A rugby-like sport, qiang shu, recently debuted at the Ninth Traditional Sports of Ethnic Groups competition in Hulunbuir, allowing the audience a taste of the traditional Ewenki game.
In Chinese, qiang shu means grabbing the pivot, a cone-shape wooden wedge used to fasten the wheels on a cart used by nomadic men on grasslands. To protect athletes from injury, match pivots have been ameliorated with wool on the inside and sheepskin on the outside.
As a newly enlisted game, qiang shu attracted 150 athletes from the cities and leagues of Baotou, Tongliao, Wuhai, Xilin Gol and Hulunbuir.
At the start of a match, two contestants fetch the pivot from the referee’s hands, before carrying it to the goal line to touch the pivot to a wheel. The opposing team does their best to prevent the passing and throwing of the pivot. Once a member hits the wheel with the pivot, their team wins.
Apart from the Ewenki, the sport is also popular among the Mongolian, Daur and Oroqen ethnic groups.
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Contestants fetch the pivot at the start of a qiang shu match during the Ninth Traditional Sports of Ethnic Groups competition in Hulunbuir, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on July 15. [Photo/people.cn] |
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An athlete passes the pivot to her teammate while being tackled by another competitor during a mixed qiang shu game in Hulunbuir on July 15. [Photo/people.cn] |
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Athletes tangle during a qiang shu game in Hulunbuir on July 15. [Photo/people.cn] |