLAYING BALL


Text and photos Lee Jian Wei


In 1835, Thailand included a volleyball net in
gameplay, and in 1945, Malaysia introduced
the badminton court and net. But it was not
until the impending inclusion of sepak takraw
as a medal sport at the 1965 South East Asian
Peninsular Games (now known as the SEA
Games) in Kuala Lumpur that the Southeast
Asian states were forced to agree on an official
name and single set of rules for their common
game. They christened it sepak takraw: sepak
means “kick” in Malay, while takraw means
“woven ball” in Thai – the two countries had
the strongest claims to the origins of the sport.
Coupled with upgrading of the traditional
rattan ball to a plastic ball (the latter does not
have a nasty tendency to splinter), the game
grew immensely popular. Today, it is Malaysia’s
national sport.

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