WROCLAW, Poland – “Good ball movement!” shouts U.S. assistant Amy Bokker at the IWGA World Games in Poland, where lacrosse is participating for the first time.
But she wasn’t talking about lacrosse.
After Team USA defeated Great Britain 14-6 to go 2-0 and earn the top seed entering the semifinals on Saturday, the Americans went to Orbita swimming pool to support men’s and women’s canoe polo teams, starting with an afternoon match featuring the New Zealand men’s team with whom they had built a camaraderie since arriving in Wroclaw on Tuesday.
Canoe polo, also known as kayak polo, is described as a combination of canoeing and ball handling similar to water polo, starting the game with a race to the center of the pool to secure the ball, just like dodge ball, and scoring goals by shooting into a net like basketball.
While it was a new sport to lacrosse coaches and players in the stands, including Great Britain coach Nicky Budd, Bokker noticed similarities between canoe polo and lacrosse – the ball movement to allow open looks to net, the fast breaks after a turnover, picks to create open lanes, strategies when playing man-up or man-down, and the physicality of the defense underneath the net to battle for good positioning and protect the goal.
Just like lacrosse, canoe polo is one of 30-plus sports aiming to achieve Olympic recognition.
“It just goes to show when you find your niche and you’re passionate about it, you can be an Olympian some day,” said Bokker.
U.S. defender Megan Douty, who has canoed for fun and whose mom played intramural water polo in college, added, “They are putting on a show and I think it will be a very interesting sport to go into the Olympics. It’s very exciting. We’re doing the same thing with lacrosse. [This event] is great for all the sports here.”
Team USA has also built friendships with the Belgium floorball team and Puerto Rican powerlifters. The Americans have watched water skiing and wakeboarding as well, and so have the British.
“It’s absolutely amazing,” said Great Britain midfielder Emily Gray. “Everyone’s been so friendly and welcoming and really interested to watch other sports, which is great.”
That’s what The World Games is all about.
“It’s a stepping stone to the Olympics,” said U.S. coach Ricky Fried. “Everybody that’s here is hoping to get to the Olympics. … So it’s international competition from multiple sports and a vast number of countries. The exciting thing for our players is not only the number of countries that are here, but the different types of sports and the camaraderie. They get the same sense of an Olympic venue.”