Saturday, November 1, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Three sports you didn’t know existed 

|
|

Many of us grew up playing classic Canadian sports such as hockey, soccer, basketball and baseball but what constitutes classic sports in other parts of the world can be  unimaginable to the Canadian mind. 

Here are three sports that Canadians probably have never heard of:

Bossaball

Bossaball was created nearly two decades ago in Spain. The game is played on an inflatable surface with a volleyball-style net in the middle and a ball. The net is three metres high and the game is played in teams of five. Each side also has a trampoline that allows players to gain extra height while trying to hit the ball over the net. 

Similar to volleyball, the objective of the game is to hit the ball over the net with a maximum of five hits. However, there are restrictions on how many times you can hit the ball with a specific part of your body in one possession. For each possession, a team is only able to make contact with the ball once with their hands, twice with their feet and twice with their head. The game is normally played in the best of three sets with each set going up to 25 points. 

The game has grown across Europe in countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands and Spain, with the Netherlands launching the first-ever bossaball major league in 2015. Over the past seven to eight years the league has grown exponentially as every two years World Bossaball Championships are hosted in either Netherlands or Belgium with 8-10 countries competing in the tournament. 

Bossaball has yet to make its way to North America but with other countries in Asia and South America starting to play the game as well, we may see it come overseas in the next couple of years.

Competitive Sleeping

Yes, it is exactly what it sounds like. Competitive sleeping was first played in 1998 in the State of California. People gathered together and created a competitive sleep league. Now, many countries have their own league for the sport and the World Sleep Championship (WSC) is a yearly tournament where the best sleeper in the World is crowned.

So you may be wondering how they crown the best sleeper. All competitors are given an Oura ring. An Oura ring is a bracelet that tracks your body day and night. For this specific sport, it is used to track your zen sleep which is the main focus of scoring in the competition along with time and stillness. The longer your body is in a zen sleep the better chance you have at winning. 

In the case of the WSC, the competition is over two weeks long as Sleep Racers will battle it out in a series of round-robin and elimination matchups. After 60-plus hours of sleeping, a winner is crowned with a WSC belt and a cash prize. 

The 2023 event has yet to be announced but with the success of the 2022 competition had to earn sponsorships from Oura, Fitbit, Jamieson and other companies that make sleeping pills despite them being deemed “performance enhancing” and banned from all league play. 

Zorbing

Remember the movie G-Force with the spy hamsters who roll around in their little hamster balls? Well, now you get to be the hamster and roll down a massive hill, or even a mountain. 

Zorbing originated in Rotorua, New Zealand in 1994. The sport or recreational activity consists of people inside a massive plastic ball rolling down a hill. 

People can partake in it recreationally in other countries such as England, Ireland and here in Canada. The sport is comparable to ziplining or rock climbing as it can be done leisurely or at a higher level depending on how adventurous you are. 

In New Zealand, they host tournaments for the sport where people can be seen going down steep hills in a timed event. Whoever has the fastest time without exiting the course/track is deemed the winner of the zorbing tournament. 

Highlight reels for bossaballcompetitive sleeping and zorbing can be found at their respective links. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Indonesia upholds visa ban on Israeli athletes  

In October, Indonesia announced that it would refuse visas to Israeli gymnasts set to compete in the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Jakarta. The decision revived historical tensions between sport and geopolitics, prompting legal maneuvers by Israel through the Court of Arbitrations for Sport (CAS).  

Iranian delegation faces charges in South Korea  

During the May Asian Athletics Championships in Gumi, South Korea, two Iranian athletes and a national team coach were arrested for the alleged sexual assault of a 20-year-old South Korean woman. The case attracted wide attention across Asia, sparking debate about the obligations of national federations when their representatives face criminal accusations abroad.

Week 1 NHL power rankings  

An arduous offseason is now in the books, and teams across the league are finally settled into what looks to be a difficult stretch of hockey. All the moving pieces have been put into place, with players and coaches demonstrating the ease with which they fit into new teams or the difficulties that come with putting on a new jersey. The 2025-26 NHL season is upon us, which means it's time to overreact to and power rank teams one week into a fresh season. 

Who’s most likely to break out in this NBA season?  

It’s that time of the year, just before the NBA season begins, when there’s never a better time to speculate player progression. No matter the case, there is always a select group of players that exceeds preseason expectations and explodes onto the scene. For NBA fans and media, there’s no better feeling than bragging about a niche player going for a career season that you predicted months in advance. A handful of players have landed in new spots, signed small deals to prove their worth or posted offseason workout videos, making viewers curious about what kind of season a player can have. Let’s look at some players who could be destined for a leap ahead of the 2025-26 NBA season. 

The Blue Jays are headed to the World Series  

The Toronto Blue Jays defeat the Seattle Mariners in game seven of the ALCS, punching their ticket to the 2025 World Series. 

Previewing the Brock men’s volleyball season   

Fresh from a disappointing 2024-25 campaign, the Brock men’s volleyball team enters the new season with something to prove. Last season wasn’t one to remember, as the Badgers finished the year with a 7-13 record, failing to qualify for the OUA playoffs. Whether it was a lack of cohesion within the team or the minimal amount of depth on the roster, Brock just couldn’t figure it out. 

Canada women’s rugby secures silver at World Cup 

In one of the most anticipated matchups in women's rugby history, England and Canada faced off in the Women's Rugby World Cup final on Saturday, Sept 27.

A look into the newly built Toronto Raptors  

Since winning the franchise's first championship in 2019, the Toronto Raptors have become the embodiment of mediocrity. They’ve managed to finish just outside of or in the play-in for what seems like the last half-decade. Raptors fans have become impatient following another disappointing year amidst the once promising Scottie Barnes era. For most of that time the team looked directionless, often making questionable trades and signings that left fans and media wondering what is really going on.