Khong Kangjei ( Hockey on Foot )
This version of hockey is distinctively Manipuri in character, and as
wrestling too forms part of the game, the name sometimes changes to
Mukna - Kangjei or wrestling hockey. The origin of the game is traced
back to the prehistoric Hayichak era, before Christ. According to the
tale attached to the game's genesis, a young boy of the royal household
was spotted playing with a curved club and a round object. He was
immediately named ' Kangba ' and eventually, when he ascended the throne
of Manipur, he became a staunch supporter of the game, not unlike
hockey, which the local people termed ' Kangjei Shanaba '. Another
version has it that King Kangba of a prehistoric era, began the games -
Kangjei ( hockey on foot ) and Sagol Kangjei ( polo ).
How the game is played
Manipuri hockey is as popular as the Manipuri game of polo. It is a
seven - a - side game and each player plays with a cane stick, about
four to four and a half feet in length, shaped very much like the
present day hockey stick. The game starts when the ball is lobbed into
play in centre field ( hantre huba ). A player is permitted to
carry the ball made of bamboo root, and kick it, but a goal can only be
scored when the ball is struck by the stick over the goal line. The
ball, white in colour, with a diameter of about 3" to 3 1/2 "
is called kangdrum. There are no goal posts. The game can turn
into a trial of strength between opposing players. A player holding the
ball and on his way to scoring a goal can be tackled by a player of the
opposing side and made to submit to a trial of strength, locally known
as Mukna, which is Manipuri wrestling. The game ends when one side or
the other scores the agreed number of goals, and the duration is
generally 1 1/2 hours. The strokes are usually restricted to the
nearside. This lends protection to the legs from an opponent's swinging
stick. No player is permitted to tackle another player, obstruct him or
hold him, if either is without a stick.
Each player in the team of seven assume the following positions :
a) Pun - Ngakpa ( Full back )
b) Pun - Ngakchun ( Half back)
c) Punlluk ( Left wing )
d) Langjei ( Centre )
e) Pulluk ( Right wing)
f) Pun - Jen ( In )
g) Pun - Jenchun ( In)
The opposing team takes up positions in the reverse order. |