SOKA, Japan — A team of Ukrainian sumo wrestlers
whose training was interrupted by
Russia's invasion are aiming for global glory
after a month-long camp in the home of the ancient Japanese sport.
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The six-strong Ukrainian amateur sumo team will fly to
the US state of Alabama on Tuesday to compete in the World Games, an
Olympic-like event featuring sports that are not contested at the Summer Games.
The team had just finished a training session at their
base in the city of
Kharkiv when Russia invaded in late February and the city
came under bombardment.
An acquaintance organized for them to hold a training
camp in Japan and the team are now raring to go when the Games begin in
Birmingham on July 7.
"Rockets are falling all over
Ukraine and things
are being destroyed everywhere," said Ivanna Berezovska, a silver medalist
in the open-weight category at the 2017 World Games and one of two women in the
team.
"Competing at the World Games, first of all I
want to give myself something to be happy about and then I want to give people
back home something to cheer."
Ukrainian sumo wrestlers holding a Ukrainian flag with written messages of support pose for photographs with school students before a training session at a gymnastics center in Soka, Saitama prefecture on July 3, 2022.
Professional sumo is confined to Japan but the ancient
sport is popular at the amateur level around the world.
There are around 3,000 people involved in sumo in
Ukraine and the country has been one of the most successful nations since the
sport made its official World Games debut in 2005.
The Ukrainian team arrived in Japan in late May and
held training camps in southern Oita and Ehime prefectures.
Their first base, in the city of Usa, is known as the
birthplace of the great yokozuna Futabayama, who set a record of 69 straight
wins in the 1930s that still stands to this day.
Ukraine coach Liubov Korobko said the team were now in
good shape for the "very important" World Games, despite the
disruption caused by the war.
"It's a big deal when Ukrainian athletes win
medals there," she said.
"We have a lot of sumo wrestlers competing and I
think we can make a contribution and help raise the image of our country."
The World Games have been held every four years since
1981 and feature a range of non-Olympic sports from orienteering to billiards.
This year's event was postponed by a year because of
the coronavirus pandemic.
Ukrainian sumo wrestler Ivanna Berezovska (left) attends a training session at a gymnastics center in Soka, Saitama prefecture on July 3, 2022.
Athletes from
Russia and
Belarus have been banned from
competing because of the invasion of Ukraine, but Korobko said she believes
"sport and politics should not mix".
"I think there are a lot of athletes in Russia
who are against this war," she said.
"I think it would have been a good place for
their athletes to tell us their opinions as friends and express their desire
for peace."
Team trainer Kostiantyn Korobko says his father
founded the Ukrainian sumo federation in 1999 and helped spark interest in the
sport, which he says is now "very popular".
Ukraine-born wrestler Serhii Sokolovskiy, 25, now
competes in Japan's professional ranks under the name Shishi after making his
debut in 2020.
Korobko believes sumo has a bright future in Ukraine.
"Of course at first it was difficult for everyone
to understand, but for small kids the rules are actually pretty simple,"
he said.
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