A new underwater rugby league will begin competing this weekend at the Bellahøj Swimstadium in Copenhagen. The competition will fill the hole created by the demise of the Euroleague (EUWRL). Halted by the Covid pandemic after 7 seasons of competition, the EUWRL had prepared to resume play only to be derailed by the Russia-Ukraine war. The Moscow based non-profit underwater rugby promoter and member clubs could not overcome the additional difficulties that arose as a result.
Anton Churzin, co-founder of the Euroleague in 2011, said that he and partner Victor Krylov, had been willing to transfer the league to some alternative European based management. However, the Euroleague (EUWRL) and the organizers of the new league did not come to any agreement.
“Actually Manuel [Tito de Morais, the sport’s top referee] started reaching out initially scoping interest amongst former EUWRL managers,” explained Flipper spokesman Martin Kjeldgaard. “Important was that it was not a replacement but substitute until league could return some day.”
The new Underwater Rugby League—called UWRL for the time being—will initially broadcast 9 matches over Saturday and Sunday, October 8-9. The 6 participating clubs: Flipper, Krefeld, Malmö Triton, Molde, Polisen and Tudserne, were all members of the Euroleague. Tudserne won the league once (2017-18) while Molde were champions 6 times. The new league will not feature any clubs from Finland, Russia or Turkey. Malsch, a top German club that competed in the Euroleague, opted not to take part.
One big difference with the new league is that all rounds will take place at the same venue, Bellahøj Swimstadium in the Danish capital. Copenhagen enjoys a geographic advantage in that teams from the Nordic countries and Germany can travel a similar distance. The pool is cost free, easy to book and is a good size for rugby.
Although a few top women managed to play sporadically in the Euroleague on mixed teams, there was no dedicated competition for all-women teams. The new league will feature women’s teams beginning with the second round. At this point the likely participants will be from Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Germany.
“For this there is so far only the opinion that all the interested teams are extended national teams,” explained Kati Vehlow, the German women’s national coach.
Even though Germany still has a functioning women’s league, Vehlow did not consider them ready for the same pure club format as the men.
“At the club level, we probably won’t get it done,” she said, “In Germany, at least, that is the situation.”
The Euroleague was very expensive for the players and their clubs. The new league has not fixed the cost of participation yet.
“Cost is still a question to be solved,” said Kjeldgaard, “Surely less than the Euroleague (with less tech and tech support). We have accepted to get going and split actual costs afterwards.”
The new league’s underwater television production will be handled by the Gotland diving club Bottenskraparna. The primary camera operator and chief producer is Hanse Sandblom.
“The first round will be a light version and just a test to see what we can do to improve the quality in the future,” said Sandblom. “It will be cool to what we can make of it. It will be fun to see what we can achieve, hopefully the teams take it as seriously as the Euroleague in terms of quality of players and the matches.”
The organizers invited the Turkish club Ege University to join the new league, but they declined.
“We didn’t join the new league because three rounds is very difficult economically for us,” said Euroleague veteran Hakan Toğar, adding that his club still planned to play in Champions Cup in Berlin.
Betta, Russia’s top club, will not take part. According to Victor Krylov, Betta received no invitation. Krylov and other Russian players have long participated in Finnish league play as foreign free agents. Finnish domestic league rules set a cap on the number of foreign player per club. Now, however, Russian have difficulties visiting Finland to play sports. One solution may be to travel to Turkey to play, revealed Krylov.
Ekin Koç, another Turkish Euroleague veteran, confirmed that there had been discussions.
Fans can tune into the new league’s YouTube broadcast here on Saturday and here on Sunday.
Uncertainty surrounds 2023 Montreal World Championship pool conditions.
Olympic standard pools are not the favorite venue of every underwater rugby player. Those who prefer to bang in the compact pressure cooker of a small playing field are perhaps the majority and yet there are those who flourish in a large pool.
The official CMAS rules of underwater rugby allow for a range of swimming pool width, length and depth. Montreal, host to the upcoming 2023 World Championships, will likely utilize the diving pool of the Piscine du complexe sportif Claude-Robillard.
The pool is 20 meters long and 5 meters deep. However, there are rumors that the pool could be shortened through the construction of a temporary wall. This solution, however imperfect, has precedent from the last World Championships in Graz.
I know there has been talk about getting a wall, but the cost would increase for each team.. For all players’ sake, I hope we are able to get a wall.
—Isabelle Bernard, Canadian National Team veteran
Since the announcement of Montreal’s selection in August last year, CMAS posted the competition’s date and logo on the official events calendar. However, with less than a year remaining before Montreal 2023, players and coaches do not have final word on the temporary wall solution. Many now anticipate the full 20 meters.
Linda Karlsson, a Swedish national team player who did not compete at the European Championships this summer, is not upset about the extra meters of water.
“I look forward to playing in a large deep pool, one gains a completely different freedom of action in a positive sense,” she said. “I am absolutely going to take back my goalkeeper position on the national team after having been busy with work.”
For David Tron, who captained Luxembourg when it made its debut in CMAS competition in Graz, pool size creates unknowns. He has only rarely played in a 5m deep pool and never one longer than 15m to 16m. He recognizes that this is his personal experience but he believes that the majority of players seldom have an opportunity to play in large pools.
“I can also imagine that this will favor fast swimming teams over more physical ones,” he suggested, “And more generally strong teams over weaker teams.”
He commented that it is undesirable to play the sport’s most important tournament under conditions that are unfamiliar to a significant percentage of teams.
“That being said: if the official rules allow the dimensions concerned for an official match, it seems legitimate to me that even a world championship can be organized there.”
As a team leader Tron has to consider more than his personal preference.
“… for a country with such a small pool of players as ours, many factors come into play: high transport costs, the Covid-19 pandemic that made recruitment difficult, dates that are not necessarily ideal for us… etc. But I have to admit that the size of the pool is also one of the points that is discussed and that makes many players “worried”.”
The size of the pool, however, is not the sole determinant in his opinion, but one negative factor among others.
“For a big country it is not a real problem to replace some players–and I cannot really imagine that players would refuse a national team spot they worked hard for because they don’t like the pool?–for a small country like ours it is.”
Austria, a more established rugby nation, illustrates his point. In the opinion of Thomas Schenkeli, a national team veteran, the Montreal pool will not dampen his or his teammates’ competitive spirit.
“Nobody in Austria will give up his spot [on the national team] because of a big pool. We would prefer a smaller pool but the best team will still win,” he said.
“I know that Scandinavians like more fighting and less swimming. But isn’t it fairer if it is sometimes a bigger and sometimes a smaller pool? Ski races are also not always happening on the same track. If you are the best, you can still prevail.”
Oscar de la Guerra, a player in Montreal, competed in Graz and hopes to represent Canada again next year. He has tried out the venue:
“The pool is big, it is true… personally the depth is ok for me, [it] is a little longer than usual but is a matter of adapting your cycles of apnea to it and coordinating the strategy with your partners in the water and out of it.”
De la Guerra believes the top teams will cope relatively easily. He outlined a number of common sense adjustments to strategy dictated by a large pool, adding that these would be most effective if all the players on a team were in good enough physical condition to execute them.
For example, he sees challenges for the weaker nations keeping three or 4 players below on offense for long periods of time. His expectation is that the number of outlet pass options will diminish for those teams with worse conditioning.
Asked what the big pool meant for him personally, de la Guerrra responded:
“Well I think it does not change the fact that to become a good underwater rugby player you need good physical condition, strength, efficient underwater swimming technique and speed. If you have that, no matter the pool you play in, you’ll be able to have a good performance and contribute as the players on the elite teams do.”
Canada has held two clinics at the pool in Montreal to acquaint players with the venue. One was national team veteran Isabelle Bernard, whose home club in Timmins plays in 3.8m deep versus Montreal’s 5.0m.
“This is a huge difference compared to the pool I practice in my hometown. The depth for me personally isn’t really problematic; you adapt easily and it gives more room to play. However the length—it’s exhausting to swim across to the opponents net… it’ll be important to try and avoid swimming back and forth and to focus on playing near the nets (whether it’s defending or attacking).”
Players who have a background in competitive swimming gain an obvious edge in a pool like Montreal’s. The coach of Denmark, Michael Kragh, knows that he can call up stronger swimmers like Sigurd Dideriksen, a former elite competitive swimmer who plays goalkeeper. Dideriksen did not play for Denmark at the European Championships.
“We have a very strong team and we have 8-10 good players for each position, including mine,” says Dideriksen, “all the [Danish] goalkeepers showed super high quality at the EC.”
He agrees that the Montreal pool improves his chances of making the team next year.
“Yes, the different elements with the long and deep pool is indeed very good for a player like me, because my particular strengths are speed and endurance.”
Dideriksen had heard that a wall might be built.
“I’ve heard the rumors, but don’t know much about it,” he says. “I think it would be good to find out for sure, so that we can plan our training for the World Championships in good advance.”
The Danish national team already emphasizes swimming fitness but Dideriksen himself plans to add one extra swim workout per week if Montreal turns out to be 20m long.
Pool size preference depends partially on what pools have been available during rugby’s formative period. In Sweden, for example, small 25m pools with a deep end for platform and springboard diving were common. Increasingly, deep ends do not find support in the planning stage of new pool projects. Sometimes deep ends are in very wide pools that favor FINA events. However, in Australia, where the per capital ownership of pools is the highest in the world, large pools are relatively common.
Angus Lamin, an Australian national team player, said: “I don’t mind bigger pools over smaller pools… we’ve not really been phased by the size of a pool at a competition.”
According to Lamin, most Australian clubs have access to a 5m deep pool, 15m or longer. He personally plans to concentrate on his cardio more than strength.
In fact, he noted that prior to Covid, Australia’s national championships took place in pools the same length and width as the pool in Montreal as it is.
The length and depth create questions for the officials. Kai Throndsen, an experienced referee speaking unofficially, said: “Rumor says wall. I have not see any plan for pool.”
He added that he personally did not mind the “extra” swimming. However, he observed that the water referees in a deep pool would certainly have to wear scuba tanks in the eventuality they had to lift an injured player from the bottom.
Not a single player interviewed for this article had any formal objection to the Montreal pool size.
Linda Karlsson said the pool size was not her primary concern: “What makes me nervous is not knowing where the final cost for each player is going to fall in financial terms. To represent one’s country at a world championship, one shouldn’t have to pay oneself. Our country should pay for us, that’s what I think.”
Otto Skåre Kverndokk joins mother and uncle among the international elite.
This summer at the European Championships in Stavanger, a new yet familiar name kept popping up—Skåre. When the Norwegian men scored it was sometimes Marius Skåre, a veteran national team player, but more often it was his nephew, 22-year-old Otto Skåre Kverndokk.
The young goalkeeper from Ålesund ended up as his nation’s top scorer. His uncle had a respectable 4 goals in total while he had 14. This placed him number two in the overall goal scoring table, tying him with Germany’s Jochen Schottmüller. Only Schottmüller’s countryman Lukas Tadda, who finished with 17 points, had more.
Kverndokk stands 1.83m and weighs just 80kg. Despite lacking body mass and arm length, Kverndokk has become one of Norway’s top offensive threats. He arrived even as his uncle and mother still compete for Norway.
Kverndokk’s mother loves the game so much that even now, verging on 30 years of international play, she intends to fight for her place on the squad going to the World Championships in Montreal next year. It is possible that the three of them will make the journey together.
Kvernkokk’s family connection to the sport is so strong that one might wonder if he was steered into underwater rugby at an early age rather than choosing to play.
“Neither mum nor uncle pushed for me to start playing rugby,” explained Kverndokk, whose younger sister tried the sport but did not continue, Kverndokk had other athletic interests. He ran middle distances in track and played football before finally prioritizing rugby.
“But I probably would never have heard of the sport had it not been for them,” he observed.
As a small boy he sometimes accompanied his mother to her practices. He swam in the shallows, at times observing the drills and scrimaging. Her club, Ålesund, had no junior training program at the time. He first tried playing around the age of 12. A couple of years later the club established a junior program. It was then that began to play regularly with other youngsters. He then gave up football.
Initially he enjoyed rugby a great deal. However, there came a time that he did not look forward to going to the pool. He remembered:
“I have always been quite a bit smaller than the others. There were several times I didn’t want to go to training because I was tired of getting beaten up in the water.”
This was especially so during the transition from junior to senior training.
Kverndokk felt he was just half the size of the largest men: “It helped to have a mother who motivated me and went along with me to practice.”
“If there were days when I wasn’t quite motivated to go, it helped to think that I had an uncle or mother standing on the edge waiting anyway.”
—Otto Skåre Kverndokk Ålesund and National team player
He is uncertain just how old he was when he played in his first senior domestic league match but guesses that he was 15 at the time. He joined the U21 national team at age 16. He then weighed around 50kg; his height was about 1,70m. His first competition was the 2016 Open European Championship in Sandefjord.
Norway lost its bronze final against Colombia 8-0 but Kverndokk for hungry for more high level matches.
“For me, it was fun to join the team,” he recalled.
Up until that point he had always played forward, but the U21 coach Marius Bunæs switched him to goalkeeper.
“At that time we had 4 better forwards, so he would have been given less playtime,” remembered Bunæs. “But the most important thing was his reliability: we knew that he would be at his place on the basket until his partner came to switch and that he would return quickly to the bottom to exchange.”
Kverndokk’s positional partner was a clubmate, Vegard Brandal Hansen. To transform Kverndokk into a goalkeeper Bunæs knew that he could count on the uncle to work with the two boys.
“Marius is the best goalie coach in Norway,” said Bunæs, “So Otto and Vegard quickly synched with the rest of the national squad.”
Bunæs added that he was not entirely surprised that his former player has now become an offensive threat at the senior level:
“Goalies can score a lot of goals. Most of them rushing in in counter attacks or entering an attack from the safety position [lying back on offense].
Although two of Kverndokk’s junior teammates in Ålesund, Vegard Brandal Hansen, 25, and André Kalvø, 23, continue to play, most of the others dropped out of the sport. One reason for the attrition, according to Kverndokk, is the need to balance school and work.
At the age 18, he himself went to sea as a crewman on a fishing vessel. Typically, this meant 34 days at a stretch in either North Sea or Barents (around Bjørnøya and Svalbard). For the following three years he could only play rugby during his time off, every other month. In 2021, he enrolled in a two-year deck officer program at the local maritime school, allowing him to attend practice regularly again. This was enough to get him on to the national team for the Nordic Champsionships in 2021.
“After the Nordic Championships I was disappointed because I was unable to take advantage of the opportunities when I got the ball around the goal. After that, I have aimed to get better around the bucket and become a faster and more explosive player.”
Kverndokk was with the right club to improve. Ålesund, whose roster now boasts Iver Bjørnerem, are the current national champions.
“The people I play with are good at moving the ball around when we are in attack,” he said.
His uncle also helped him to do a lot of scoring technique drills. In Stavanger it all came together for Kverndokk, who said:
“I was able to be in the right place at the right time and manage to take advantage of the opportunities I was given. I have focused a lot on how I receive the ball and positioning the ball around the goal and when I make the hit.”
Kverndokk’s success in Stavanger should, barring injury, secure him a spot on the national team headed to the World Championships in Montreal next summer. So it is possible that he will play on the same squad with his uncle again, while his mother is on the women’s team.
Interestingly, Cecilie Skåre, who quit competitive swimming at age 16, started playing rugby when she was studying in Oslo at the age of 21. The person who convinced her to try the sport was none other than Øyvind Nyhus, the current Norwegian men’s national coach.
Nyhus, who has had a huge impact on the overall development of rugby strategy, has coached both mother and son. He said that the two share similarities on many levels:
“Their instinct and ability to read the game is extremely good. Tactically they are both smart players. Cecilie has extremely good playmaking skills while Otto is excellent at driving the ball out from the defensive end.”
Nyhus expects Kverndokk to be an important player in the big pool in Montreal next summer, although he, like his mother, lacks the weight and strength typical of many elite Norwegian players.
“He needs more experience to deal with players from Colombia, Germany and Denmark because of the way they hold the ball so tightly to the body,” observed Nyhus, “So he will need to put in a lot of hours in the gym next year.”
Kverndokk said that he is considering taking a year off from the sea to focus on rugby.
At the European Championships in Stavanger, Ilona Häsänen had to go straight from shooting a penalty to defending one in Finland’s final match.
Finland standout goalkeeper, 31-year-old Ilona Häsänen, played a great match against Sweden in the Bronze medal final. However, in a climactic penalty shoot-out a coaching oversight in combination with bad luck in the coin toss may have cost Finland a medal at the European Championships.
Twice Häsänen kept Sweden from scoring penalty shots. The Swedes could have gone ahead 1-0 in the first half after a shoulder in the basket call. But Häsänen defended by staying down the entire 45 seconds to prevent Therese Blennert from cashing in.
And then in sudden death overtime she did it yet again. With less than 5 minutes remaining in the extra period, Sweden’s Lina Cavalin drew a wedging call. Ann-Sofi Krakau, one of the game’s all time greats, threw a penalty against Häsänen. When the shot clock ran out Krakau lay breathing on the surface while the Finn gazed up at her from the basket below.
Since I know now I can be there the whole 45 seconds, I then just try to stop the attacker and not the ball if you know what I mean. Attacking the ball it’s more risky.
—Ilona Häsänen, goalkeeper Finland
After that, neither of the two teams managed a decisive attack in the waning minutes of sudden death. And so they found themselves in the first penalty shootout of the Championships. It was also the first time in the history of CMAS rugby competitions that a new rule applied.
In the past, all players on a team had to shoot once before they could repeat. Now both teams had to supply lists of both defenders and attackers in ranked order. Although teams could make up such lists in advance of the tournament, due to injuries, fatigue and form the actual list had to be adjusted, finalized and submitted to the officials during the regulation 5-minute break between the end of play and the beginning of the shoot-out.
Since the new rule had never been in effect before, it was quickly apparent that neither the Finnish coaches nor the referees had the list management under control.
The regulation 5-minute break lasted well over 10 minutes, as the teams and referees struggled to get the four lists in. This delay gave all the defenders extra time to deep breathe if their nerves allowed it. This distortion did not, though, favor one team over the other.
Penalty shoot outs start with a best of three series. If one team scores in its first two attempts and the opponent fails to score on either of its first two throws, there is no need for the third attempt: the match ends after two rounds. This gives coaches a strong incentive to put their strongest shooters and defenders in the one and two spots in both lists. Not surprizingly these lists can overlap.
Sweden won the coin toss and elected to throw first.
The shot of Therese Blennert bounced off the rim into the grasp of Jenny Frondelius, who swam up, denying the Swede much chance to recover the ball.
Häsänen took Finland’s first throw. She forced the defender, Krakau, up on the basket and after attacking head side, she pivoted to the Swede’s back, pried open a gap and jammed the ball in.
When Finland prepared for round two, the referees informed Finland that it was Häsänen, who had just shot, scheduled to defend. Clearly unprepared, she hopped straight back in the water to face Wilma Tien. Guarding the goal immediately after shooting caused obvious discomfort. The Finn put up a credible fight but could not stop the ball going in.
Livestream commentator Mattis Wahlby declared that the Finnish coach had “wasted” his top penalty defender in this mixup. Häsänen herself recalled:
“I was very disappointed with the whole situation since I had prepared myself during the break to first attack and [then to be the] third to defend. So it was very sad that I had to defend right after scoring.”
If the coin flip had gone the other way, she would have had a critical minute to reset, as her teammate shot.
Finland, which had seemed to be in control, was suddenly uncertain. Even though three Swedish defenders ended up in the penalty box—Blennert for kicking, Erika Lindström for holding the basket and Tien for leaving the vicinity of the goal—Finland was still unable to regain momentum.
Kajsa Lilja put Sweden up by one. Irina Viippola of Finland matched her to tie the game again. However, when Elin Strand gave Sweden a one point lead, all the pressure was on Finland’s Katja Lind. She had to score against Elin Hoas. The referee called Lind for a head attack.
The dramatic confusion had sunk in so deeply that the deck referee almost sent Hoas into the penalty box, although the game was actually over. Indeed, most of the players did not seem to comprehend what had happened. The referees also seemed to be a bit shell shocked at the end.
The game was a classic but the new rule’s introduction was not entirely smooth.
Implications of new rule require study
The rule requiring the entire team to defend was proposed by Sweden and adopted at the last CMAS rugby rules meeting. It means that players unaccustomed to defending will come under pressure. The intent is to involve more players in the outcome.
“For some teams it can be an advantage, if they don’t have a super keeper,” commented Denmark’s Lars Greve.
A super keeper would be someone like Greve. In the semifinal against Norway, Greve pulled a Häsänen; incredibly he saved penalty throws by both Iver Bjørnerem and Jørgen Ulvestad.
Now in the event of a penalty shootout, the penalty defenders like Greve or Häsänen can only defend once per 12 throws.
“I don’t know the intention of the rule, but which other sports do this?” he questioned.
Perhaps Denmark or some other nation will propose to strike down the rule next year when the rules meeting takes place in Montreal. Perhaps the rule will be a success. There have not been enough competitions to know yet, commented one referee.
After the chaos of the Finland versus Sweden game, the referees provided more instructions to the teams that contested the three final matches that determined the men’s Bronze and the men and women’s Gold finals.
Each team was instructed to keep a copy of their list so that they would know which player was next in line. Secondly, and this was a point not yet covered in the text of the new rule, teams were informed that a defender sent to the penalty box would only reenter the list at the very bottom.
This is in contrast to a shooter whose attempt is spoiled by a foul on the part of the opposing team. A shooter can be inserted back into the throwing line up at any point the player and or his team’s coach decide he (or she) is ready.
Having two lists can produce unexpected consequences. Jukka Levonen and Kaj Björk, the Finnish women’s team coaches, perhaps simply did not calculate that losing the coin toss could deprive Häsänen of a critical one minute or so break between shooting and defending.
In fact, given that players, including shooters, can be sent to the time penalty box, the fixed lists minus players who committed fouls that drew time penalties have the potential to create unforseen situations that compel players to go two in a row.
Penalty shoot-outs cause dissatisfaction because they may not reflect the fact that one team dominated and had more scoring opportunities. But adding more sudden death overtime is practically impossible.
Will the new rule make the results fairer?
It is worth noting that although Greve contributed so much Denmark making it to the final and preventing Germany from scoring, he was visibly worn by the shoot-out. He did not score or save.
At that point with all the lists, a coach can hardly spontaneously send in another player who might be fresher.
Are penalty shoot-outs a coach’s nightmare or a tactical opportunity?
Update:
Lukas Tadda, who captained Germany to European Gold in Stavanger, successfully adapted to the new penalty shoot-out rule in the final against Denmark.
Tadda believes that Germany has several good defenders so it may actually enjoy an advantage under the new rule. Still, he opposes it, remarking:
“The goalkeeper is a special person in every sport. So, training to hold a penalty is a special job. Sone people train specifically for this.
“It’s very disappointing for them, that they can only defend one time. But I understand that this argument is maybe the exact reason for the implementation of this new rule.”
Loyal players gather round misanthropic coach for historic victory.
At the Swedish National Championships in Borlänge this year, Uddevalla underwater rugby club—also known as Team Super Fast Pat—stood at the top of the podium for the first time ever. Uddevalla overcame Polisen in group play and went on to beat Triton 1-0 in the final. Instead of Malmö repeating yet again, Uddevalla booked its ticket to Champions Cup.
The coach who orchestrated this triumph, Patrick Nilsson ”Misanthrope” Sonett, does not take social media too seriously. On his Facebook profile, he declares himself a hater of humanity, employed “as a slave at Sweden Slavery Incorporated”. Sonett began poking fun at social media the moment he joined the platform.
Still, there is one place online that he does not joke—the club’s internal Facebook group. There he consistently reminds members to sign up for the approaching week’s underwater rugby practices. Sonett takes his sport seriously.
People should do what they are good at, not fit into a mold or strategy that holds them back. —Patrick Sonett
Uddevalla, around one hour’s drive north of Gothenburg, has a population of around 36,000. During the 80s and 90s when Sweden was the world’s top underwater rugby nation in the men’s game, towns like Uddevalla contributed to vibrant regional leagues across the country. However, over the last two decades, Swedish diving and rugby clubs have dried up and crumbled away. Sonett’s club was no exception.
In 2012, Uddevalla played in the national championship for the first time and then promptly disbanded. However, several players moved on to other clubs. One of these, Esurf, took third place in the national championships in 2016 and 2017. In 2020, the Uddevalla old-timers—Johan Aronsson, Emanuel Johansson, Emil Haugen, Niklas Waldäng, Henrik Waldäng and Sonett—pulled themselves together and revived the club.
The reborn Uddevalla took third place at the national championships that year. In 2021, it climbed up to second. And this year, first. So, from 8 years of non-existence, Uddevalla suddenly went on a three-year rampage, from bronze to silver to gold. To do this it overcame Stockholm’s Polisen and Malmö Triton, the two established big city clubs that had ruled the sport’s top tier in Sweden in the modern era.
How the historical final went down
The Swedish National Championships are a two day affair. Over a weekend, 4 teams play a round robin. On Saturday, Uddevalla lost to Malmö 2-4 but beat Polisen 4-0. Since Triton defeated Polisen, Uddevalla placed second overall and went through to Sunday’s final on day two.
In the deciding game, Sonett and his teammates had two strategic points of focus. On defense, they forechecked aggressively, taking care to keep the ball out of the hands of Malmö’s Andreas Bergenholtz and Linus Norén, Triton’s two greatest offensive threats, as much as possible.
On offense, they scrummed on the surface while pushing forward. In the final, one can often see Uddevalla take the ball as far forward as possible beneath the water and then drag the defenders up to the top. Think of it as a Scandinavian variation on the Betta style.
An expert analyst (who wished to remain anonymous) described Uddevalla in the final:
“They adapted their tactics to negate a free flowing game. You can see Emanuel [Johansson] guarding the ball a lot and Super Fast Pat just waiting for the refs to look away enough so he could dive to the basket and try to push the goalie off. The signal would be when someone strong enough, often Bulten [Niklas Waldäng], could mount an attack on the Triton basket.
“But they played very well defensively in the final too, so that’s probably the main reason they won. The goal they got was classic attacking play, enough bodies put forward and [it] created the advantage and space to leave Erik Sörstadius free with the goalie’s back.”
Sonett himself summarized succinctly: “We managed to hold them to zero and jam in a single goal.”
Uddevalla in the context of Swedish rugby history
As rugby expert Benjamin Westerfjell put it, Swedish rugby once enjoyed a “golden age”. That was back in the 80s and 90s. Since then the sport has faded. At the World Championships on the men’s side Sweden has gone steadily downward:
World Championships (men)
Fredericia 2003 Gold
Bari 2007 Silver
Helsinki 2011 Bronze
Cali 2015 4th place
Graz 2019 5th place
This pattern coincides with the contraction of the sport at the club level. Many of the clubs that medalled in the national championships through the years—Växjö, Barracuda, Polar, Diver Sven’s Divers Diving Club, Näcken, Sydkusten, Telge Play Boys—have long vanished from domestic league play. The level of competition has fallen as a result.
The club die-off exacerbated the orphaned player dilemma, those whose clubs could no longer field a 12-man squad. The solution to rescue the orphans has been to alter the rules for club affiliation. Membership has become a loose concept.
The fourth team at the 2022 Championships, Stil-Björnarna, a pickup team of juniors and young adults seeking experience, surrendered 115 goals without scoring a single point in 4 games. One can say that the competition was really between three teams, not four clubs.
Polisen and Triton, actual organic club teams, had had Euroleague competition to keep themselves sharp in recent years. Moreover, the pair had history on their side. Although Polisen lost 6 finals in a row against Triton between 2009 and 2014, it went on to win 4 national titles, including last year’s. As for Triton, well, it stands out as one of the greatest clubs in the history of the sport. This year it was seeking its 19th national title. But neither could break the gritty defense of Uddevalla.
Sonett, a 42-year-old former submission grappling and MMA fighter, has the gift of being able to inspire. Besides holding together a core of veterans, he coached several juniors on to the elite track. Five current national team players and one reservist—Victor Lundin, Emanuel Johansson, Ivo Lundin-Hatje, Anton Sagström, Elin Strand and Sophia Axelsson—all spent time in the school of Super Fast Pat.
Appeal of the misanthrope
“He has a rather dark sense of humor but if one understands him, one realizes that really he is a very kind person who lives and breathes underwater rugby,” said Elin Strand, a forward on the Swedish national team.
Strand attended a marine biology gymnasium 50 minutes drive from Uddevalla. There a group of teenagers took up underwater rugby on their own in a shallow pool without any coach. When Sonett learned about them he invited them to his club practices in 2014. Several went directly on to the Swedish junior national team, although they had not played long. Strand remarked:
“Pat was in reality my first real coach and I regret that we only had one year with Pat’s club before I graduated, for it was during that time that I learned to play underwater rugby.”
Super Fast Pat fast? Strand, a former competitive swimmer, laughed:
“He prefers smaller pools, where one can play more and swim less.”
So, Sonett is neither an aquatic Flash Gordon nor a hater of humanity. He prefers to dictate the game’s tempo around a very physical playing style.
Sonett, whose father played underwater rugby with a club called Hydro, grew up with the sport. By his own account in his early 20s he began to take rugby seriously.
His approach to teaching rugby, perhaps influenced by his martial arts experience, rests on the systematic breakdown of skills.
“He had a different focus for every practice: ways to score goals, how to do a swimout, how one should think as a forward defending and attacking,” recalled Stand.
Anton Sagström, a Swedish national team player who also had Sonett as his first coach, usually plays in the national championships with his home club Linköping. However, the 9-time national champion club did not participate in the elite league this year, so Sagström joined Uddevalla.
He praised Sonett’s approach:
“He is forthright and direct; he gives you the feedback you need without making it complicated. He explains in a way that you can comprehend. Above all he is a very good player.”
In the national championships this year Sonett did not introduce new things, according to Sagstöm:
“We did the things we knew worked, which is a good recipe to win matches. The older Uddevalla players motivate because they always do their job with every exchange and so as a team mate, you have to do yours. That’s all there is to it.”
Uddevalla´s loss to Polisen in last year’s final galvanized the club to train even harder. Victor Lundin and Erik Sörstadius could not play with their home club (Felix) so both switched to Uddevalla. Lundin joked about the club’s beloved coach.
“Pat has motivated me by always looking very bitter, so I felt that something that could put a smile on his lips would be gold in worth. When we had finally beaten Triton, his otherwise gloomy face broke into a smile that lasted at least 5 minutes. Clearly it was worth the effort.”
Sonett´s influence on Swedish rugby resonates through the players he schooled. Lundin and Sörstadius recently took on the responsibility of coaching the Swedish U21 men’s team.
“We’ll do it for the Gold and Blue, Swedish rugby and the coaches who inspired us, like Super Fast Pat,” he said.
Twenty-five years have gone since Switzerland last sent a women’s team to compete at the European Underwater Rugby Championships but they are making a comeback.
The Swiss women have a national team again. After placing dead last at both the Copenhagen 1991 World Championships and the Gothenburg 1997 European Championships, the Swiss women gave up and disappeared from CMAS competition. Now they are set to take part in the European Championships in Stavanger next month. Next year they plan to continue on to Canada, to test themselves at the 2023 Montreal World Championships.
Dennis Rockenbach, an experienced German player from Mainz, became head coach around a year ago. He has devoted three weekends to Switzerland’s national camps and the positive results show.
Limited size
Helvetia, a pick up team that included many but not all Swiss national team candidates, entered the Amager Ladies Cup in Denmark last month (April). They performed well, losing only one match the entire tournament. During round robin play, they even managed to tie the eventual champions (Amager) 0-0. Their final rank was third after they prevailed over Barcelona 1-0 in the bronze placement match.
Amager attracted tough teams with a significant proportion of national team players. So, it was an important test for the Swiss even if Helvetia was not necessarily the squad that will eventually go to Stavanger.
“I’m very proud of my team, it’s been a tough few months with even tougher training camps,” said Rockenbach, whose first goal was to raise understanding of team play.
The total number of women players in the country is basically enough to provide enough personnel for one team. And given that Switzerland’s female rugby players have no domestic women’s league, playing exclusively with and against women was completely new for some.
Since leaving CMAS competition, the dream of a national team has been sustained at Berlin’s Champions Cup, where the Swiss women did come together once a year. It was there in 2019 that Rockenbach first considered coaching them. He agreed to watch some of their matches and saw their potential. At first he acted as an assistant coach to Leonid Roupyshev. Later when Roupyshev stepped down, he took over the job.
“I thought I could get more out of the ladies than they were showing at the time [I first saw them]. My motivation [in taking the coaching job] is to watch my team play and see them trust themselves and enjoy the game.”
The existence of a national team has helped motivate clubs to recruit new women players.
“The Amager Cup was my very first competition,” explained Cristina Arioli, a 24-year-old goalkeeper from the club Unterwassersport Zurich.
Arioli, a former Swiss junior national team synchronized swimmer, only began playing rugby last autumn after a try new sports week at her university.
“Since I am a huge fan of water, I tried out all water sports I could find, including underwater rugby. I really liked it so I stayed.”
Arioli’s rapid progression in the sport offers partial clarification to Switzerland’s strengths and weaknesses. At the Amager Cup, Helvetia was very good at holding on to the ball but had difficulty scoring. So although Rockenbach has been successful at instilling team play routines, the mechanics of moving around the basket to score will require more drilling and match experience. Rockenbach commented:
“My team is aware that one rarely scores goals with individual actions. If we score goals, that’s because we are at the goal as a team and we hit it together.”
Arioli and her teammates appreciate their coach’s efforts:
“Dennis, as a coach, is very enthusiastic and puts a lot of effort into our practices and development as a team… he has a lot of experience in underwater rugby and knows how to pass on his knowledge.”
Personal responsibility
As in many other countries, Swiss players only have underwater rugby practice a couple of times a week. So, responsibility for fitness and strength training routines fall upon the individual player. Arioli’s teammate Judith Buchli, a 29-year-old goalkeeper, is an example. During winter she skis or runs. In the summer she turns to cycling, swimming and mountain biking.
Buchli, who took up underwater rugby when a surfing pal happened to watch a game and told her about it, has been to Champions Cup twice, in 2018 and 2019.
She agreed that Amager was an important opportunity “because we are just a few women who play underwater rugby in Switzerland and we are use to having men on our team and as opponents. Also it was good to see what we worked for and where we need to improve.”
Her personal ambition in rugby is to cut her reaction time.
“I need to be faster in my mind, read my teammates and the game more so we can achieve opportunities together,” she explained.
“And for the team, I guess we need to keep the game in a flow.”
The Swiss woman have a tendency to get bogged down in surface scrums, but if they can achieve more dynamic underwater movement, they may prove a difficult opponent in coming competitions.
“You know, we don’t have any pressure. Our biggest goal is to participate and do our best,” said Rockenbach. “It doesn’t matter which place we’re playing for.”
Snorkel purchase in a dive shop sparked creation of the Tallahassee Tarpon Underwater Rugby Club.
Tallahassee, Florida’s capital, lies far from Miami and the Everglades. It is home to Florida State University, where Michael “Mischa” Steurer works as a researcher, modeling energy systems for all-electric ships and future terrestrial power systems. While a student in his home country of Austria he loved playing underwater rugby. He also played in Zurich when he studied for his PhD. His wife Maria, who moved with him, also enjoyed playing from time to time.
In 2001, the then 35-year-old Steurer had organized a meeting to see if he could introduce the sport to the area. However, he fell ill at the time and had to cancel. Rugby went into dormancy. In 2019, he stopped in a dive shop to buy a snorkel. He told the sales clerk he wanted an old fashioned one, of the simple sort that he had when playing underwater rugby nearly two decades ago in Austria.
The clerk responded that he knew about rugby. A German cave diver who lived in the area had mentioned the sport to him. Steurer Mischa had no idea who it was, though he had lived in Tallahassee continuously. The clerk offered to put the two in contact.
“After I received Mischa’s contact information,” recalled Joerg Hess (the diver), “I immediately called him, rather than putting it off for another day, and I met them [Mischa and Maria] the same evening.”
Hess and the Steurers discovered that they had both thought about introducing rugby for years. They even lived in the same town, Crawfordville, population around 5,000.
“It was quite literally the right moment, for us, to decide to start our own club,” said Hess. “We each had crucial contributions to make. I believe it would have been harder if not impossible without each of us three.”
Underwater rugby clubs have sprung up overnight before. When Australian Bobby “Simonsson” Chen moved to Iceland in 2011, he declared:
“I am ostensibly here to study on exchange, but my real goal and ambition is to start an underwater rugby team in Iceland and spread awareness about the sport.”
Chen bootstrapped an underwater rugby club into existence but when he left Iceland, the sport collapsed. Without recruitment, coaching and administration a club can hardly survive beyond a year. Tallahassee received all three elements from Hess and the Steurers. Even the untimely pandemic could not stop them.
As soon as Covid restrictions allowed pool training again, the Tarpon made up lost ground. Currently, there are about 20 members. On average 8 to 10 regularly show up to practice twice a week. They have begun to compete. In 2021, Denver hosted the US National Championships and Tallahassee managed to participate for the first time.
There was a bit of luck involved since the Florida club had never really competed. Steurer Mischa knew little of what was happening in the rest of the country. However, while traveling to DC on business in September of 2021 he sought a fix of rugby endorphin.
“I wondered if there was a club I could play with, just to get a workout,” he said to explain how he connected with the DC Devil Rays.
Afterwards the Rays’ coach, Juan Sevillano invited the Tarpon to combine with his club to compete. As a combination of two clubs they were ineligible for the title but they could compete for a place in the ranking. The Florida club convinced 7 players to make the trip across the country. Simultaneously, for the first time they took on the shock of altitude and unfamiliar opposition all at once.
“We had no expectations but in our first match against New Jersey, the top team, we only lost 9-0,” recalled Steurer. “We beat San Francisco 3-2, and that rookie team [of DC and us] played San Francisco again in the final placement game. We tied in regular time and, thanks to the strong players from DC, won in a penalty shootout.”
In the space of two months the club went from never having played matches to crossing the country to test itself.
Growth potential
Roaming underwater rugby players, whether they are students, couch surfers or business travelers, often provide stimulation to clubs. The Tarpon welcome visitors from Europe or South America but with the university town and diving base, they are confident they can find and develop local talent in Tallahassee.
“I never thought that we would end up here in Florida,” recounted Maria Steurer. “During a vacation I told Mischa that I thought Florida is either big cities, or swamp. I had no idea how people live here.”
In 2000, the couple lived in Portland, Oregon for three months. When her husband got invited to a job interview in Tallahassee, they stayed three days.
“During that time I was driving around looking up horse stables and the housing market. I fell in love with this area!” she said.
A year later, in March 2001, they moved to Tallahassee. A year later they bought a home. Maria Steurer, who got work as a surgical assistant at a veterinary clinic, found the move bittersweet.
“The hardest part was to leave family and friends behind. At this time we also had two horses, three cats and two dogs. All, except one dog, stayed with our family. Our dog, Joey, flew with us and lived to the ripe age of 13 years.”
Maria Steurer competed in equestrian sports in Austria, mostly jumping. The couple actually met at her stable when they were 12 and 13 years old.
“Horses are still and will always be a big part of my life,” she added. “Actually, Mischa and I got married on our horses in the garden of my hometown’s castle.”
They currently own 4 horses. Two are retired and the other two are mounts for trail riding.
Maria Steurer has two roles in the club. She is the treasurer and “mother” to the new players. She did the critical research to determine how to incorporate the club as a non-profit sports association.
Cave diving in Florida
Joerg Hess, 49, tried underwater rugby once while a student and was “hooked” from day one. His father, an open water diver, allowed him to breathe from tanks in a swimming pool in Aachen. At the age of 12 he gained his CMAS junior diving certificate. Diving then went on hold but in 1998, a year after he started playing rugby, he resumed scuba with the same club.
“[Although] I was a diver first, I believe it was rugby that started my diving ambitions,” said Hess.
In the end of the same year he took an internship in the Southern US. Local diver friends took him to the Florida Keys. He remembered rinsing his gear in a freshwater spring and wanting more.
“For the next few months I would make the 12-hour drive (each way) every other weekend,” he said.
He signed up for cave training. On New Year’s Eve 1999, he descended into a cave to emerge in the year 2000.
“We opened a bottle of Champagne during decompression.”
Hess, who holds a doctorate in biochemistry and microbiology, became a Floridian because of the cave diving opportunities. He settled near Wakulla Springs, one of the world’s most spectacular fresh water springs. The state has many underwater caves in which divers can view manatees, alligators, etc. often through crystal clear waters. Hess considers himself to be just one of many divers drawn to Florida.
He gave up trying to explain to friends and family back in Germany why he immigrated. Instead he invited them to visit.
“I showed them, rather than telling, what I do,” he said. “How do you explain to someone that I just emerged from a twelve-hour dive squeezing through tiny crevices while experiencing several major life support equipment malfunctions, coming out grinning from ear to ear?”
Visitors to Hess’s world are energized by the experience.
“When you tell this to someone, they think you are boasting and lying, and simply don’t believe it,” he explained. “It is not just this spectacular place here, but the people who surround me. They are all very grounded, open minded and curious, to say very real.”
After Mischa Steurer convinced various swimming pools and institutions, such as the university’s diving club, to accept rugby as an activity, they decided to give the coaching responsibility to Hess. Although he only had two years to pick up the sport in Germany, with his experience as an advanced diving instructor he is a systematic and effective teacher.
Lacking a long experience in rugby, Hess found that he was teaching what he himself needed to improve at.
“During the year of covid, Mischa and I would talk on the phone once in a while, and it was he who turned our attention to team play, rather than individual skill. Afterwards our coaching strategy changed, and team play became more important, and better.”
Maria is certain that underwater rugby will grow in Tallahassee. In the short term they plan to take part in the Coral Springs Cup on the other end of Florida, 740 kilometers from their home. They have ordered uniforms.
The next step is to market and recruit more at universities and colleges.
“The future is bright!” exclaimed Maria Steurer. “We have so many enthusiastic team members that I can say for sure that we will grow.”
Center forward Kim Kristensen chose cardio over strength and it worked for him.
Kim Tonsberg Kristensen first made the Danish national team at age 41. Standing 192 centimeters tall and weighing 92 kilos, the center forward is not a small guy, but his lean frame is perhaps not the modern ideal for top level underwater rugby.
Playing a position that calls for him to strip opponents of the ball, he is conscious that he cannot approach the task in the style of Thor Lykke Funk, a Danish forward who grinds down opponents by wrestling the ball away whenever possible.
“Where Thor often attacks head on with great strength, I try more to sneak up on the opponents and take the ball when they don’t expect it,” said Kristensen.
He does not spend much time in the gym lifting weights. He sticks to high intensity interval training (HIIT). He also has a huge passion for endurance sports that give him the physique of a runner or cyclist. He compensates for lack of muscle mass by providing the Danish national team with extended bottom times. He can maintain the lid-tight-on-the-jar defense over the course of a major championship, providing the team with a point of stability. And he is a goal scorer besides.
According to Denmark Head Coach Michael Kragh, the durable 42-year-old has a good chance of holding on to his position on the national team through the upcoming European and World Championships in Stavanger (2022) and Montreal (2023) respectively.
Kristensen’s social media feed features running, cycling, kitesurfing, kayaking, skiing, etc. Love of endurance sports makes him a standard setter for the Danish national team’s fitness.
After the recent Nordic Championships—at which the Danish men took gold for the third straight time—Kragh said: “Four games in two days is tough, but not for Kim.”
Teammate Andreas Wielandt, one of Europe’s top offensive threats, spoke of Kristensen’s presence:
“At 27, I’m still one of the youngsters on the national team, and I can beat most players at a fitness test, but Kim will still beat me in time spent underwater during a game. That’s what makes him so valuable.”
Although Kristensen first played for Denmark as a senior in 2021, he in fact had a good chance to play in Graz World Championships in 2019. He remembered exactly what cost him a spot on the team.
“When preparing for the World Championships I missed one national training session due to an adventure race. That was a reason I didn’t get selected for the team that went to Graz. And I do believe that was fair and a sign to the players that you need to step up.”
Since Graz he played for Denmark at the last two Nordic Championships, where Denmark prevailed each time. This year he made an assist in the 1-0 victory over Sweden in the final in Helsinki.
Given that Kristensen, who with his wife is raising two children, has so many sports interests that he could have left rugby out of his life. However, the underwater ball sport was something special for him and his family. His father, who also enjoyed many sports, took a CMAS diving course with him in 1993 when he was 14. The dive instructor at Blæksprutten diving club required that those who took his scuba course all play the underwater ball game. The early start shaped the way he learned to play.
“I only weighed 65kg. Therefore I had to use stamina, speed and be better at reading the game. Not only trying to predict what my opponents would do but also to read my team mates moves and try to position myself in the best place for a pass at the right moment.”
In Blæksprutten [the Ink-squirters] there were three or four youngsters who wanted to play more. So his father, who continued to play for fun with Blæksprutten, drove him to Delfinen, a club 20 minutes drive from home. The club, which competed in the Danish league’s elite division, developed his skills. Five of the national team squad that played in the European U21 Championships in Karlskrona, Sweden came from Delfinen.
During Kristensen’s time, 1996 and 2000, the results were poor. The Danes never did better than take a bronze medal in either Nordic or European competition. The team had an impact nonetheless. Among his teammates were Flipper’s Simon Schæfer and Søren Nielsen, two large figures on the Danish rugby scene.
Why did it take two decades for him to finally rejoin them on the men’s senior national team? Kristensen spent 8 years serving in the Danish Navy as a diver and electrician. During that time he typically sailed three month stretches. He went on 5 tours of the Mediterranean. His ship, the corvette HDMS Peter Tordenskiold, even went as far as Cape Verde.
It was only after retirement when he settled in Aarhus that he could resume playing with the club Aqua Quick. There clubmates Andreas Wielandt, Jacob Nedergaard and Mads Jacobsen were impressed by what they saw at practice and in league play.
“They asked if I would like to play with them on the Tudserne team in the Euro League,” explained Kristensen.
He did for two seasons and was part of the team that broke Molde’s domination for the first time in the league’s history.
“One of the highlights of my sports career was definitely winning the Euro League before the cheering crowd in Izmir,” he added.
Kragh, who is looking forward to both the European and World Championships, is likely to stick with the relationships that exist among the current roster.
Because Kristensen is a team player, he allows teammates like Kim Petersen and Andreas Wielandt space and time, the ingredients of goal scoring. Petersen, who pairs up at center forward, said:
“Kim is not a shout-out-loud type of person, but has a more thoughtful and reflective personality… when we exchange with each other, I can always trust that he takes care of the situation under the surface both in defense and attack; that makes my mind relax better when waiting for my turn to play. Kim always seeks to tie the team and his own effort together, and by doing so, he never just performs good, but also makes the whole team perform better.”
Some athletes excel because they need to prove things to themselves and others. Kristensen is more motivated by the role of team member or leader if need be.
When Kristensen suits up for Denmark he plays for more than just his team. You can feel the presence of his whole sports enthusiastic family.
Once, when member of Kristensen’s three-athlete team withdrew from a race, he convinced his younger sister Lisa to take her place. It meant a big commitment from her since the races typically last 6 to 8 hours. She remembered:
“I attended on his Yeti challenge team because of a female member had an injury… I had never tried it and didn’t bike too much. I was okay fit but had no training before the run… at one point where we had to run a longer distance at the end of the day he ran with me on a strap to give me a pull up the hill because my legs was getting wobbly.”
Her brother remembered that he just needed to get her to the next energy drink station to replenish her blood sugar. They finished fifth out of 20 teams in their class.
“Kim is the motivational type who pushes you to the limit while making you laugh while your dying a little bit at the same time,” laughed his sister. “He has this insane strength physically and mentally to push through when a team mate needs it!”
Märta Martin-Åkesson was a last minute addition to the Swedish women’s national team.
They found an old U21 spaghetti strap swimsuit for her at the last training camp in Oxelösund.
Players on national team reserve lists usually do not go to championships. And if they do get promoted, it is uncertain how much playing time they can look forward to. When Märta Martin-Åkesson moved up to the national team travel squad headed to Helsinki at the end of February, the coaches did not actually plan for her to see action at the 23d meeting of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden.
As it turned out, with someone else’s name on the back of her suit, she delivered the key assist to break a 0-0 tie in the bronze final against Denmark. Her coaches now call her a “real trooper”.
Martin-Åkesson, who plays forward, came to the sport of rugby late in life. A Stockholmer who only started playing rugby 4 years ago at the age of 26, Martin-Åkesson would have had zero chance of wearing the national colors of Germany, Norway or Colombia. In Sweden, however, the pool of talent has been drying out for many years. The 14th and 15th spots on the squad lacked clear candidates.
At first, coaches Nina Berggren and Wilma Tien simply promoted Märta Martin-Åkesson to the reserve list because she was making rapid progress. It was a mark of distinction for what she was doing, rather than the player she was.
During her childhood in Kalmar, Martin-Åkesson had had some passing exposure to underwater rugby. In the autumn of 2017, she and a friend decided to try new things. Nemo, a club in Stockholm within cycling distance of her home, invited her to give rugby a go. It took a year before she bought her own equipment and attended practice regularly. Most of the Nemo players were men, so she had to cope with a disparity in experience, strength and aggression.
She chose the position of forward. She benefited from a very low key but involved coach named Anders Hansson. She also received help from Daniel de Soto, a forward who once played a round of the Euroleague for Polisen. Still the difficulties would have stopped most.
She had never played a team sport before. The shot put style of passing the ball underwater had to be learned from scratch. She could not accelerate rapidly, so she had to endure many scrums. Scrimmaging meant she had to suffer the humiliation of having the ball pried away time and again. She did not give up and gradually she internalized defensive tactics to protect the ball.
Unfortunately, the opportunities for women to play against women are limited in Sweden today. There is not a single club that can come close to fielding 15 women players from a single town or city. The women’s domestic league is patched up business. The three or 4 teams are constellations that to some degree compete for players. However, Martin-Åkesson got on to a team from Stockholm and other nearby cities. Although the league was badly disturbed by Covid, it gave her an occasional chance to test her abilities in an all women competitive environment.
“I felt it was so constructive that I decided to go to everything [offered to women] just to learn as much as possible,” she recalled.
This included national team training camps, some of which are open.
“I didn’t think that I would be selected for the national team, but just that I should go to everything that I could go to. It’s cool to try and improve at stuff.”
One benefit of the camps was the eye of Jens Westerlin, a men’s national team player who helped out with the coaching. At one of the camps, he noticed the uncertain, lanky girl and asked who she was.
“Jens said that for someone who did not understand the game very well, she was pretty good,” recalled Tien.
What especially impressed him was her receptiveness to instruction.
“Jens said that she did everything that he told her to,” noted the coach.
Westerlin did not dish out praise lightly, so Tien and Berggren paid a bit more attention to the unknown Martin-Åkesson, who had used the pandemic period to hit the gym and increase her strength.
The women’s national team experienced a setback. The regular coaches Ulf “Uffe” Ridell and Johan Fernlund suddenly resigned just a few months before the competition. Kajsa Lindman, the head of the national rugby committee, asked Tien and Berggren, both aged 26, to temporarily fill in until new coaching staff could be found. They had previously coached the junior women together. Still, the responsibility stressed them, not least because both studied full time.
Furthermore, they confronted the psychological difficulty of selecting a team that might have included their old teammates, the veterans with whom they had emotionally bonded when they had been the youngest on the team.
To reduce the administrative duties of coaching they asked the team members for volunteers to take care of pool booking and other time consuming but essential details. Up stepped Martin-Åkesson. She proved herself both capable and efficient. Suddenly, not only did they notice her out of the water, they depended on her.
No one anticipated the appearance of Martin-Åkesson on the reserve list. She herself said:
“I was really happy, I never expected it. I was just so glad that my name even came up in the situation.”
Rugby wise they did not deem her ready for international competition, but the team needed someone on land to assist. So, when Anna Alfredsson, another player was injured or contracted Covid, they decided to promote Martin-Åkesson to the 14th spot on the team, with the understanding that she probably would not play. She would make the trip to Finland to fill water bottles and seep in the atmosphere.
She still needed a national team swimsuit even if it were to remain dry. It was too late to order a new one for her. In fact, Levina Johanson, a goalkeeper from Umeå, brought an IKEA bag of leftover swimsuits from storage. Some 6 players needed to borrow blue and gold spaghetti strap suits to unify the team look. This team was an experimental constellation that might not exist come the European Championship in June. By that time a new head coach might well select a different squad.
The extra suits had the names and numbers of players from the CMAS U21 World Championships that took place in 2018. The personalized touch was inspired by the Euroleague. The suits in the IKEA bag existed because of a mix-up in the order. Players who wanted high back models with wide shoulder straps ended up with spaghetti straps. Having the wrong suits caused chaos among the teenage women players. The head of Swedish rugby, Kajsa Lindman, straightened out the mess in time for Oberhausen by getting new ones. The federation found itself stuck with a batch of rejected suits.
They should have gone to the federation’s office but ended up in Tien’s mother’s storage room and then followed Tien to Umeå and sat in a closet at the pool.
“I tried to sell them to new players, but beginners never wanted to buy a suit with Sweden and someone else’s last name,” explained Tien, who wished the bag and all the memories it evoked would disappear.
Then suddenly, 4 years later, the suits were needed for the Nordic Championships. The botched order became a convenient, cost free solution. Not coincidentally, the U21 players from Oberhausen became a major presence on the team for the first time. There were 5 of them: Agnes Hoas, Elin Strand, Sofie Öberg, Estelle Persson and Levina Johanson. Tien and Berggren found themselves coaching these players a second time.
To say that Tien and Berggren were reaping the reward of their previous efforts would be true but the truth is more complex and interesting. Martin-Åkesson’s arrival would not have been possible if more of the players from 2018 had continued to play and develop. At the time, the 2018 U21 team failed utterly, coming in dead last in Oberhausen, the first ever CMAS World Championship for juniors in the history of the sport.
Oberhausen set an important new benchmark for rugby as a whole. It delivered quality at the top. In the men’s final, Colombia’s Juan Jose Laverde smashed the ball through a nonexistent gap between the German goalkeeper’s head and shoulder to deliver the deciding goal in a tight 2-1 match. The German men, captained by Philip Kreißig, made for a world class opponent. Turkey beat Norway for the bronze, eliminating all the Nordic countries from the podium.
On the women’s side Turkey defeated Colombia 1-0, demonstrating that rugby could be popularized and coached to a high level in the space of a decade. Germany took bronze. The historically strong underwater rugby nations of Norway and Sweden, found themselves pushed down to the bottom of the table. Denmark and Finland did not even send teams. Observers had to ask themselves if there was any future without junior development?
The Czech Republic sent a mixed team of boys and girls. The others crushed them repeatedly. In group play the Czechs allowed 94 goals in the space of three games. They did not manage to score a single one in return. The other competitors cheered the Czechs, hoping that they would return to future events better prepared. Still, there was a general understanding that absurd disparities damaged rugby’s image.
Tien and Berggren took on the coaching assignment in part to prepare as many future players for the women’s senior national team as possible because they did not want to spend their careers playing for a nation that would never contend for medals. In essence, the two were trying to do what they could to reverse Sweden’s decline.
At Oberhausen the majority of Swedish junior women did not have the cardio for the 4-day competition. They started out strongly against Colombia in their first match, but their conditioning could not sustain their skills. The full length games soon rendered their muscles sluggish and heavy. They came in last, losing every game. They allowed 17 goals while scoring only one. Oberhausen gave the Swedish girls an experience but no triumph or glory.
To 2022 team Sweden ranks came more newcomers: Felicia Johnsson, Sara Nilsson and Elin Hoas, the older sister of Agnes. In short, the team bet on a collection of inexperience, bad experience and youth. However, the green team in the old U21 suits still had three elite veterans: Theresa Blennert, 35, Ann-Sofi Krakau, 39, and Kajsa Lilja, 40. Did they approve of the changes by Tien and Berggren?
Part of constructing a team involves psychology.
“Märta and Felicia are two blank pages who take instructions fantastically well and they give the team energy,” explained Berggren, who feared running out of teammates.
And Sweden literally ran short of players in Helsinki when Öberg strained her shoulder and Johnson twisted her ankle. Suddenly only three defensive backs remained on Saturday. Small and medium crisis broke out. Öberg would have played, but worsening her shoulder would have been too costly in the long run. So, they had to tell Johanson to get her out of the water right before the second game.
To restore the fourth back, Tien switched down from forward and Martin-Åkesson was told to put on her suit and warm up. She had just 5 minutes to make the mental transition before the match against Finland. The rest of the team had already jumped in the water. The Swedes needed a victory over the Finns to advance to the final.
Only when Tien and Berggren looked for Martin-Åkesson to tell her to turn in the team list to the officials did they remember that she was now playing. On top of all this, Berggren’s suit had been missing and she had had to get another one out of the IKEA bag just before warm up.* Tien and Berggren later admitted that they do not understand how the great player coaches hold it all together.
The decision to put Martin-Åkesson into the lineup entailed risk, for as many know, the mistakes of a single weak player can cause a team to collapse. But it was now time to forget it all and put faith in the team as it was.
Martin-Åkesson believed in herself: “I didn’t have time to think about much. I thought it was great and I needed to do my damn best to contribute to the team and not screw up.”
By nature or education Martin-Åkesson is not the sort of person who suffers from competition anxiety.
“I was mainly nervous that I wouldn’t have time to get my suit and gear on, pee and get to the right place at the right time. Of course during the match I was on edge the whole time and my pulse was elevated along with the above normal increase in adrenaline.”
Finland kept the match 0-0 as needed. The Swedes were disappointed but the rookie forward held up, not allowing the Finns into score. Martin-Åkesson’s team would play for bronze in their final game.
The test of the rookies, a big portion of the team, depended on how the entire team accepted the strategic changes the coaches demanded. Simplified, Tien and Berggren wanted the backs and goalkeepers to take part in forechecking when on defense at their own basket instead of just exchanging. Did they consider this an innovation?
“Oh, not really! The aggressive back [in defensive strategy] was already incorporated by Johan and Uffe,” laughed Berggren.
“Stux [another former national team coach] tried,” added Tien.
The strategy had never been implemented due to a combination of factors, according to the two.
The strategy further called for Martin-Åkesson and the other forwards to resist the temptation to chase. They were to lurk and steal balls when the ball carriers were distracted.
On offensive, the two coaches wanted the whole team to contribute to attacks. No one should lie and watch Krakau and Blennert, the two most dangerous goal threats, try to score; they should get close to the action to help finish the opportunities.
In the Sunday bronze match against Denmark, whom Sweden squeaked by 1-0 on Saturday, the Danes proved stubborn again. In the second half after a strong attack by Denmark, the Swedes got the ball to the other side and then suddenly in a second wave Martin-Åkesson was on the bottom in exactly the right spot for a pass. And when she got it she pressed forward without hesitation. Elin Hoas screened out the back, allowing Tien to take a pass and drive the ball past the goalie.
“That was a well built up moment,” declared the livestream commentator.
“I had a Dane on me right away but I saw Wilma and Elin at full speed and so I thought that I had to pass while holding the Dane away from them. Then I saw the goal about the same time I surfaced and was so darn happy.”
After the weekend, Krakau posted her approval on social media:
“What a weekend with this team. Seldom have I played at the international level with a team with such great desire and such great courage to unsparingly dig its way through to the opponent’s basket.”
Looking forward to future competitions, she concluded that the future looked bright for Sweden since the women’s average age was just 26.
It is possible that there are a few former national team players who will now make a new effort to get back on the team. So, Martin-Åkesson is hardly assured of a spot in June at the European Championships in Stavanger. The Swedish Sport Diving Federation has yet to announce who will take over after Tien and Berggren, who were temporary replacements.
*Both Tien and Berggren keep their wet suits in Systembolaget (the Swedish state alcohol retail monoply) plastic bags. After the match they discovered that Berggren’s suit was in Tien’s pack.
Here is a YouTube link to Martin-Åkesson’s assist.
Stars Amanda Barsten and Jim Holmbäck are absent from the Nordic Championships this weekend in Helsinki, however a larger than usual number of new players have broken into ranks of the national teams of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden.
Henri Huttunen is among the younger players have impatiently waited for Covid travel restrictions to lighten. Huttunen last represented Finland as a junior on the 2012 and 2013 U21 teams. Since then he continued to develop while playing for the club Urheilusukeltajat in both domestic competition and the Euroleague. It took him almost a decade to win a spot on his country’s national team.
“Right now I’m healthy and I’ve been lucky that I haven’t had covid (at least yet),” said Huttunen. A goalkeeper, who hails from Vantaa, a suburb of Helsinki about 20 minutes drive from Pirkkola swimming pool, where the competition begins today (Saturday).
Finland has lost goal-scoring forward Jim Holmbäck to injury in the middle of January. Head coach Hannu Ahonen will use his absence to try out two rookie forwards, Alexandr Efimov and Aku Luukko, 24, who join Huttunen in making their international senior debut.
One the women’s side Amanda Barsten is taking a break from international competition.
“I’m not playing in the Nordic Championships. I probably won’t play in Europeans either. I might try to be on the team for the World Championships in 2023.”
Barsten is not injured but has changed her focus. “I’ve been rather using my time as coach for the junior girls national team. For the time being I find the role of coach more motivating than that of player.
Among the new young players for Norway is Elisabeth Ose. Asked if the Covid pandemic had a negative effect on her preparation, Ose replied that she was currently serving in the army and marching with a heavy pack had put her in good condition. Despite the reduced pool time she was ready.
“It feels great [to be on the national team]], I am excited to go out there and do my best!” she exclaimed.
Another Norwegian playing her maiden senior match will be Gedvyde Petkeviciute. Born in Lithuania, Petkeviciute moved to Ålesund before she turned 8 years old. She started playing seven and half years ago and under the tutelage of Marius Skåre, who is the current women’s national coach, she learned the game.
“I feel excited about the weekend and am nervous about my performance,” she admitted.
In her mind she has been rehearsing how her teammate Gerd Anne Solibakke deceives the goalkeeper one-on-one by faking the direction of attack with arm contact.
“Of course, I hope to score but it would be more than enough to just help my teammates get a goal.”
Most of her family still lives in Lithuania, where underwater rugby is an unknown sport.
“It’s hard to explain so I usually just turn on [a link to a video of] the semifinal where Norway played against Colombia in Graz.”
The Norwegian women are definitely favorites, going to Helsinki. When asked how that made her feel, Petrkeviciute replied that she had confidence in the team. “They are some of the toughest people I know, with a lot of experience. This of course puts a lot of pressure on oneself, but I think it makes me a better player.”
Skåre, the man who taught her the game, will accompany her as the women’s national team coach while also playing on the men’s team. He said that he had carefully weighed the pros and cons of having two responsibilities.
“It will be difficult to combine, but I hope I’ll manage,” he said. Looking forward to the European and World Championships, he considers Helsinki part of a building process: “The Nordic Championships will give me an opportunity to see how the team works together. Hopefully, this will be a good training session for them.”
On the Danish women’s team veterans Laila List and Dina Iversen have taken a break and it seems that there are probably 4 or 5 new players in their mid 20s. The youngest is forward Silje Siefert, who is just 19 years old.
The Swedish women have 5 or 6 players who will represent Sweden for the first time. Three of them, Felicia Johnsson and sisters Elin and Agnes Hoas, play for the Gotland club Bottenskraparna. Sarah Nilsson of Polisen, Märta Martin-Åkesson of Nemo and Levina Johansson of Isbjörnarna will also suit up for Sweden for the first time. The decision by rookie coaches Nina Berggren and Wilma Tien to bring on so many new players will be put to a test.
Even without Barsten, Norway should probably win all its matches. Can the greener Swedes and Danes beat Finland to secure a place in the finals? And, perhaps as important, will the teams improve over the course of the competition. The European Championships in Stavanger are just 4 months away.
Predictions on the men’s side Denmark won the last two Nordic Championships and head coach Michael Kragh is returning with 12 players from the team that took gold last time. The Danish men should repeat, as Nordic Champions. Norway’s coach Øyvind Nyhus conceded that the team might not be the strongest.
“We have a diminished team for a number of reasons, including Covid,” he said. “No matter though, some of the next generation will get experience and probably a few of them will also compete in Stavanger this year so it will be useful.”
“I guess Denmark have to be favorites at this Nordic but it will be more open come the Europeans,” he added.
A source of satisfaction for Kragh is Denmark’s depth. Even without Thor Lykke Funk and Mikkel Rasmussen. He has 30 plus players attending national team training camps.
“It looks good for the future, for the next generation is getting ready to take over, they keep the ‘old’ guys sharp,” he remarked.
Rasmussen, who is recovering from shoulder surgery, said that he looked forward to watching the live stream from Helsinki.
“It might be close between Norway and Denmark. Norway have done more practicing than the Danish team. So they might be the strongest. Sweden will lose. Maybe they win one match. And Finland is a wild guess. You never really know about those guys.”
As Kragh points out, the Nordic Championships are extremely demanding because there are no weak teams and all the action transpires over the course of a weekend.
New players at this level will make mistakes that are difficult to correct because the opponents will react quickly to opportunities. There is a lot to think about. One new player who faces an extra challenge is Swede Erik Sörstadius, 26, who began playing in Valladolid, Spain with the club Pirañas 9 years ago. Now, having been a national team reserve player two or three times, he finally has made the team.
“They [the coaches] have me as a candidate for both goalie and forward and I find both positions a lot of fun. So, the tricky part for me will be to able to focus on either position at the same time that I make my national team debut.”
Lack of revenue hampering development of underwater rugby’s nascent professional league.
Chief Manager Anton Churzin is now considering raising capital through the sale of shares in a future company.
The Euroleague has the potential to grow. Competition for juniors and women are in planning. Expansion would, however, create additional financial demands on the already strained organization. The business model that has served for 6 seasons may no longer be adequate.
The Euroleague currently operates as a Russian domiciled non-profit organization, despite the league never having held a round in Russia. The costs of the competition have been covered almost entirely by the competing clubs. This has left the league starved for working capital. Churzin explained how the television production team, a hybrid business that lacks regular full time employees, could be transformed.
“Ten persons are working almost for free. We have very good professional team, but it will be very hard to save it, if we do not pay more for their work.”
The Euroleague anticipates an operating loss of at least euro 7,000 for the next two seasons. Without revenue from sponsors the league must charge the players more or risk bankruptcy.
The league has not yet explained how exactly how or where share sales might take place. The plan, covering the coming three years (2018-2021), proposes increasing the participation costs now to enhance the league’s value prior to an initial share offering.
“Opening to private investors will require considerable preparation,” Churzin said. “A share of future profits will of course belong to investors. So, I propose that initially the players and clubs invest so that they can benefit financially when the league monetizes.”
The notion that the league could become a company with a variety of shareholders is new. The original conception of the Euroleague was that quickly growing viewership would lead to commercial sponsors and a revenue stream from the sale of advertisements. Clubs would earn their own income. When founded, the league and clubs agreed to share any income from sale of television rights. However, no sales have occurred. In the 6 years of operation, only two significant sponsors have backed clubs (Betta and Vienna). The league itself has received sponsorship from Slomo, a video technology manufacturer that expects the league to begin paying for its mixing equipment.
Instagram
Currently the league has just over 4,000 followers on Instagram.
“We need to increase that by 70 percent each season so that we reach around 20,000 by the end of the 2019-2020 season,” said Churzin, adding that 10,000 followers is a key goal this season because that is point at which the platform permits live links. “When we reach 50,000 followers we can monetize of our Instagram account.”
According to Forbes, “an Instagram user with 100,000 followers can command $5,000 for a post made in partnership with a company or brand.”
The new business plan calls on each club to meet social media activation targets. Furthermore, the league will require all club managers to create a database in their home market so that the league can issue press releases to television, radio and newspapers.
The response of the league managers has been muted. Molde, the most successful club in the league’s history, arguably has the most to gain from the league’s stable growth. Jon Reidar Heggdal, Molde’s league manager, said: “I have no comment at this moment.”
The league’s other Norwegian club, Egersund, competed in a qualifying round last year and this year won a place in the 10-team regular season that meets three times. League Manager Håkon Emil Sæstad, called the development plan “ambitious and interesting”.
“I like what he aims to achive with the Euroleague,” said Sæstad.
Martin Schottmüller of Malsch said that his club was economically maxed out and could face difficulties next year.
“I do not approve of 10 clubs bearing the economic burden of make underwater more professional. We should take step forward to CMAS to get support and a good relationship [with the governing body] again. This is only way to be more professional.”
Schottmüller said that while Churzin’s vision of the future was important, pushing too hard could cause the league to collapse.
Niclas Onkelbach of Krefeld replied that the business plan would not affect his club since the German team had determined that this would be its last season in the league. He explained:
“Yes, the fees are a major point and we also had huge trouble getting people together this year. I don’t see it becoming any easier next year.”
He did not foresee the league finances drastically improving.
“You can’t make it professional by telling the players ‘be professional’,
—Niclas Onkelbach,
Manager, Krefeld
In his opinion for it to truly be professional it would have to make enough money to permit the athletes to train more, which would mean adjusting work and studies.
“Getting paid 100 euro per round isn’t something you can give as a reason for your studies taking two years longer than those of your peers.”
Janne Lind, the league manager for Urheilusukeltajat, a Finnish club that will make its debut at the October round in Helsinki, said that he discussed the business plan with key players in his club:
“The response has been mixed. We all want underwater rugby to develop and to get more media attention. However not all the people in our organization see it as the players’ responsibility to fund this development. Ideally the growth should happen organically, but there is real worry that without risk capital and crowdfunding, the progress made so far will slowly diminish.”
Urheilusukeltajat was critical of large and sudden budgetary changes.
“We highly appreciate the work Anton and the media team are doing because the Euroleague has made a huge difference in the presence of the sport. Nonetheless, the current level of expense is already a straining our team. It comes from our pockets directly.”
Lind, a business development analyst by profession, noted that none of his club’s members were professionally involved in PR and marketing.
“We are uneasy and unsure on how we could get and fund the additional costs with sponsors even if we agree that we should try this approach harder,” he added. “Additionally there is nothing in the proposed model that would allow teams to benefit if the league starts to make money.”
One incentive to raise capital and generate marketing activity would be for the participation fees to earn stock in the Euroleague as a limited company.
“Maybe teams would start to invest time and money on business development if they owned a stake it and if the league started to make money the dividends would be paid back to the participating teams,” Lind added.
There are signs that the Euroleague may have priced itself beyond the ability of clubs in less wealthy countries. Ege, which hosted a round in Izmir last season, has dropped out because of the economic difficulties, said head coach Tarkan Laleli.
Three players who have been with the league from the beginning: Thor Funk, Kristian Schäfer and Victor Krylov. Photo: Davrell Tien
Kristian Schäfer, a league veteran who has played for three top clubs (Flipper, Akkaren and Molde), concurs with Lind that opening the league to a broader owner base would be the best way to engage clubs and players.
“Basically I think the best way to move forward is if all clubs owned the league. Just as you see several banks own a organisation. That way could you also involve the clubs much more in terms of financial growth.”
“But it will only be a business if we organize ourselves like a business and act like a business, until then is it, I don’t know the word… something else, an event.”
“Clearly it has been great for our sport. Certainly, the lack of money has limited what we have been able to accomplish. We could offer an alternative to Champions Cup, a women’s league, a junior competition, etc. but we do not have the funding to act quickly and forcefully. I hope the league will find a way to bring in capital, but we will never flourish if everything depends on payments by the players. Also, personally, I do not see any serious investors putting money into anything domiciled in Russia. There is too little confidence in the legal system there.”
Among underwater rugby players there is a contingent of spearfishermen who have the skill to hop into the sea and come up with something to put on the dinner table.
Some post photos of their catches on social media, evidence that spearos are eating better than those of us dependent on the grocery store.
Line Urup, a 24-year-old Danish underwater rugby player, started as a gatherer. While still a child she snorkeled, collecting crabs and mussels with her bare hands. When she filled a small bucket she gave them to her parents to cook.
“It was kind of the treasure hunt feeling,” she explained.
Around the age of 11 years old her father gave her a speargun. She did not catch anything for a long time. To begin with the hunts only happened once or twice a year. Around the age of 16 she took her harpoon more seriously. Since then she has gained experience, pursuing a variety of prey under different conditions.
“I remember the first of every species I’ve caught,” remarked the now 24 year old Dane.
The transition to shooting fish took some time. The first sea trout came as a bit of a surprise.
“I didn’t expect to hit it, since it was a bit far away, but I took the shot anyway and struck it right in the eye; it was a cool experience,” she recalled.
Her most exciting catch ever was a unicorn fish on a trip to the Tuamotu Islands of French Polynesia. She was wary of prey that might be contaminated with ciguatera, toxins that reef fish sometimes accumulate. She knew, however, that unicorn fish were safe to eat. When she saw one she decided to pull the trigger, although it was not an especially impressive specimen. She was not, though, the only one who saw the fish.
“As soon as my spear hit the fish, 4 sharks came towards me and ripped the fish off my spear just next to me. So, I didn’t get my unicorn fish, but I had a very interesting close up meeting with 4 sharks.”
Spearfishing and rugby have played different roles in her life, Urup has never taken part in spearfishing as a competitive sport, although she started it earlier than the ball sport. She now hopes to match herself against other spearos.
“My plan is to attend my first spearfishing competition this year if corona allows it,” she said.
She will also seek a spot on the women’s national rugby team headed to the European Championships in Stavanger this summer.
Urup is not the only Danish rugby player who loves spearfishing.
The Siefert family
“It could be fish every evening for dinner, but the family only wants fish one or two days a week,” said William Siefert, Chairman of the Danish Spearfishing Committee.
Siefert’s son Oliver was Denmark’s top spearo in 2020, putting pressure on all the freezers the Sieferts have access to.
“Oliver won the Danish championship followed by William. Both are swollen, happy and exhausted after many hours in the cold water,” declared wife and mother Christine Siefert on Facebook. Fighting the current 20 meters below the surface, peering under the hull of a sunken ship in search of cod is what 50 percent of her family considers fun.
She knows the that sea is unforgiving to those who make mistakes while rugby in swimming pools poses a low risk as “extreme” sport go. She doesn’t complain for her family loves the outdoors. Even Silje Siefert, Oliver’s younger sister, goes spearfishing when the weather is nice.
“Silje only spearfishes with Oli and I a couple of times in the summer each year,” commented William Siefert. All three play rugby.
Oliver won a gold medal at the Nordic U21 Rugby Championships in 2017. Silje, a junior national team veteran, will try to win a spot on the women’s national team that will represent Denmark at the European Championships this summer.
Spearos need big freezers
One reason the Sieferts do not have to eat fish twice a day is because William Siefert is gamekeeper who is responsible for culling deer herds. Grandparents get both venison and fish when the family runs low on freezer space. Fish must be frozen to kill off seal worm, a parasite that can live survive briefly in humans. Salting is not certain to kill all the eggs and larvae, so the Sieferts do not employ traditional salt curing to preserve fish.
Spearfishing is a much larger sport than rugby. Oliver Siefert has become a sort of a spearo rock star.
“You can call Oliver a semi pro,” said his father, noting that there roughly 10 Danish spearos who at times get free wetsuits, fins and spearguns.
Prior to competitions Siefert can request that equipment makers help cover the cost of trips, which range between 5,000 DK and 10,000 DK (670 euro to 1,350 euro).
When the Danish national spearfishing team [which includes the two Sieferts] travel abroad to international competition, DSF (Dansk Sportsdykker Forbund/the Danish Sportdivers Federation) covers up to 50 percent of the expenses up to a maximum of 5,000 Danish kronor.
Copenhagen area spearfishing hosts competitions itself. The Latvian spearfishing equipment maker, Scorpena contributes around 1,000 euro and some gear to sponsor the Øresund Cup .
“We use the money to pay for the safety boats and other expenses,” said Siefert.
Spearfishing is a world sport
Singaporean Khee CH has many recipes for fresh fish.
“Grilling, steaming, frying, sashimi, when you have so much fish, you will try every way possible to cook it,” he laughed.
Khee began both spearfishing and rugby while studying naval architecture in Sydney between 2006 and 2010.
“I started spearfishing because I didn’t have enough money to get through my uni. I looked for a job but no one wanted to hire me for part time work. So, I decided that I’d hunt for my own food to get by.”
Familiarity with the snorkeling was not a problem. He was 23 at the time and had already begun playing rugby. He bought a secondhand wetsuit for 50 Australian dollars (32 euro) and on Ebay he found a speargun for 80 dollars (50 euro). A classmate and a housemate joined him. The three often fished together. Along the way they met other speros who helped them learn the ropes.
After graduation Khee worked in Norway, where he continued both sports. And then back in Singapore, he continued to spearfish. Water visibility there is limited to between two and 4 meters. Most of the time he hunts at depths of between 5 and 10 meters.
“Because of the visibility, the fish are particularly skittish, so it takes a while to learn how to get close to them,” he explained.
During Singapore’s Covid lockdown fishing was on hold for 4 months.
“I was back in the water the day after restrictions were lifted and the fishing was really good because the fish had gotten fat as no one was catching them.”
Like all spearos, Khee witnesses the consequences of pollution and human activity below the surface. Spearfishing is one way for mankind to monitor the health of marine environments.
“Over time, I learned to be part of the ocean, and take only what I required,” he said.
Spearfishing and rugby go together
Finding rugby players who spearfish is not difficult. But the the state of mind playing rugby and hunting very different, though both sports require apnea, snorkel and fins. Colombian player Dario Lopez, 50, was introduced to spearfishing by rugby player friends who went fishing in the Pacific, described the mental shift between the two.
“Apnea in rugby is very demanding, which helps one to develop apnea towards fishing below the surface. Rugby improves lung capacity.”
Spearfishing requires coolness and serenity, not explosion.
“You have to reset the rugby brain because in fishing the apnea must be very, very calm at all times, even at the moment of the shot and during the ascent with the prey.”
He hunts longfin yellowtail, snappers, groupers when they are in season. He also goes after, palometas (english?), king mackerel and barracuda.
In which countries can one both play rugby and spearfish? The laws and regulations restricting fishing are so complicated that it is impossible to generalize. In the same country, the rules may differ, depending on whether one is fishing in an ocean, lake or river. Some species are protected. In some areas rubber band powered spear guns are forbidden while spears are okay.
Sweden is one country, where spearfishing is not really allowed, although one may apply for a weapon license to own speargun for underwater target shooting but they are not classed as legal fishing equipment. Nonetheless, Malmö Triton rugby player Sebastian Wada has gotten so good at spearfishing that he works part of the year in Norway as a undersea guide for Arctic Spearfishing.
“First and foremost it’s my friend Axel Schüller who runs the company,” replied Wada, who has recorded his progress as a stalker of halibut since 2014 when he took his first one, an 18-kilo fish.
“Spearfishing and rugby are a good combination,” declared Wada. “Halibut hunting is the most extreme underwater hunting that one can do up here in the arctic. You have to spend hours on the bottom.”
Schüller has introduced around 20 underwater rugby players to spearfishing. By the time the 2012 Stavanger European Underwater Rugby Championships end the spearfishing season will have begun, he said.
“Here in Lofoten we also find big cod, pollack, coalfish, flounder etc. Its nice to mix the spearfishing up with other species because the halibut hunting can be very demanding and its not always sure the you find one.”
He then added what sounded like a perfect sales pitch to some underwater rugby players:
“When you halibut hunt its also very important that your gear is really good because they pull very hard if you don’t manage to get a killing shot… You also have to stay clear of lines and don’t get entangled in equipment, because the halibut if its big enough it can drag you down.”
Lakhdar Belloumi scores the second goal by Algeria to upset Germany in the 1982 FIFA World Cup.
Those who follow the sport of underwater rugby should be aware that tournament draws and seeding systems can at times undermine straightforward competition.
Sometimes there is a path through a draw that involves preferring a tactical loss or draw. Before you dismiss this as far fetched, consider an example from ice hockey.
The Swedish men won gold at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino. It was obvious to expert observers at the time that Sweden was not trying hard in its last group play game against Slovakia. At one point, with a two-man power play advantage and 5 Swedish NHL stars on the ice, the Swedes did not manage a single shot on goal.
By losing to Slovakia 3-0 and finishing third in its group Sweden met Switzerland instead of Canada in the quarter finals. Canada crashed and burned against Russia, which had upset Sweden 5-0 in group play. The long and short of it was that while some of the strongest teams had very hard quarter final matches, Sweden could recover physically and mentally for the semi final and final.
Five years later Swedish hockey legend Peter Forsberg told a reporter that the Swedish team realized that losing their last group match against Slovakia would give them a much easier route to the final.
Two-time Olympic Champion, Peter Forsberg also won two World Championships and is considered one of the all time NHL greats. Photo: Javatyk
“We saw absolutely no reason to win, absolutely none,” recalled Forsberg.
The Canadian media picked up the story as something hockey crazy Canadians would want to know. Forsberg was forced to retract what he had said, but the television interview is on YouTube and is not going anywhere (even if you don’t understand Swedish it is amusing to watch Forsberg’s expressions).
Just so you won’t think I am singling out Sweden, another example of a group play scandal was the 1982 FIFA World Cup match between West Germany and Austria, which cheated Algeria of advancement. You can read about it and other match fixing scandals here
So what does this have to do with rugby. Has rugby had any such incidents? Not that I know of. For one thing, there is no money in rugby, so there is no corruption from gambling or prize money. But the Olympic hockey tanked match did not involve money. The Swedes, all professionals with good incomes, just wanted Olympic gold. So could an underwater rugby team trying to win end up in a similar situation?
The round robin
Tournaments in which all competitors meet once, the round robin, is one of the best ways to objectively determine the ranking of teams in a sport. But there are too many nations playing underwater rugby to consider a giant round robin in the space of a week.
“When a round robin format is desirable but the number of entries is too large, splitting the entries into two divisions is a practical solution,” comments John Byl, author of Organizing Successful Tournaments.
Byl goes on to point out that dividing the teams into two groups that play a round robin cuts the number of games in half. Once the two groups have determined the top two teams, it is easy to have the top team of each group play the final while reserving the bronze match to the two teams that placed second in group play. This approach is called the round robin double split.
Although the round robin double split allows the organizers to economize on time and venue—both of which constrain the length of a World Championship—Byl points out that if the three top teams end up in one half of the draw, the third best team is excluded from the play-offs. That is very undesirable in rugby.
CMAS rugby organizers have long been well aware of the shortcomings of having just two groups. On the men’s side the solution has been to create four groups. The name for this is the “round robin quadruple split”. Good seeding is still important, but having four groups gives 8 teams a chance to advance to the medal games.
Since underwater rugby’s major championships, the World and European, only take place once every 4 years, seeding reflects historical rather than current form. The epoch when the four Nordic countries and Germany stood head and shoulders above the competitors has passed. Not only has Colombia advanced on both the men and women’s sides of the draw, countries with enough clubs and players to create elite nationals teams, such as Australia, Turkey and the United States, may improve considerably. It is possible that historically weak or unknown teams can be crowded in one or another group. My understanding is that the CMAS seeding is that it follows the principle of forming groups by picking the top and bottom teams from the last championship in group A, followed by the silver medalists and the second from the last in group B and so on.
There is a great disparity between the strongest and bottom seeds. Some elite players wish they did not have to play “meaningless” matches and would prefer that there was some qualification tournament, so that absurdly lopsided matches could be avoided. However, participation in an inclusive World Championships is a treasured experience for many players. The knowledge that a budding nation is going to face professional level athletes is a huge motivator for training and development. Few in rugby would be happy to see that spirit diminish.
Still, the inclusion of relatively weak teams can lead to tactical play that undermines genuine playing-to-win competition. There were two instances at the Graz 2019 World Championships.
Germany and Denmark, two of the world’s strongest teams were in the same group. Both nations knew they were going to beat the Czech Republic and Great Britain, their other two group play opponents. The Czechs, though weaker, were experienced and were unlikely to lose by a large difference. The question would largely come down to the goal differential generated against Great Britain.
After Denmark pummeled Great Britain 37-0, the Danes had had 30 minutes of experience identifying the weak points of the British team, none of whom had ever played at this level. Before Germany played the UK, Denmark offered coaching to the team led by British captain Mark Price. The pointers from the Danes may well have had an effect. The next day Germany “only” managed to rack up a score of 30-0. The reliable Czechs lost 12-1 to the Germans but only 8-0 to the Danes (perhaps that green teams can improve dramatically by meeting the best).
Thus, Denmark only had to play for a tie against Germany in order to win its group. This they accomplished by holding the game 0-0. The two teams ended up with identical records, but Denmark put in 45 goals and allowed 0 while Germany sank 42 goals and let in just one.
A similar scenario played out on the women’s side of the draw in the group composed of Finland, Sweden and Canada. Like the UK, the women from the north of North America had never competed in a CMAS championship. Both the Nordic countries had to batter the Canadians to accumulate a mass of goals..
Sweden only managed 19-0. The Finns flipped the Canucks 24-0. After that the Finns, like the Danish men, only needed a tie to win their group. One might say that a team that knows it only needs a tie going into a game effectively plays as if it were protecting a 1-0 lead.
It seems odd that teams reach the semifinals of a world championship by drawing one match and crushing a team taking part in its first and second international matches ever.* This is of course not the fault of Denmark or Finland, they simply played rationally, given the circumstances.
Worse can happen. A team might see that winning their group will put them against the de facto tournament favorite while a loss or tie will send them against a rival they are more confident of beating. Why not go for the draw or loss and aim to meet the more difficult opposition in the final instead of the semis?
Am I imagining a problem where none exists? Why should rugby be different from other team sports? Can the rules be tightened? To begin with there could be a rule forbidding a team or teams from not trying or arranging a particular result. Proving misconduct might be difficult but a statement of principle might discourage this kind of gamesmanship.
A more practical measure would be to eliminate tie games through either penalty shootouts or sudden death overtime. The problem with this that they can throw the tournament schedule haywire.
*Correction, the Finnish women went to the quarter final against Australia, which they won 8-0.
Nemo coach Anders Hansson (no. 18) played with Swedish national champions Polisen this year. He trains with Polisen once a week. Andraes Tael is the player standing immediately to the right of Hansson. Photo: Polisen
There are several reasons coaches should stop scrimmage during practice and run a drill. Underwater rugby is a physically demanding sport. Extended scrimmaging that exceeds the conditioning of even a few players will create chaos and reinforce bad habits.
Rugby is more intense than soccer (football). A regulation underwater rugby match lasts 30 minutes: two 15-minute halves with a 5-minute halftime break. Soccer matches last 90 minutes: two 45-minute halves with a 15-minute pause in the middle.
Underwater rugby has more in common with ice hockey, which has three 20-minute periods, with two 15-minute breaks in between. Like rugby, ice hockey has continuous substitutions while the game goes on. Top level hockey players are on the ice for around 45 seconds before the next line jumps in. Hockey may be more intense than rugby because the competitors must generally skate close to full speed the entire time.
The point, though, is that hockey and rugby routinely compete at the edge of physical exhaustion. Coaches train players to force themselves to perform beyond comfort so that they can maintain the team’s offensive and defensive structure. The beauty of top level hockey and rugby lies in the fluidity of action, not endless brawling.
If a club practice lasts between 90 and 120 minutes long and everyone plays with match level intensity, the disparity between players will widen. The less fit and skilled players will become even less relevant to play. The number of sloppy mistakes will increase. The number of fast breaks on unguarded baskets will go up. The number of pointless scrums will rise.
This sort of unstructured practice can be fun but is detrimental to the development of disciplined team play. If the most dominant players use their skills, strength and endurance to the max, the weaker players will not develop as quickly.
If the best offensive player is used to going in alone to score because the defense cannot cycle in their positions, that may not work well at all in competition against a team that stays together. The best players need the support of an entire team since over dependence on individual heroics is an unreliable strategy.
This is why having a variety of players score in matches is sign of good team play.
Examples from clubs in Sweden
The Stockholm club Polisen has a standing rule: during scrimmage coach Andreas Tael will stop play anytime a player loses the ball and fails to immediately forecheck to recover it or stop the other team’s forward progress. Polisen players are also not allowed to swim into the exchange zone area and loiter passively with ball. Tael will also stop play when he sees that even if the ball is not lost. After a brief review of the situation, play then resumes.
One advantage of this method is that the feedback is immediate. If at the end of practice the coach has to recall situations to discuss them, only a small minority is likely to remember what he or she is talking about. Instantaneous feedback has much more impact.
Another Stockholm club, Nemo, has a broader spectrum of players in terms of age, ability and experience. For coach Anders Hansson there is often a need to stop play so that structure can be restored. Typically, he has drills thought out ahead of time. Often the drills are very simple. All the players on one team form circle and pass the ball back and forth. This allows the players who are not as proficient at passing to concentrate on getting the ball to travel straight and briskly for a meter. While this takes places pulse rates sink to normal and after a few minute scrimmage can resume.
A more complex drill might involve three players starting on the bottom by their own goal and swimming over to score on a defender and goalie to approximate the situation when a team gets the ball while defending their own goal and need to have as many players available to take a pass when counter attacking.
For Polisen this might be a rather basic drill but for Nemo and probably many other average clubs, getting players to stay down is a habit that needs reinforcement.
At Stockholm’s third club, Caviar, attendance is sometimes sparse. When there are only 6 players total, match play for an hour and half is unproductive. Those practices are mostly drills with a few breaks to scrimmage.
Drills should be simple and address the club’s needs. Often the benefits of drills can be seen immediately in the scrimmage that follows.
The Swedish Sportdiving Confederation (SSDF) spent money on cheerleading, go-kart racing and bowling when the national teams had to pay their own way to the 2019 World Championships in Graz.
The latest SSDF Annual Report, which covers two years instead of one, makes special note of a change in the organization’s policy. The auditor’s Note 2 states:
“Under the course of 2019 both a Swedish National Championship and World Championship took place. All the senior athletes, in contrast to previous years, paid for a large part of their costs themselves.” [emphasis added]
Does “large” mean 80 percent, 90 percent or 99 percent? Kumar Thirugnanam, the official auditor, does not elaborate, but that fact that he took the trouble to make note implies that it was a significant policy change.
So, beginning in 2019 the underwater sports federation of Sweden decided not to pay the costs of underwater rugby at senior championships, even when the national teams represented the country. In 2019, a total of 780,000 kronor (75,000 euro) went to cover travel, food and lodging at competitions. Given that the number of freedivers and underwater photographers in competitions is limited, it seems that rugby players and their sponsors came up with hundreds of thousands of kronor when the Federation was unwilling to contribute.
(note: 100 SEK to EUR = 9.61000 Euros)
Is this in anyway formally wrong?
The single largest source of SSDF income is state support in the form of subsidies. In 2019, the total revenue of SSDF was over 5.5 million kronor (530,000 euro), according note 2 of the annual report. A large chunk of this, over 2.2 million kronor, came from state subsidies.
Why was it necessary to stop supporting senior competitions out of subsidy revenue? After all, isn’t some of the Swedish Sport Confederation subsidy actually earmarked for elite competition and national teams?
The Swedish women’s National Team at the 2019 Graz World Championships. Photo: Thomas Denk
Confederation clarification
Peter Eriksson, Controller for approximately 1.8 billion kronor (173 million euro) in state subsidies at the Swedish Sport Confederation, explained that SSDF was fully within its rights to dispose of its subsidy income as it saw fit.
“The federation decides itself what activity to spend the money [from so-called Special Federation funding] on,” he explained. “Most federations use this support for their administration, personnel costs and office rent. But federations can allocate the money as they see fit.”
SSDF, he added, had received a national team subsidy of 50,000 kronor (4,800 euro) in 2019:
“It’s up to the federation to determine exactly where to put the money as long as it goes to the national team area of activity. It could be everything from a training camp, a championship, test activity, compensation to national team coaches, etc.”
In 2019, the Federation also received 25,000 kronor (2,400 euro) to visit a “promising future sports environment” with respect to its underwater rugby women’s national team, according to Eriksson.
In short, the Swedish Sport Confederation only allocates a very small amount of earmarked money for the national teams and there is no obligation to support the senior national teams at international events.
In fact, SSDF did have money for go-kart racing, bowling and cheerleading in 2019. On the 26-27th of September, the members will have a chance to question the Chairman, Board of Directors and Auditor about the accounts. The General Assembly will vote whether or not to accept the economic decisions of SSDF’s leaders during the past two years.
Expulsion of underwater rugby from the Swedish Sportdiving Federation (SSDF) could lead to independent recognition by CMAS.
The relationship between underwater rugby and sport diving is so bad that a leading diving club wants to kick the ball sport out of the federation. As previously reported, at the Swedish Sportdiving Federation (SSDF) general meeting this September the members will vote on a motion to entirely shut down the organization’s involvement in underwater rugby as a sport in Sweden.
Mats Gunnarsson (second from the right middle row) was a member of one of Nåcken, one of Swedish rugby’s top clubs. Photo: Sportdiving Club Näckan
This development would not necessarily affect Swedish rugby’s national teams. CMAS President Anna Arzhanova said that a new Swedish national rugby association could request documents to apply for independent recognition.
“Fill them in, sign them and send them back to headquarters,” she said. “Should you need more information do not hesitate to call me.”
As with many sports the international schedule is up in the air because of the Coronavirus pandemic. The next international competition should be the 2021 European Championships in Stavanger.
The Chairman of SSDF, Henrik Johansson, has advised the members to vote against the motion. However, the club that filed the motion, SDK Näcken, is the home club of Mats Gunnarsson, the Chairman of SSDF’s [scuba] Diving Committee. It is unclear whether Gunnarsson or Johansson will command a majority when it comes to a vote.*
Although a few Swedish rugby players would be happy to set out on an independent course, the majority are anxious not to see their sport lose its official status within SSDF, a member of the Swedish Sport Confederation.
Background to conflict
Along with the motion to eject rugby, Näcken submitted an explanatory document. Näcken Chairman Gunnar Larsson—the author of the background note—observed that acrimony on social media had had a negative impact on relations between rugby and the federation. He briefly described three points of dispute:
The expense of the office in Stockholm;
The lack of reporting on rugby in Sportdykaren, the federation’s glossy print magazine;
The general competence of SSDF’s leadership and administration.
He went on to say that the annual meeting should not engage in a discussion of who has been right or wrong in the conflicts between rugby and the federation leaders. The goal of Näcken’s motion is simply to put an end to an unhappy relationship. The motion does not propose any financial compensation to rugby. Nor is there any scheme to divide assets. One could call Larsson the advocate of a no-fault divorce between two unequal parties.
What on social media offended the divers? The explanatory document does not mention any particular incident or episode. Still, it is easy to find examples. In 2016, when the leaders of SSDF decided to shore up the organization’s shaky finances by introducing an annual 300 kronor (29 euro) competition license for underwater rugby players and freedivers. The income from the license would, the board promised, go entirely to the respective sports committees to use for the purposes they saw fit.
Rugby players and freedivers had never paid more in annual membership fees than scuba divers, so there was understandably reluctance. However, when it came to a vote, divers enjoyed a majority, for only about 6 percent of SSDF’s 6,000 members were rugby players. The proposal could (and would) be passed, regardless what the athletes thought.
Sweden, though, is a consensus based society and confrontation is considered undesirable. Accordingly, SSDF’s leaders made an effort to sell the idea. In August 2016, Gunnarsson introduced himself to the Swedish rugby group on Facebook that is commonly used to communicate what is happening in the country. The Diving Chairman himself had a strong background in rugby. With legitimacy he could and did make a sales pitch from a rugby point of view:
“My name is Mats Gunnarsson. I play [rugby] for Nautic but was rugby schooled in Näcken… I have several Swedish National Championship medals from the golden days with Näcken and now I just play in Division 1 for fun.”
He added that he was also Chairman of SSDF’s technical [diving] committee.
To begin with he noted that diving instructors have paid a license fee for 10 years. Why the instructors license was the equivalent of a competition license he did not elaborate. Importantly, he noted that economic relationship between rugby and diving had wrongly favored rugby.
“As I see it underwater rugby has raked in the gold from SSDF for many years,” argued Mats Gunnarsson, Chairman of the Diving Committee at the Swedish Sportdiving Federation.
He offered two reasons for this. Firstly, underwater rugby had had “clever” and “motivated” lobbyists who had worked in the interests of their sport. He specifically mentioned Kajsa Lindman, who is today the head of the underwater rugby committee.
Secondly, rugby had exploited a myth that without rugby, SSDF would not have qualified for subsidies from the Swedish Sports Confederation, the distributor of hundreds of millions of euro each year. Diving, rugby players were fond of saying, was not a sport. SSDF could only be a member of the confederation thanks to he inclusion of rugby.
A diver had investigated the matter and learned that scuba diving was a legitimate recipient of state funding in its own right. Diving was not at all beholden to rugby. Suddenly, divers realized that paying for Swedish rugby teams to represent the country in international competition had been unnecessary. Resentment over the expense of the team sport became a grievance.
Gunnarsson, who had access to SSDF’s financial information, made assertions about how much money rugby had gotten in the past. The new fee would allow diving to keep more money, compensating diving. The divers’ point of view was new to many rugby players. The majority posting on the thread in reply to Gunnarsson expressed gratitude for his presentation.
Still, his argumentation did not go entirely unchallenged. One rugby player questioned whether it was correct for member of the board to cite budgetary numbers in a Facebook discussion without providing public access to the complete budget figures. Another player pointed out that some subsidies were tied to reported athlete per hour training, a contribution that rugby club practices generate. There are more juniors in rugby than in scuba diving, another factor that increases the subsidies from the Swedish Sport Confederation.
In any case, the license fee was adopted. Ill feeling, though, did not disappear over the next three years. The Stockholm club Polisen has now submitted a motion to scrap the competition fee and work out a new system. SSDF’s Board admitted that he competition license had had created problems and suggested that it that it run the licenses through an online platform provided by the Swedish Sport Confederation. This, too, will come up for a vote in September.
Where the money actually goes
The Näcken note observes that today rugby actually is already largely self financing. It states that Swedish league competition is run almost completely by rugby. The Underwater Rugby Committee plans the schedule of play. The clubs themselves book pool time and pay the rental costs of facilities. The Committee ensures that referees attend. The referees’ travel costs and the league fees are collected by committee. As for the Swedish Championships, the Committee had in the past partially financed the championship, but now the participation fee covers the cost of the Swedish Championships.
“So you can say that league play and Swedish Championships are financed by the clubs themselves,” stated Larsson, implying that rugby would not lose much money from government funding because it did not receive much in any case.
He does not cite a source for the financial information.
SSDF’s annual reports do not separately break down cost and income comparisons for diving, freediving and rugby. This reporter has heard on several occasions that the nitty-gritty working budget details are provided to the chairman of each sport. This shared information is the basis of the internal negotiations on how to divide funding between various competing interests.
In underwater rugby it is the national teams that are the big cost,”
—Mats Gunnarsson Chairman Diving Committee Swedish Sportdiving Federation
It would seem that shedding the national teams to cut costs and labor could be an aim of the motion to expel the sport. But how much the national teams actually receive is not public. At the last World Championships in Graz, Swedish national team players bought their own uniforms. Each player paid 15,000 kronor (1,488 euro) to participate.The fate of the national teams
The explanatory note discusses how the national teams could continue to exist after the expulsion of rugby. Larsson suggests that a new underwater rugby association could be established. The new association would then negotiate an agreement with SSDF to handle the CMAS license provision for the European and World Championships, the only two competitions requiring SSDF approval.
In such a scenario, SSDF would not have to pay anything at all towards national teams and perhaps gain income from the Swedish Sport Confederation elite sport subsidy.
The alternative would be the founding an entirely independent association to join CMAS. There are numerous examples of countries having multiple CMAS memberships. Argentina, for example, has one federation for diving and another for hockey. An independent Swedish underwater rugby organization could pay the federation membership fee but not receive any CMAS voting rights that would infringe SSDF’s rights in other matters. It would only pay for membership in the rugby section, where it would have the right to vote. This would not affect SSDF since the Swedish federation would not have rugby as an activity.
International referees
Sweden has been a key nation when it comes to running underwater rugby as an international sport. Four international referees, including the CMAS Chief Referee, are Swedes. Manuel Tito de Morais, the sport’s chief referee, said that he did not believe he would be eligible to serve if SSDF quit rugby.
“To referee Champions Cup would not be a problem, I think, but the European and World Championships would probably not be allowed as we would not have CMAS association any longer,” said Tito de Morais. “I would probably not be able to stay on as Chief Referee.”
He added that he might try to gain membership through another federation so that he could continue officiating the sport. Founding and administering an independent Swedish rugby association seemed like a great deal of work, according to him.
The sport would have to scramble rugby to salvage its records, both paper and electronic, among other difficulties. There are several unknowns. Could rugby clubs join the Swedish Swimming Federation to restore their connection to the Swedish Sport Confederation? Could the Swedish National Championships retain their legal status?
However, leaving the diving federation might not be a bad thing, according to some.
“I know a number of groups who would love to be in Swedish rugby’s position,” commented Graham Henderson, President of the Australian Underwater Federation
The vote to expel rugby is scheduled for the 27th of September.
* In 2018, he coached the Swedish Women’s National Team at the Nordic Championship in Katrineholm.
The Swedish Sportdiving Federation filed a police complaint this week against individuals suspected of providing the media with information about the Swedish Sportdiving Federation’s financial policy and transactions.
Henrik Johansson, besides heading the Swedish Sportdiving Federation, is the head of the Ambulance Union. Screenshot: SVT/Swedish Public Service television news
The leaked documents disclosed that the Federation financially remunerated both the Chairman and Vice Chairman in 2019. Henrik Johansson, the head of the underwater sports in Sweden, received 83 days of compensation payment between December 2018 and August 2019. The amount totaled 112,500 kronor (10,862 euro). Vice Chairman Annikki Wahlöö received 18,000 kronor (1,738 euro) for 13 days.
Payment of salary or wages to the board members of nonprofits is perfectly legal. In fact, in Sweden there has been a steady trend towards remuneration. However, critics are concerned that this undermines the Swedish tradition of volunteer labor in sport associations. If financial gain becomes too important as a motivator, sports may decline. Physical inactivity is a growing problem in Sweden; the overwhelming majority of sports have been losing participants in recent years.
In 2017, SSDF suffered an operating loss of 440,000 kronor on gross revenue of around 5.4m kronor. It was the second year in a row that the underwater federation was in the red. At the 2018 board meeting in Stockholm, Leandra Caldarulo of Felix Diving Club moved that the board of directors collectively draw up a sound economic development plan. She also requested that the board investigate why the federation had failed to execute its previously agreed upon economic strategy successfully. Her motions were approved.
“No financial compensation goes to those on the Swedish Sportdiving Federation’s Board of Directors,”
—Henrik Johansson, Chairman Swedish Sportdiving Federation, 2016 news brief
Asked to clarify how and when he changed his position, Johansson replied:
“I have worked voluntarily without pay from the federation for 10 years and I continue to do so even now. Those times that someone [on the board] has received compensation for lost income is caused by more time demanding tasks that could not be done on a voluntary basis.”
The position of the Swedish Sport Confederation
Much of SSDF funding comes from the Swedish Sport Confederation. Peter Eriksson, Business Controller at the Confederation said there are no specific guidelines regarding financial compensation to board members. He elaborated:
“Historically very few of our sport federations have given compensation beyond compensating board members for expenses like lodging, meals and other expenses directly attached to the board mission.”
He noted that the Swedish football and ice hockey federations paid the chairmen something similar to a normal wage.
“My view is that the small or middle sized sports and federations seldom have any compensation beyond normal expenses. And in those cases the compensation is most likely shown in the annual report.”
The last published annual report of SSDF (2016 and 2017) does not mention compensation to the board members.
Compliance with the 2018 plan
At the same meeting 6 board members were elected. Subsequently, three of them resigned before their term of office expired. Their departure concentrated financial authority in the hands of Chairman Henrik Johansson and General Secretary Frida Linderoth. This shift in authority from the board to the Chairman and General Secretary has been noted in SSDF’s Annual report 2018-2019. The report, which has been released internally to diving club leaders in pdf format, does not yet provide the financial results.
The organization’s reformed procedures for oversight are outlined in a single paragraph, which can be broken down as follows:
“The expenses of the Federation Chairman are reviewed by the office for final approval by the Financial Committee (ekonomigruppen) at its convention.”
In other words, Johansson informs Linderoth what expenses he expects to spend on behalf of the federation. She grants (or denies) initial approval. When the Financial Committee meets it makes a final determination whether or not to accept the Chairman’s decisions. The paragraph does not discuss how often the Committee meets or who heads it. There is no discussion of procedure in the event of a rejected expenditure.
“The expenses for the Board Members are overseen by the office and subject to approval by the Chairman.”
This seems to contradict the resolution of 2018 to have the Board plan collectively.
“Salaries have been determined by an external financial consultant and approved by the Chairman.”
Thus, some of the most significant costs for running SSDF, employee salaries and the Chairman’s expenditures, are not first hand determined by the Board of Directors collectively, but by the Chairman, General Secretary and outside consultants.
Johansson declined to name the head of the Financial Committee to the media.
“The Federation has an accountant, nominating committee and an annual general meeting of members that oversee the organization and enjoy complete insight,” he said.
The receipts
Johansson used an SSDF Visa Business card. The total charges in 2019 amounted to 129,528 kronor (12,630 euro). He traveled over 30,000km for which he was compensated over 70,000 kronor (6,825 euro) at the standard rate of 18.50kr per 10km. While working for SSDF, Johansson submitted various unremarkable receipts from hotels and restaurants. But there were also receipts that one would expect an auditor to question. For example, there were a few substantial grocery shopping receipts from a local supermarket in his hometown. The three largest together totaled 6,733 kronor (656 euro). Each comprised a wide variety of food products:
Cucumbers Sweden 2
Yeast 50 grams 2
Meatballs 2 x 450 grams
Steakhouse fries 2 x 900 grams
Carraway ground 38 grams
Pearl sugar 500 grams
Smoked reindeer meat and cheese spread
Cinnamon ground 42 grams
Onions
Etc.
When questioned about the purpose of the food purchases, Johansson responded that it was clear the SSDF had suffered a serious breach of confidentiality. Subsequently, the Federation announced that it had filed a police complaint. After that he declined to further discuss financial matters.
In Chairman’s hometown Arne Cronvall, the Vice Chairman of the Örebro Sportdiving Club said that Johansson had indeed provided hotdogs for a “try diving” program to reach underprivileged youth in Örebro. There were grocery receipts with hotdogs that matched such use of federation funds. When pressed for confirmation that the large grocery purchases might have gone to his club, he said that he would check and reply later.
One of the receipts came from an historical reenactment supply store in Örebro. Screeshot: Nidingbane
There were other curious receipts: a payment of 1,435 kronor went to Nidingbane, a historical warfare weapons and clothing store in Örebro.
There was a 644 kronor purchase in serieZonen, a comic bookstore in Uppsala.
Re-election
At the end of September SSDF will convene its bi-annual meeting at which time members will have and opportunity to request explanations from Johansson, regarding his stewardship of underwater sports.
During the past two years Johansson has carried out some important reforms. He successfully introduced an annual competition fee of 300 kronor per athlete. This may have helped to stabilize the federation’s finances, but he was unable to increase the number of clubs by 10, which was the goal the board set.
Some 20 inactive clubs have been removed. The clean up is important to prevent auditing by the Swedish Sport Confederation, which is getting stricter about inflated numbers from its members.
In 2020, the Competitive Freediving Committee has a budget from SSDF of 153,600 kronor, which is an improvement over a turbulent period for freediving during which the Committee was even disbanded.
Has Johansson done enough to win re-election come autumn? CMAS member federations tend to stick with established leaders, regardless of controversies. The challenge to SSDF, like many other sports in Sweden, is to engage youth and keep a larger number of seniors playing rugby, scuba and freediving.
Julio Lopez became a World Champion as Colombia executed a masterful plan to become the first non-European to take gold ever. Photo: Camilo Diaz
Julio Lopez played for Colombia in Bari 2007 but then missed the next two World Championships. Now at age 41 the offensive star is making an international comeback.
Julio Lopez played for Colombia in Bari 2007 but then missed the next two World Championships. Now at age 41 the offensive star is making an international comeback.
Colombia’s national side for the World Championships in Graz only has two players from clubs other than Orcas: Ecomares’s Héctor José Escobar Suárez is one and the other is Scuba’s Julio Lopez.
Lopez acquired the nickname “the ugly” because there was another elite player, goalie Julio Restrepo, who was called “the beautiful”.
According to Federico Londoño, one of the stalwarts of Medellin rugby, the nickname was justly given.
“This fellow Lopez is very ugly and you can tell him I said so,” quipped Londoño, who will also play for Colombia in Graz this summer.
“So, Lopez did not make the national team because of his looks but because he can score goals?” was the follow up question.
“Not even that,” replied Londoño, who be seen standing next Lopez in a recent national team portrait shot.
Julio Lopez (fourth from the left) stands next to Federico Londoño. Photo: Orcas
What makes Lopez a potent threat?
There is evidence to the contrary. In a half dozen grainy videos Lopez can be seen completing an attack by taking a pass and charging the goal with full-force. He strikes decisively.
To play for Colombia a player must be 100 percent committed. No club is training as hard as Orcas, the home club of Samuel José Gaviria coach of the national team. Gaviria must also believe in Lopez, who has had the opportunity to participate in training camps and the selection process. Although he missed Helsinki 2011 and Cali 2015, Lopez has been in training and playing the whole time.
“I’ve been working out nonstop for 20 years, swimming, running, lifting and playing,” said Lopez, adding that “Nothing comes for free.”
Two decades ago Lopez was one of the founding members of the Medellin club Ecomares. Four years ago, he and some of the other old guard decided to split and form a new club, Scuba. Today he is their coach. He recently led a team of Scuba players to the 25th North American Tournament in Pompano Beach in preparation to meet Orcas in the national championships.
Lopez coached the team to first place in the cup, defeating a pickup squad based on the NWAR A team in the final 1-0.
Julio Lopez was top scorer in the national championships in between 2004 and 2010. Photo: Davrell Tien
“I think you need attitude. You’ve got to be goal hungry,” said. “But you also have to train a lot, if you do not train in scoring, you’re never gonna make it.”
But no matter how much a player trains, attitude is an essential factor in his opinion.
“You need both elements,” he concluded.
He clearly likes to drive the goalkeeper off from either side that he can find space below the basket.
Regrets
Lopez, who today is a cattle rancher with a secure income, was not financially comfortable back in 2011. He had a place of the squad headed to Helsinki for the World Championships.
“As the date to play grew closer, I could not come up with money, so I had to tell the coach to take someone else.”
Lopez missed Cali in 2015 because of a car accident and work obligations. He clearly still feels some heartache that he was not there.
Today Colombian national team players continue to bear a heavy personal economic burden when they represent their country. Fedecas, the national federation, does not even pay the team entry fee or uniform purchase.
“We invest four hours a day preparing ourselves to meet our objective, and the rest of the day we look for resources to solve our passion,” states the teams fund raising site on social media.
“Fedecas only charges us to play and does not even cover our team entry fee: this is really wrong if I may say so,” he commented.
But he is looking forward to the competition and can afford to have his daughter make the trip to Austria.
“I have a daughter and son who mean everything to me,” he said. “Maybe my son will go, too, and we’ll have 15 days together after the championships.”
Blocking would be goal scorers with 95 solid kilos on a 1.85 meter frame, Förschler commands a good bit of space within the defensive perimeter. Photo: Facebook
Veterans dominate the 15-man squad Germany has named for the Cali World Championships this coming July. Only two new players have broken through. Christian Förschler, a TSC Pforzheim defender, is one of them. At 22 years of age he is the German national team’s youngest player.
“I was a reserve national team player before, so I knew I had a decent chance of going to Colombia, but there were other strong candidates so I never took it for granted,” he said.
He took up the game at the age of 13 when Pforzheim recruited Förschler from the diving club’s snorkel group. He recalled the beginning of his career:
“After two training sessions I fell in love with this underwater rugby. Prior to that I had played soccer but only for fun not in a club or a league.”
The line up of TSC Pforzheim Unterwasserrugby at a Bundesliga match in 2013. Christian Förschler: bottom front far left. Photo: TSC Pforzheim Unterwasserrugby
Despite his size and strength, his approach to the game is calculating and effective. As much as possible, he prefers to play at high speed with finesse rather than brute force:
“I developed my style for two reasons: first as a teen it was really hard to match strength with the older, powerful guys and secondly the tactics of [national] youth team are to play as fast as you can, he explained.”
Not from a leading club
He has played his entire career with Pfrozheim, except for a season with rival Malsch, which is usually number two in the final national standings after Bamberg. His club, which competes in Germany’s southern division, has struggled this season. Last year they finished in fifth place and need to win matches in the final three games to avoid relegation. The club has only managed to rack up a total of 5 goals in league play so far. Two were by Förschler, who credits his teammate with elevating his game. He is the only player from Pforzheim on the national team.
“My club is very proud I made the national squad because it displays our good team work. I learned the game with them.”
International experience Last year the Norwegian national team travelled to Germany for a friendly match between the 2011 World Championship gold and silver medalists. Förschler missed that competition but between 2011 and 2013 he made four appearances on Germany’s U21 squad, taking gold three times. This has given him exposure to playing several full 30-minute matches over several days time, an experience that he will take to Cali.
Gold medalists: Germany’s U21 pose at the Open Nordic Championship in Oxelsund, Sweden. Second from the left in the bottom row.
Molde had been considered unstoppable, but Flipper went to Olso with a strategy to shut down Molde’s speedy counter attacks. The upset victory by the Copenhagen club threw the third season of the European Underwater Rugby league open, raising the possibility of a new league champion.
Last month Flipper stunned Norwegian Molde by prevailing in an extremely physical 1 – 0 contest in Round 2 of the Euroleague last month in Oslo when veteran goalie Jørn Christoffersen sprinted the length of the pool to score on an open basket.
Jørn Christoffersen’s international experience includes 8 appearances at the Champions Cup. Photo: YouTube capture
Flipper coach Mikkel Rasmussen and went to Olso with a well considered plan strategy to prevent Molde’s speedy counter attacks. First the Danes determined that they would cut down on turnovers by avoiding all speculative long passes. Secondly, Flipper decided to put a defensive full press on immediately every time Molde took the ball. Flipper also welcomed physically draining scrums on the surface. This strategy inevitably diminished Flipper’s own offensive punch. But the Danes were willing to settle for a tie against the two-time Euroleague Champions.
Oppporunity arose to break the tie
With less than a minute remaining in a scoreless game, Goalkeeper Christoffersen began a dive at mid pool and retreated along the bottom back to his own goal when Molde took possession. Lying in wait for an attack he saw that Flipper had recovered the ball. He sprinted forward to take a pass. Suddenly the 85-kilo goalie found himself on a adrenaline rush towards an open goal. The 37-year-old veteran beat the off guarding Molde defenders and jammed the ball in.
Bellahøj Swimming Stadium is next up for the Euroleague. Photo: Pinterest
Comeback career
“They talked me into coming back to play on the Euroleague squad,” said Christoffersen, a two-time world champion (2003 and 2007), who had taken a step back from competition for a few years. These days he never misses a practice. The pay-off? A legendary goal in the history of underwater rugby.
Flipper does not face Molde again this season but Malmö Triton now has a good opportunity to win the league. The Swedish club may now attempt to copy Flipper’s strategy in the final match of the season on Saturday in Copenhagen’s Bellahøj Swimming Stadium.
Haugland takes Waterways prize for top scorer at the Champions Cup
Nine goals over three days catapulted Akkaren forward Karine Haugland to the top of the women’s table for individual scoring by the end of the underwater rugby Champions Cup in Berlin.
Once a year, the world’s national champions in underwater rugby come together for international competition at the Tempelhof Municipal Pool in Berlin. Haugland, a Norwegian national team veteran since 2005, helped lead her home club, Olso’s Akkaren, to become world champions in an undefeated run at the 2013 competition. The Oslo club defeated German league champions Duisburg 1-0 in the final on a goal scored by Haugland.
Haugland and her Akkaren teammates barely made it to the Champions Cup this year. Facing arch rival Molde in league play, they dug themselves into a deep hole at the beginning of the season by losing their first two meetings. It looked as if Molde, runner up at the Champions Cup last year, would defend its position as Norway’s number one club. Haugland recalled:
“During the regular season when we had our backs to the wall we knew we had to win our third meeting with Molde. Perhaps they took us for granted a little bit, but we played 100 percent. And after our first victory we really had a hard battle in our fourth meeting, but we had momentum and self confidence on our side.”
After tieing the divisional race Akkaren won the national title because the Norwegian system distinguishes between the year’s league champion and national championship. The winner of the league represents the country at Champions Cup.
The Norwegian women’s league only has three teams at present. This makes the Champions Cup a special highlight of the year, according to Haugland.
“We need more variety and tougher competition. So the Champions Cup is something we really forward to. It would be great if we could compete more regularly against German club teams,” said Haugland. “Perhaps we could have a European League like the men.”
Waterways Prize
Haugland made 9 goals in Champions Cup:
– 2 versus Orcas (Colombia) – 3 versus Aquanavt (Russia) – 0 versus Volants (Czech Republic) did not play – 3 in the semi final versus Black Mermaids (Sweden) – 1 in the final versus Duisburg (Germany)
“There were many players on our team who deserved the prize: we did it together,” said Haugland upon receiving the award, a pair of Waterway underwater rugby fins.
Waterways fins dominate the fiber fin market in Norway among underwater rugby players. The retail price for a pair in Norway lies around 130 euro. Haugland already played with the Ukrainian made fins.
“Of the players who use fiber fins I would guess that 95 percent have Waterways,” she said, who originally started out as a competitive swimmer.
Haugland started out as a swimmer. But at the age of 14 she switched to slalom rivercanoing (whitewater) and was a member of the national team for five years until a knee injury forced her to quit at the age of 20.
“I was introduced to underwater rugby in 1999 and started playing competitively in 2000,” said. “Loved it from the start.”
She was named to the Norwegian National Team in 2005 and has played in two World Championships.
(Sidebar text: The top scorer in league play and the top scorer at the Norwegian Championship both receive prize money of NOK 250.
The first UWR tournament in Australia just took place this weekend. Teams from Brisbane, Sydney, Canberra, Hobart and a combined New Zealand contingent (Auckland and Wellington) played an intense round robin (5 matches each) on Saturday. Sydney won 4 of its matches and settled for a tie against Brisbane, followed closely behind by New Zealand with 4 wins and one loss.
The semi-finals and finals were held on Sunday. Tasmania produced a surprise upset, defeating the Sydney team to enter into the finals against New Zealand, which defeated Brisbane in a very close and tightly fought match. In the Bronze medal game, Brisbane and Sydney were tied at 3-3 during the second half. Just as a sudden death round was looking increasingly likely, Brisbane broke the deadlock producing 2 goals in quick succession. Sydney, who were undefeated out of five games just the day before, were noticeably devastated to come in at 4th place.
The grand final between New Zealand and Tasmania was hard fought and physical. New Zealand’s defences in the end proved too tough to overcome, they dominated possession and the scoreboard with formidable, well-executed counter attacks. However, opportunity came knocking twice on Tasmania’s door. Two penalty throws were awarded to the Tassie team within 5 minutes of each other, giving them the opportunity to equalize. Both throws were contested tooth and nail but ultimately saved by the Kiwi captain. New Zealand went on to take out the tournament, leaving Tasmania to be content with the title of National Australian Champions.
However, the biggest event of the weekend was still yet to come. During a lunch break, selectors from each of the Australian teams gathered together to select the best 15 Australian players of the tournament to form a National Team. Selected players were picked quite evenly from across all the different Australian teams, even though no formal quota system was in place.
National anthems were played. Group photos were taken. Then at 2:47pm, amidst tense nerves from both players and their supporters (watching the big screen from the side of the pool) the whistle blew. Over the next 15 minutes, both sides stubbornly matched each other in attack and counter-attack. Worryingly though, for the Australians, the Kiwis were dominating possession. However, the Australian defences never let up, despite a few close calls and brilliant saves by goalies on both sides. At half time the score still sat at 0-0.
The mood around the pool was pure finger-biting, edge-of-seat nervousness. After quick match analyses and prep talks on both sides, the game resumed with an even higher level of intensity. The Kiwis were still dominating possession with their superior bottom times and precise ball handling, but Australia remained firm in defence and relentless in counter-attacks. More than halfway into the second half, the scoreboard remained dry. Players were diving in and out of the pool at increasing regularity. A few more narrow opportunities on both sides came and went. Then it happened.
The Australian goalie is outnumbered. But she narrowly staves off the attack on goal long enough for support to arrive. Number 7 from Tasmania snatches the ball and goes straight for the counter. Executing a one-two with another supporting player gets them through the Kiwi’s now scrambling midfield. A forceful drive at the New Zealand defences gets brings the ball towards the surface. The ensuing wrestle for possession takes place in the water column directly above the goal. The Kiwi goalies misjudge their exchange just as an Australian player gets a pass away. Her pass is good. It goes to number 11, nose-diving straight down from the water above. Arms fully extended, the player brings the ball home into an open goal. 1-0 with 3 minutes remaining. The elated roar of celebration from the audience was a tremendous release. The nervous tension that had been pooling over the last thirty minutes was suddenly given an outlet.
But the Australian players in the water are slow back to their side of the pool. The whistle to start play blows while half the team has yet to touch the wall. The Kiwis make a final committed attack against a frantic Australian defence. But the defence holds yet again, followed by an Australian counter-attack, then Kiwi possession, then a referee’s ball with 1 minute on the clock remaining. The ball drops, the Kiwis take possession but become entangled by Australian players in the midfield. The referee clangs the metal pipes together. Players are rising to the surface. After 30 minutes of a thrilling, suspenseful game – the highest level of underwater rugby that has ever been played on this vast continent… it was all over.
(This was the third time that Australia and New Zealand have met in the water to fight over a trophy named the Ocean Hunter Cup, with Australia having been convincingly beaten both times before. Revenge is indeed a dish best served cold.)
Jacques Naude, the first South African to score a goal in international competition. Photo: Markus Bjurén
South Africa had a goal in the Championships — to score at least one goal. In their final match South Africa, held scoreless in every previous match, faced Switzerland. In the first half South Africa was down 0-5. But in the second half Jacques Naude scored a goal on a penalty.
“I got him around the neck pulled him off,” said Naude when asked how he managed to give South Africa its first goal in World Championship play.
Prior to their first game the South Africans said that they had heard that the USA had only managed to make single goal at three world championships.
“We want to do better than that,” said one of the team. Goal achieved.
When South African diplomat Rudi Janse van Vuuren received a phone call, informing him that his country was represented at the World Championships he was incredulous.
“I thought someone was pulling my leg at first,” confessed van Vuuren, who later joined Team South African at their hotel for a beer.
A three-strong German break for the goal with one minute to go looks bad for Sweden, but Felicia Nyberg catches them from above and snatches the outstretched ball. Less than minute remains. It will be a penalty shootout…. No, suddenly with five seconds left Ann-Sofi Krakau, perhaps Sweden’s top player, certainly a physical and explosive athlete, is over the goal and shoves one in. An amazing finish. The Germans have been somewhat unlucky but possession must be converted into goals or it means nothing but a bitter taste… no that’s not true. Germany played very well. It is a hard defeat but they can be proud.
From now on we are in the quarter finals. For the rest of the Championships there will be no more undecided matches. Now, the event of a tie, there will first be a 15-minute overtime period of sudden death play. If that produces no resolution, then the game will go to a penalty shootout.
All 12 players are allowed to shoot, providing the game is not decided by a mathematical impossibility for the team that has fallen behind.
In the penalty shootouts if the goalie commits an infraction, he or she receives a two round seat in the penalty box.
The match between Colombia and German provided a stark contrast in strategies. The German team, collectively more than 10 percent larger in terms of length and weight, wanted to play a battle on the bottom, using rhythm and speed to punch through. This approach was no doubt correct but the Colombian women, who could not rip or wrestle the balls away in one-on-one play, had a strategy of their own.
Every time they clamped onto a German player another would close in so that German player ended up floating to the surface. At times some of the Colombian players would attach themselves to the balls and curl up in a protective fetal position. It was impossible for the German players to pass or score with such large remora on the balls. Worse the Colombian player had no interest in symbiosis. As soon as two came into the picture there was battle.
The Colombians could easily have been down 3 – 0 at the half but their goalies were very quick to seal the basket.
“They have a lot of air,” said the husband of one of the German players.
Conditioning is a vital advantage in underwater rugby. The Colombians were on the defensive much of the game. Sometimes when attacks were mounted and the goalie were in danger of being lifted off, their teammates usually the backs and or other goalie would push them down on the rim.
Germany was the stronger team but it looked as if the Colombians might pull off a long shot victory by doing approximately the same as the Japanese women did to the Americans in the World Cup. It was not to be though, as the Colombians had too few break away threats to catch the German 2 goal lead.
The other teams will have to adjust themselves to beat Colombia. Germany are after all the defending Champions, so this was not a surprize result.
We have just watched the best match of the Championships so far. In the opening minutes a very strong German team looked as if they might dominate, but Denmark got successively tougher as the match progressed.
In the first quarter of the game Germany often managed to methodically build up attacks. The Danes looked somewhat passive with the team’s forwards seemingly content to wait for passes, instead of challenging the tempo established by their opponents. The danger for Denmark was that during the exchange of backs the Germans would make a rush backed by 3 or 4 players.
Shortly before the 10 minute mark, the collection of half fresh lungs outside the Danish goal gave Germany’s Stefan Klett a chance to flip the switch, putting one on the score board. Not long after that Dennis Pahl made a second goal for Germany. Two to zero might have spelt the end for another team but not this one from the country lying so close to Germany.
Denmark’s lapse was no burnt-out fuse. The Danes reset the circuit breaker and in workman-like fashion gradually deprived their opponents of the tempo control strategy. It did not come easily. On more than one occasion, though they did not have physical dominance, the Danes scooped up sub-prime Deutsche passes and tried to go to the bank. With around 5 minutes remaining Denmark’s Simon Schäfer put in goal, erasing Germany’s self assurance.
Perhaps frustrated at the trend, the Germans committed two roughing fouls, which only encouraged the Danes to dig in and fight harder. After half-time the Danish forechecking became urgent. If in the first half Danish counterattacks quickly met resistance, in the second half they extended their forward movement. Every time they closed on the German goal, two Russia spectators rooting for Denmark said, “come-on! Tie game now.”
The Danish pressure had a sort of increasing grimness that the Germans had no answer for. However, in the end team Germany hung on to their one nil lead to the end. The last few minute were nail biting entertainment.
First match of the Helsinki 2011 World Championships, as originally reported August 16, 2011.
The game was very tight for the first 15 minutes. Neither team was able to score. With few seconds remaining in the first half both teams received team warnings for holding.
Rami Riikonen Photo: Facebook
The action resumes and Rami Riikonen scores to give Finland a 1-0 lead.
With 8 minutes remaining in the second half a Pasi Aman of Finland is sent out for roughing. A time out is called by Finland. The game resumes but Colombia is unable to capitalize on the advantage. With half of the penalty time remaining, Colombia’s German Castro (No. 14) gets a call for holding. Since there is already a team warning, he heads to the penalty box.
The sides are even, 5 against 5. Finland’s captain Reijo Rantemäki scores another. Jussi Jokinen follows him shortly after again. The final result is 4 – 0 in favor of defending Champions, Finland.
The third Finnish goal was a beauty. The goalie clamped on to the ball and floated up with the Finnish attacker. Once the Finnish player wrestled it back a second Finnish player planted it in the empty goal. Two other Finns players lurked in the background.
Colombia had better than 50 percent possession in the first half. Their forwards played very tough defense. However, after Finland gained a two point lead they played coolly and prevented the increasingly frustrated Colombians any realistic chance of coming back. The additional two goals came as Colombia splintered.
Colombia has a strong team but they must now win all their remaining group matches to remain in medal contention.
Second penalty shot for holding the basket decides game in favor of Norway.
Late in the first half Swedish goalkeeper Anna Överby goes into the penalty box for gripping the basket. Sweden survives the 2-minute power play. In the second half around 8 minutes remaining the referee calls basket holding again. Penalty shot. The Swedish goalie easily holds off the attacker and the Swedish players on deck scream with delight.
However, the Swedes are caught again. The goalkeeper is not a large player so it is easy for her to slip a shoulder too deep. The ref calls for a second penalty.
Now Felicia Nyberg (No 10) of the Swedes must face another penalty shot attempt. This time the Norway’s Karine Haugland harasses her from the bottom. Nyberg cannot risk letting a crack open. There are 45 seconds for a penalty and Haugland shrewdly heads up for a deep breath and comes back like a seal who has figured out a fisherman’s trap. She has a stressed goalie short of air and in goes the ball.
Swedish Captain Helena Fagraeus. Photo: Ann-Sofi Krakau.
Sweden is down but not out. The action now has a frenetic quality. The Swedes are anxious to equalize. They come in more aggressively but they cannot break the Norwegian defense. With relatively little time remaining the Norwegians tie up the Swedish captain Helena Fagraeus on the surface in a tiring battle to nowhere.
Time is running out. A free ball awarded Norway gives the side a chance to call for a time out. Perhaps not a good move because it allows the Swedes to rally for a final attempt. They take the ball from Norway but Norway takes it back. Norway then burns up the remaining minute and half passing safely in the corner.
Norway has too many players in the water. A time penalty is awarded Sweden but only three seconds are left the Swedish and Norwegian players are taking off their masks as the meaningless free ball goes into play. It’s over. Norway has a victory under their suits. Sweden must regroup.
Karine Haugland is one of Norway’s top scorers. Photo: Stine Røsok Dahl.
This was match commentary from a women’s match in Helskini, first published August 16, 2011
Both teams have seen a player sent to the penalty box for holding the goal. Still no score, even with the advantage of being a woman up, neither can do much. Too many dropped balls. Play is in the middle a bit too much.
Both teams are hesitating to take it into the basket area. It hurts there and there are risks but you cannot score without some pain. “I was expecting a bit more but it’s the first match,” says one a Danish ref on his break.
Report from an ongoing match during the 2011 Helisinki World Championships originally published August 16, 2011
Two strong teams are meeting. The 3 – 1 Turkish lead is the product of having more attacking players swarming around the goal. Turkey has been tougher in clinched ball situations, ripping it away from the Spaniards. In the second half Spain has been more aggressive and they need to be.
Vocal Spanish fans punctuate the spacicious pool hall with shouts of encouragement. “There is free player beneath ,” cries a woman, as if the players below could hear her.This is a nice place to play. The doors are open to let in air. One side of the pool hall is all glass, giving the Championships good light, although it is overcast. How is the video stream? Let us know.
The Turkish players sing the national anthem in salute to their opponents, for whom this was a hard blow. The Spanish players look distracted in defeat. Will they be able to pull themselves together.
The situation for underwater rugby in the USA / interview of Rolexi Pinzon (New Jersey Hammerheads) First published August 6, 2011.
Davrell,
Thanks for your interest on UW Rugby in the US and Canada. Certainly as you mentioned the sudden change of plans from Colombia to Finland and short notice affected our participation. For both US and Canada rugby players this meant a big difference and although we had the interest to participate up to the last minute, in the end we just couldn’t get our teams organized.
Since I was involved in the effort of getting a USA team participating back in the UW Rugby World’s, I would like to answer your questions and clarify the current status of UW Rugby in the US and Canada. At this point we are in constant communication with players in Canada and we are trying to do a common effort to develop UW Rugby in both countries.
Where do the North American teams stand right now in terms of competitiveness at the top level?
We have a mix of well experienced players and very enthusiastic new players. There are three clubs in the US that are constantly practicing and promoting the sport. One of the teams (New Jersey Hammerheads) has been very active locally organizing along other clubs tournaments and clinics and also internationally trying to participate outside the US and get the top level experience needed in the sport, even inviting players from other clubs and players from areas without a club so they can get to experience a high level competition and learn. The East Haven Makos (from Connecticut) is a team that dissapeared for a while but is back with many new and enthusiastic players that is growing really fast. This team has been a great supporter of UW Rugby events. The oldest of the US teams (Quincy UWR) has been active for the longer time and has a lot of experienced players.
Are the skills and tactics up there?
Yes, that has been one of the goals for the clubs. We are constantly in contact with coaches from different teams and experience in all levels (national, league and world championship) and we are always trying to develop, practice and implement both skills and tactics. A big help on this has been the participation of experienced players from other countries like Colombia and Germany.
3) How is UWR growing?
Rugby has been around in the US since the late 90’s and in Canada since 5 years ago
Honestly it has been very slow the last years because of different reasons. First, it is extremely difficult to get access to a pool. Since the sport is not an usual or common sport, support from pools or municipalities is very hard to get. Distances are also a big problem since players sometimes are really far from practice venues. Pools and distances have made extremely difficult to get new teams organized.
The good thing is that right now we have clubs that have been active from long time and clubs that are back in practice again. We have 5 clubs (including some from Canada) that are relatively “close” and all looking into organizing a yearly schedule of events that will help to get an organized calendar.
Yes, UW Rugby is somehow different from waterpolo in regards to swiming skills. You might not be a good swimmer and do good, but still you need basic swimming skills. Being a good swimmer makes a big difference and the learning curve is much shorter.
Since we dont have enough players in the clubs to have men and women’s teams, we play with mixed teams as they do here with UW Hockey teams. The ideal will be to have women teams & tournaments but that’s going to take a long time.
Katie told me that the Michigan players driver four hours to practice in Chicago during the summers. Wow! At the same time a city like Chicago could support a league. Is getting pool time difficult in the USA?
We had no idea of someone playing Rugby in Chicago!!..Thats good news! We’ll contact Katie. As I mentioned getting pool time is extremely difficult because of the costs, insurance, and lack of interest from pool managers/entities to support the sport and also they are afraid of liability issues.
How many play in the USA today?
Hard to say but I would think there are 75-100 active/inactive players.
In Europe UW hockey is big some places while UWR in others. How is it in the US?
UW Hockey is bigger in the US. There are about +/-25 clubs in the country and tournaments all year round.
For UW Rugby we have 3 organized clubs and 2 developing. I’ve heard of groups practicing in Montana and from your email another one in Chicago.
In the case of Canada the situation is similar. UW Hockey is pretty big, but they have now 2 new clubs that are growing really fast.
The good thing is that in both countries we have players that come from countries where UW Rugby is big and have experience in club, league, national and international levels, especially from Colombia and Germany, and that are pushing to develop the sport to the next level.
Do you think USA will be ready next time? How about cup play?
I certainly think that we will be ready for the next Worlds. We have started a common effort with the teams from Canada to make UW Rugby grow locally, and hopefully for next year we will have 1 team from each country (Canada and US) participating in an international tournament (probably in Colombia). From then the next step will be the Champions Cup and the Worlds.
At this point I’m not sure about this year’s Champions Cup if thats what you refer about. Right now I think it will be too soon, but we are thinking about it.
Any sponsorship?
None!
What is the balance of foreign immigrant players to natives?
Hard to say, but I think right now with only active players it is 35% immigrants and 65% local. That varies per club and also that will change if I get to contact Katie and get information from Chicago.
Davrell, for more exact information from canadian teams you can contact the following people (I’ll copy them on this email)
Tom Elliot
Club Liberation (Brandford, ON)
elliottp@mcmaster.ca
Cesar Florez
CAMO UW Rugby (Montreal)
cesaugflorez@hotmail.comSome think UWR has an attraction that is different from water polo. You need to be a good swimmer to get into water polo but UWR is somehow different; people of different levels/men and women can compete together. Correct? If so, how does that affect recruitment?
The 23 – 0 result of Sweden versus Spain raises an issue that the underwater rugby rules committees at the national and international level may wish to consider in the future. In the women’s group play scoring large numbers of goals against the weakest team has now and can in the future determine advancement rather than some clear victory or defeat among those at the top of the draw.
In this case Sweden and Denmark tied while both lost to Norway. This meant that Sweden and Denmark could only distinguish themselves a total goal differential. In practice this meant pumping goals in the basket of the hapless Spanish team—a contest to see who could dish out a worse drubbing to Spain. Good for the sport? Not really.
Although there are different ways to consider the fairness of this, one thing is certain, Spain was playing for pride alone. Though the Spaniards never quit fighting but clearly their ability to resist was degraded by fatigue while Sweden was uniformly motivated. And in a team sport that relies on pairs who relieve each other from duty on the bottom (apnea) the loss of motivation can send the team into a negative spiral as already tired players must cover for the mistakes of others.