The Phnom Penh Post

Baby steps for gridiron in Ukraine

- Andriy Perun

WHAT is a t ig ht end? That is the prick ly question a growing number of Ukrainians are ask ing as American footba ll slowly makes its i mpact on t he crisis-torn former Sov iet republic now forging an ever-closer a llia nce wit h t he West.

The US National Football League (NFL) – one of the world’s richest sports organisati­ons and a big proponent of expanding into European countries such as England – has never set its sights on impoverish­ed Ukraine.

The East European country has been ravaged by a Russiaback­ed war in its east that has claimed more than 10,000 lives and is just now digging itself out of a dire economic recession.

But this has not kept Ukrainians from launching an amateur league whose total budget is easily eclipsed by the annual salaries of US football superstars such as the New England Patriots’ quarterbac­k Tom Brady.

“Our biggest problem is financing,” the Ukrainian capital’s Kyiv Rebels coach Artem Ryaboshapk­a said.

“We have problems travelling for away games because renting a bus costs 36,000 hryvnias ($1,400) for one trip,” Ryaboshapk­a said. “That is too much.”

It’s not rugby

Such a tiny price tag might make some US football players accustomed to staying in five-star hotels blush.

But it makes Ryaboshapk­a’s Kyiv Rebels and the other 17 teams competing in the threeyear-old Ukrainian league come up with ingenious ways to keep the US sport alive.

The lack of particular interest from sponsors means the bitter rivals on the field organise joint training sessions to which the entire league shows up.

Some US expats are also ready to lend a helping hand.

Several Americans working in Ukraine have assumed the unpaid role of teaching players and fans alike how exactly the gridiron sport is played.

“We have a lot of great athletes here, but they need a lot of coaching up,” Washington native Alphey Williams said.

“No one is getting paid. They are doing it for fun. They are doing it because they love it.”

Rebels coach Ryaboshapk­a said one of the most vexing obstacles he has encountere­d is that “when people asked what American football is, they say ‘rugby’”.

The Soviet Union played some rugby and the sport’s egg-shaped ball is at least slightly more familiar to many in Ukraine than its slimmer US counterpar­t.

“People are often not even aware of the basic difference­s between American football and rugby,” Ryaboshapk­a complained.

Losing to Estonia

The Rebels have not found much success as they prepare for their very first season in the league.

They recently lost a friendly to a team from Estonia – a tiny Baltic state where US football is also a complete novelty – during a preseason game attended by just a few dozen fans in Kiev.

But the Rebels’ co-founder Andriy Kravchenko said the game is an increasing­ly popu- lar hobby for players that has plent y of potentia l to grow.

“Our team, like all American football in Ukraine, now looks better than last year. I hope that this trend will continue,” the 42-year-old IT-specialist by profession said.

“This is a first season. We will draw conclusion­s, and the next match against [the Estonian team] will be completely different,” Kravchenko said dressed in the Rebels’ yellow jersey with No76 on its back.

And he has an answer for the uninitiate­d to the game: a tight end is an offensive player with the dual role of protecting the quarterbac­k – the guy who passes the ball downfield – and also making catches on specially designed plays.

 ?? AFP ?? Ukrainian team the Kyiv Rebels, in green, play American football against Estonia’s Titans in a friendly game in Kiev on August 26.
AFP Ukrainian team the Kyiv Rebels, in green, play American football against Estonia’s Titans in a friendly game in Kiev on August 26.

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