The one sport where you don’t want to end up being the GOAT.
I guess that’s slightly better than using a live goat for it..?
"The enemy has taken our goat carcass" "We have taken the enemy's goat carcass"
The game was in Central Asia and somehow gained a reputation in Ohio of all places
I’m from Ohio and I actually played a heavily modified version of this using a sack of potatoes instead of a goat and our “horses” were broomsticks similar to how people play Quidditch in real life. The cultural diversity organization at my college held a tournament for it and it was so much fun
In the rural western parts of germany we got "Gänsereiten", Gänse = Geese reiten = riding. In geeseriding,You strap a dead goose to a tree and the rider who manages to tear its head off while riding by it won. I think thats the most inhumane thing my ances....ah,nevermind.
No biting please. Me or the horse? Yes.
My doctor: do not worry, there is no such place as Ohiostan. Ohiostan:
So it's like Rocket League but the ball's a dead goat? Also on horses I guess
'I'm sorry, but your headless goat does not meet regulations, you'll have to get another one.'
In Uzbekistan some provinces like "Kashkadarya" and "Surkhandarya" humans plays (Ko'pkari) Buzkashi every month with 200-300 people.(I'M from Uzbekistan😊) Every year more than 1000 people comes to Kashkadarya and plays Buzkashi and I never heard about anyone been injured during the game👍
What my grandma tells me kids used to play💀
Lol the preffered head gear being soviet tanker helmets tell you everything you need to know
Back then they used to be swinging swords at each other.
Is that kinda like the games in "How to train your Dragon" with the sheep? Edit: guess it was so popular in the movie, they brought it to Afghanistan..
They played this in one of the rambo movies.
Rambo played this game in Rambo 3
Ohio is just getting wierder and wierder
In the 1880s in outback Australia there were scores of "Afghans" with camels running supplies from the ports inland. Australians pride themselves on their horsemanship, always have, and spoke respectfully of the horsemanship of the 'Ghans.
@lca2206