Bo-taoshi

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Two squads scrambling for possession of the pole.

Bo-taoshi (Japanese: 棒倒し Hepburn: bōtaoshi, "pole bring-down"), is a capture-the-flag-like game, played on sports days at schools in Japan. The game played by cadets at the National Defense Academy of Japan traditionally on its anniversary is famous for its size, where in two teams of 150 individuals each vie for control of a single large pole.[1] Each team is split into two groups of 75 attackers and 75 defenders. The defenders begin in a defensive orientation respective to their own pole, while the attackers assume position some measure away from the other team's pole. A team is victorious if it is able to lower the pole of the opposing team (which begins perpendicular to the ground) to a thirty-degree angle (respective to the ground), before the other team reaches this goal. Until a rule-change in 1973, the angle of victory was only forty-five degrees.[2]

Positions

Described here are positions seen in NDA of Japan, but usually the position Ninja is absent when played in other schools. On the defensive half, positions include: pole support, barrier, interference, scrum disabler and the ninja. Offensive positions include: springboard/scrum, pole attackers and general support attacks.

Defense

Offense

References

  1. Furbush, James (2011-07-14). "Bo-Taoshi: Super Happy Pole Pulldown Sport Time". :. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  2. "New Sport: Bo-Taoshi". Deuce of Davenport. 2011-05-18. Retrieved 2011-07-18.

Further reading

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