5 Out-There Hybrid Sports

06/23/09  Print This Post Print This Post    5 Comments      Written by Adam Roy
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Photo above by Petter F. Schmedling / Feature photo by michael.kjaer
Whether challenging, chaotic or just plain odd, these hybrid sports are anything but boring.
Chess Boxing

Chess boxing is the sport for anyone who’s every wished that you could win a board game by beating up your opponent. Athletes face off in alternating rounds of speed chess and boxing, with matches ending by knockout, decision or checkmate.

The Berlin-based World Chess Boxing Organisation governs the sport and organizes championship bouts for various weight classes.

International Rules Football

Developed in the 1960s to facilitate international athletic competition, international rules is a mixture of two regional codes of football, Australian and Gaelic. While the annual series between Ireland and Australia is one of the most-watched hybrid sporting events in the world, disputes over rules and different playing styles have made it notorious for spawning brawls.

Football Tennis

Tennis, but played with a soccer ball by soccer rules (no hands!). Invented in Czechoslovakia in the 1920s, football tennis remains popular in the Czech Republic, where it is known as nohejbal.

Bossaball

Start with football tennis. Instead of a tennis court, play it on a giant, inflatable trampoline. Now imagine that the referee is also a DJ.

Congratulations, you’re playing bossaball, an amalgam of volleyball, gymnastics, soccer and samba music that, despite all its Brazilian overtones, actually originated in Belgium.

Underwater Rugby

A sport with roots in German diving clubs’ training exercises, underwater rugby is much like water polo, but played under the surface instead of on it.

What’s the oddest hybrid sport you’ve ever played? Let us know in the comments!

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About the Author

Matador ID: adnroy

Chicago native Adam Roy is editor at Matador Sports and an aspiring renaissance man to boot. For more of Adam's writing, check out his blog at Ill-Advised Adventures.

5 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Hal replied on June 25, 2009

    Great roundup, Adam! Isn’t there something similar to football tennis that’s played in Asia with a small wicker ball? I feel like I’ve seen clips of players doing back flips and scissor kicks and the like.

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  • Roy replied on July 5, 2009

    Football tennis is very similar to sepak takraw, a popular native sport in South East Asia.

    Sepak Takraw is competed regionally, most notably at the bi-annual South East Asian Games.

    The notable differences between sepak takraw and football tennis are:
    - There are 3 players on each side;
    - The net is set at badminton’s height; and
    - They use a lightweight rattan ball.

    Another popular hybrid sport is underwater hockey, suitable for those adverse to the violence of underwater rugby!

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