The Scotsman

Play time in Finland

Finland tops the league for strange sports and peculiar pastimes, the explanatio­n for which seems to be that they’re fun, finds Andrew Keh

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Where to go for swamp soccer and wife carrying

There’s something strange going on in Finland. Over the past few decades, as it has all but disappeare­d from the global sports stage, this humble Nordic nation has sort of lost its sports mind.

More than 2,000 people ventured to the remote backwaters of Hyrynsalmi in the centre of the country recently for the 20th annual Swamp Soccer World Championsh­ips. If you and your spouse want to compete in the Wife Carrying World Championsh­ips, you must come to Finland. The Mobile Phone Throwing World Championsh­ips? Finland. The World Berry Picking Championsh­ip and the Air Guitar World Championsh­ips? Finland and Finland.

“We have some weird hobbies,” said Paivi Kemppainen, 26, a staff member at the swamp soccer competitio­n and master of the understate­ment.

Just look at swamp soccer in Hyrynsalmi, a place where Jetta can achieve a small level of celebrity over the years. Jetta is a stuffed badger ensconced in a bird cage. She acts as a mascot of sorts for a team of 12 friends who make the seven-hour drive each year from Vihti, near Helsinki, for the competitio­n. They bought the doll seven years ago from a junk shop at a motorway service station, and her fame around the swamp has grown ever since. A couple of years ago, she was interviewe­d by a local newspaper.

On Saturday morning, the men stood around shivering in threadbare charity shop suits, which they said were their team’s official warmup kit. A bottle of vodka was being passed around (their preferred way, apparently, of warming up). It was about 10 o’clock. Soon it would be time for their first game of the day. They set Jetta aside and stripped off their outerwear, revealing skimpy blue wrestling all-in-ones.

Before they went into the mud, they were asked a question: Why?

“You can say you’re world champions of swamp soccer,” said Matti Paulavaara, 34, one of the team members, after a contemplat­ive pause. “How many can say that?”

The genesis of swamp soccer was in 1998, when creative town officials in Hyrynsalmi cooked up a festival-like event that would make use of the area’s vast swamplands. Thirteen teams signed up for the first tournament. Since then, the competitiv­e field has grown to about 200 teams.

The recent matches – six-on-six, with 10-minute halves – were played on 20 fields of varying squishines­s, spread out over 50 acres of swamp. Finnish rock echoed through the woods.

People striding on seemingly firm ground would disappear suddenly into the soft earth, as if descending a stairway. Some crawled on their hands and knees; others stood still, until they were waist-deep in muck. The scores were generally low. Many of the players were drunk.

It’s hard to imagine an uglier version of the Beautiful Game.

“You play, you lose, you win – no one cares,” said Sami Korhonen, 25, of Kajaani, who was playing in the tournament for the ninth time. “The whole game is so tough, you’re totally wiped out when you’re done.”

This streak of strenuous irreverenc­e began sweeping through the quiet Finnish countrysid­e in the mid-1990s, and has only grown since.

In 1995, a Finn named Henri Pellonpaa killed a world-record 21 insects in five minutes at the Mosquito Killing World Championsh­ips in Pelkosenni­emi.

The World Sauna Championsh­ips were heavily contested in Heinola

“I think we go a little crazy in summer. mix that with alcohol and we want to compete”

from 1999-2010, until a competitor died from third-degree burns.

More recently, thousands of Finns, most of them teenage girls, have taken up competitiv­e hobby-horsing, wherein competitor­s trot and hurdle obstacles while riding the wooden toys.

How did this happen? How did Finland become such fertile ground for wacky sports?

There’s no simple answer, but Finns offer various deep-seated factors, including an enthusiast­ically outdoorsy populace (that goes slightly stir-crazy during the region’s oppressive­ly dark winter months), widespread public access to recreation­al spaces, and a continuing relaxation of the traditiona­lly reserved national character. (Also, alcohol.)

Finland is the most thinly populated country in the European Union. It boasts endless forests and almost 200,000 lakes, and its residents enjoy Everyman rights, which guarantee public access to most outdoor lands and bodies of water for recreation­al purposes. The European Commission consistent­ly ranks Finns as among the most physically active people on the continent.

“We’re like a forest people,” said Lassi Hurskainen, 30, a former profession­al goalkeeper from Joensuu, who visited the swamp soccer tournament while hosting a segment for a Finnish sports television show. “So we come up with games that relate to nature.”

Straddling the Arctic Circle, Finland endures long, punishingl­y dark winters. Summer therefore marks a period of national catharsis. It helps that the country has an estimated 500,000 summer cottages, and because many Finns receive up to six weeks of holidays per year, the act of unhurriedl­y passing time outdoors feels almost like a national birthright.

“I think we go a little crazy in the summer,” said Hanna Vehmas, a sports sociologis­t at the University of Jyvaskyla. “Mix that with alcohol, and maybe we want to compete a little bit.”

In Hyrynsalmi, the swamp soccer games were just one component of the weekend fun. Finns from all over the country – there were also a few teams from Russia – effectivel­y doubled the population of the small town, where road signs warning of crossing moose dot the quiet roadways.

On Friday and Saturday nights, after everyone had cleaned the swamp water off their faces, there were loud rock concerts in the car park of a local resort until 2am, when the soft glow of the sun was still visible over the hills.

“This is what I wait for every winter,” said Tapio Velenius, 38, who has been playing swamp soccer since 2005. “It’s tradition in Finland: having beer, no sleep, having fun.”

There was a time long ago when Finland was very serious about its sports. Athleticis­m and physical activity were important concepts around which the country’s identity was built after it gained independen­ce from Russia in 1917.

The first half of the 20th century brought what Pasi Koski, a sports sociologis­t at the University of Turku, calls the “golden age of Finnish elite sport”. The country won an average of 24 medals at the Summer Olympic Games from 1908-1948, punching well above its weight in the global arena. Champion runners, like Hannes Kolehmaine­n and Paavo Nurmi, achieved heroic status.

They embodied the important Finnish concept of sisu, which loosely translates into some combinatio­n of words like determinat­ion, patience and hardiness.

The rest of the world caught up, eventually. From 1992-2012, Finland took home an average of four medals at the Summer Olympics, and at the 2016 Games in Rio, the country won a single medal: the bronze in women’s lightweigh­t boxing.

But if the halcyon days of elite sports in Finland seem like a distant memory, the contours of a new, far weirder era of national sports prosperity have taken shape, one that reflects the wave of individual­ism still growing in this young country.

Hence the wife-carrying races (where the winners receive the wife’s weight in beer) and the air guitar contests (hashtag: #makeairnot­war) and the soccer games in cold, coffeebrow­n swamp water. Hence the celebrity of Jetta, the badger doll.

“We learned to laugh at ourselves,” Koski said. “What’s so serious?”

 ??  ?? Swamp soccer is an increasing­ly popular event held in the small Finnish town of Hyrynsalmi
Swamp soccer is an increasing­ly popular event held in the small Finnish town of Hyrynsalmi
 ??  ?? Evgeniy Gultyaev, from Russia, relaxes during the swamp soccer competitio­n
Evgeniy Gultyaev, from Russia, relaxes during the swamp soccer competitio­n

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