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basketball
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snielz



Joined: 05 Apr 2005
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:39 pm    Post subject: basketball Reply with quote

I will be coming to Argentina in a month and living in Buenos Aires. I started thinking about this move last summer and it caught my attention when Argentina won the gold medal in basketball at the olympics. I was wondering if this exposure has caused any more people to play basketball? I know that soccer is a way of life for the people, but I am hoping to be able to find a place to play some basketball when I get there. I haven't heard anyone talk about this topic so I figured I would ask if anyone has noticed anything in day to day life...
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carlos-england



Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires - Cabalitto

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 2:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The world title win and the Olympic bornze medal
was a BIG DEAL in Argentina, but though you see a lot
of Argentine league basketball on TV the game is not
something Argentinians are physically equipped for.
I woudn't say it was a major sport, Argentinians are like
the English in which they support their sports men and
women very passionetly.

If you are American and about 6ft 2ins, you are going to
be like Magic Johnson amongst all the titchy Argentines.

Argentines are obsessed with football, rugby is pretty
big and they have a well organized league and boxing and
amongst the women field hockey and netball are popular.

There will be an organized amateur league and a good way
to make friends and learn the language but basketball is
not what stokes the passions of the nation I'm afraid.
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snielz



Joined: 05 Apr 2005
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 5:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Carlos,
Good to know. Thanks for the reply. I have a question though- what does "titchy" mean?? I am 6'4" but I figured Argentines were relatively tall due to all of the European ancestry. Is this not the case? Do you think I could parlay this into minor celebrity status- just below Manu Ginobilli, of course... I definitely want to learn to appreciate the world sport of soccer more (it is not so big in the US) but I was hoping there would be leagues to play basketball in too. It seems this would be a good way to make friends.

Carlos, I know that you are 6'2"...start working on your jump shot if you are up for a game...
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matttheboy



Joined: 01 Jul 2003
Posts: 854
Location: Valparaiso, Chile

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 8:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Basketball is actually pretty popular here (well, in comparison to in england where no one gives a toss about the most tedious game on the planet-after baseball and US football of course Very Happy-oh, look, he's scored, oh, look the other team has scored, and again, and again...yawn yawn yawn) Sorry, i'm a football (sorry, soccerball Very Happy ) and rugby man myself...

You mentioned the name Ginobilli-he's the reason the sport is picking up here, he made the AllStars which was widely reported. There's always something in the paper about basketball as well, there are local leagues and the Argentine league is shown on the telly. It's not a game you see people playing in the streets or parks, like football but i'm certain you'll be able to find a club in every barrio.

and Argentines really aren't that small Carlos, especially in Buenos Aires. About the same height as your average Spaniard, a little smaller than northern europeans but certainly not tiny (titchy). I don't find i tower above people at all and i'm 6'1. In ecuador i felt like Peter Crouch must feel like at a children's birthday party. The girls here are also pretty tall, no shorter than english girls. There are a lot of Bolivian immigrants in buenos aires and they are a fair bit smaller than Argentines. Another reason they're looked down upon...
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carlos-england



Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires - Cabalitto

PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2005 10:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'll tell you both a story about my first time in Capital
Federal, went to an hotel and the chap behind the
counter looked up at me and he said 'you are a giant! (yup a giant)
we don't have a bed that will fit you' and they got me a
double bed for no extra charge which was rather nice of
them.

One day my and my girl and her friends were in a taxi and
I got in the front, but the front seat wasn't designed for anyone
over 5ft 7ins so my forehead was pressed against the window
and my knees where all over his gearstick and lower dashboard.
The driver kept quipping 'were going to have to put you on the roof'
and was rather jovial until my knee (accidentaly) turned his indicators
on where he then lost the plot and then I did saying something along
the lines of swearing and bad grammar.

Well I'm broad and muscular as well so that may be it, but
all I know is that people would comment on my height and
my size all the time. Asking if British people were as big as I was
again, I'm 6ft 2in, nothing outrageously huge. But sneilz you'll
be back here saying 'hey carlos you were right!' because 6ft 4ins
you are bound to get comments if I did.

Basketball is popular in itself, but when you compare it
to football, basketball is a minor sport, which is what I
was trying to imply. Everything makes way for football
even when football is out of season they will show last seasons
league games on the tv. But if you are a basketball junkie
you'll be fine finding watching live league games and playing.
You'll be fine!


I'm back there in August and I like a good game of basketball...
haven't player since school where I was pretty good (16 years
ago lol) but hey... I'll have a go...
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snielz



Joined: 05 Apr 2005
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires

PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2005 6:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Good to know that I can still play some good basketball when I get there. Matt, it's hard to believe you really think basketball is boring. It is a fast-paced match between some of the most athletic people on the planet. In what other sport do have a bunch of guys who can sprint 90 feet over, constantly soaring in to the air, with the dexterity to control a basketball and good footwork? In addition, these are some of the tallest people in the world. I think if you understood it better you would probably be in to it, or if it was more the sport of choice in England you would like it better. I am the same way with football. I don't understand it very well and so sometimes it seems to simply be a bunch of people running back and forth for 90 minutes with only one or two goals providing the excitement but I also know there is more to it than that and I am looking forward to learning about it from people that care about it so much. (I appreciate it a little from being in Italy and the Czech Republic)...Maybe you are just saying you don't like it so you don't have to play the winner of Carlos and I (haha).
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carlos-england



Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires - Cabalitto

PostPosted: Wed Apr 20, 2005 6:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like basketball, it is not popular here (in the UK)
but in Spain and Greece it is pretty big. It is the only
american sport that has any proper acceptance outside
its borders from what I can see whereas football is the
WORLD game...

Listen, I find some football games boring like the
Italian scudetto is like watching paint dry for me but
the Italians think our football is all rush in and kick
it up the field with the minimum of skill
(and if you watch west brom thats exactly
what it is Razz

But I will have you a game of basketball as long as you
can come along for a game of 5 a side that we have every sunday...
thats a deal I think!!!
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snielz



Joined: 05 Apr 2005
Posts: 165
Location: Buenos Aires

PostPosted: Wed Apr 20, 2005 7:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm game when you get there in August. My only question is what is 5 a side?? Is it a smaller version of football? By the way, I appreciate american football and baseball as I grew up watching them and playing them, but as I have gotten older, I can definitely see why others aren't in to them. As spectator sports they are pretty boring...
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Weona



Joined: 11 Apr 2004
Posts: 166
Location: Chile

PostPosted: Thu Apr 21, 2005 11:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

matttheboy wrote:
Basketball is actually pretty popular here (well, in comparison to in england where no one gives a toss about the most tedious game on the planet-after baseball and US football of course