Oman Daily Observer

Too tall for basketball? South Korea scraps height limit

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SEOUL: South Korea’s basketball league has scrapped a controvers­ial height limit that kept its tallest foreign players off the court, less than a year after it was introduced, officials said on Wednesday.

The Korean Basketball League (KBL) was subject to worldwide mockery last year when it banned foreign players taller than 200 centimetre­s in a move to protect local, mostly shorter athletes.

The regulation enraged many fans as it forced existing players out of their teams — many of them league favourites, including top scorer David Simon, a 201cm American.

Hundreds signed a petition submitted to the presidenti­al office, protesting the rule. South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported players had tried lifting weights and jogging before their measuremen­ts, hoping that dehydratio­n would make them shrink.

Some recruits kneeled in happiness when they measured below the two- metre limit, while others were sent to pack their bags.

But those players were now welcome to return, a KBL official said, as the league has decided to lift the controvers­ial ban to “allow autonomy of the teams”.

“We felt the ban was outdated and there were many complaints about the league restrictin­g the freedom of the teams,” the official said.

“In the past, a player couldn’t sign a contract if he didn’t meet the requiremen­t but now he can whether he is tall or short,” he added.

Each team is allowed two foreign players, but under the previous regulation, one had to be under 1.86 metres and the other under two metres.

The decision to scrap “all height restrictio­ns” was reached at a board meeting on Monday that also lifted bans against overseas recruits who played more than 10 NBA games in the last three seasons.

The revisions will come into effect starting the 2019-2020 season.

 ?? — AFP ?? People look at displays at the Yellow River Lamp display in Gucheng Village, in Zhangye City, in northwest China’s Gansu Province, on Tuesday. The display is made up of a temporary maze layout where locals and tourists can view displays of traditiona­l stories, paintings, cartoons and lamps.
— AFP People look at displays at the Yellow River Lamp display in Gucheng Village, in Zhangye City, in northwest China’s Gansu Province, on Tuesday. The display is made up of a temporary maze layout where locals and tourists can view displays of traditiona­l stories, paintings, cartoons and lamps.

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