Somalis break icy new ground with bandy national team

Immigrants introduced to local sport in attempt to integrate them into Swedish community

Players take part in the Somali national bandy team's training session in the city of Borlaenge, Sweden. Somali refugees in Sweden form the Somali national bandy team for the 2014 World Championships in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, Russia. Jonathan Nackstrand / AFP
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Borlaenge, Sweden // Somalis on ice skates seems as implausible as Jamaicans in a bobsled, but a Sweden-based team are preparing to represent the troubled African nation at next month’s world championships in the sport of bandy.

Formed just months ago and made up of immigrants who have settled in Borlaenge, a town some 200 kilometers north of Stockholm, the Somalia bandy team is an unlikely tale that has echoes of the 1988 Jamaican winter Olympians immortalised in the film Cool Runnings.

Recruited from a local football club, the team have been taught in a short time to skate and play a game similar to ice hockey but with differences.

Bandy is played on a football-sized field, teams are made up of 11 players, a ball is used instead of a puck, the goals are larger and the sticks shaped differently.

The learning curve has been steep and long.

Despite being thrashed by a local side in their first competitive game, earlier this month, the Somalis have cheekily declared themselves African champions for 2013 – based primarily on the fact that no other country on the continent has a team.

“They want to inspire their brothers and sisters that live here in Borlaenge, and all other Somalis and immigrants who live elsewhere in Sweden,” said the team’s coach, Pelle Fosshaug, who won six Swedish bandy titles and was crowned world champion five times with Sweden during his playing career.

“That is what we want to do, and I believe we’ve already started to do it.”

Scandinavia, Finland, the former Soviet republics and North America are considered the game’s strongest footholds, with Somalia, improbably, set to join Japan, Ukraine and Germany in the B Group at the world championships in Irkutsk, one step below the elite nations.

The idea of a Somalia team came from Patrik Andersson, a local entrepreneur, who saw it as a way to help integrate 3,000 Somalis resident in the town.

He contacted the Somalia government and Olympic committee as he sought a way for the sport to help the new arrivals settle in the Swedish town – and to help the Swedes learn more about Somalia.

“I registered the team with the Federation of International Bandy and got in touch with the government and the Olympic committee in Somalia to get their permission to do this,” Andersson said.

“Somalia has never had a team in a world championships, not in any team sport. Many have come in a short time and it’s not easy for them to get jobs. There is a lot of segregation. They live in two areas in particular and have a hard time getting into the labour market.”

To help bring the Swedes and Somalis together, Andersson approached a local football club with several Somali players and asked them if they would like to play bandy, and the idea of a Somali national team was born.

The team is already a source of great pride to many in the local Somali community, who packed the rickety wooden stands on a freezing night to wave their flags and see their team play its first game against a local side.

Though they were on the wrong end of a 15-0 drubbing, there is a widespread belief that the team can improve.

“These players started playing only five months ago, and some of these guys have been in Sweden for less than a year,” said Said Ali, who travelled to Borlaenge from Stockholm to film and photograph the historic game.

The Somali goalkeeper, Ahmed, voted man of the match, said he was disappointed with the result but that his team had played “OK” for their first outing.

“We want to win at all costs, but we’re looking forward to the world championships,” he said, before revealing that he first put on a pair of ice skates only three months ago.

Andersson is well aware of the strong feelings of patriotism among the Somalis, and he says that not everyone in the town is behind the initiative.

“There’s a lot of their countrymen who say ‘What are you up to? You’re making a show of yourselves!’ It’s not easy for them.”

Borlaenge is something of a bandy stronghold and local fans are warming to the team.

“It’s getting better and better,” Andersson said. “There are those who are against it, I’ll be honest about that, but I feel we have great support.”

sports@thenational.ae