ChatterBank11 mins ago
The Haka
35 Answers
I think it's high time the performing by New Zealand of the haka - and the versions by other teams like Samoa and Fiji - was kicked into touch. Why should the All Blacks be allowed to pump themselves up both physically and emotionally, thus gaining a significant advantage, while the opposing team have to stand behind the half-way line and meekly 'accept the challenge'?
It amounts to a sort of condoned gamesmanship, and is a blatant intimidation of the opposition, particularly the versions which involve the performers advancing with throat-slitting gestures. And before anyone mentions 'culture' and 'identity', I fully understand that aspect of it, but if the All Blacks want to assert and celebrate their heritage they are quite at liberty to hype themselves up by performing the haka (or anything else they choose) in the privacy of their dressing-room.
It amounts to a sort of condoned gamesmanship, and is a blatant intimidation of the opposition, particularly the versions which involve the performers advancing with throat-slitting gestures. And before anyone mentions 'culture' and 'identity', I fully understand that aspect of it, but if the All Blacks want to assert and celebrate their heritage they are quite at liberty to hype themselves up by performing the haka (or anything else they choose) in the privacy of their dressing-room.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.All Blacks have been performing the haka for more than 100 years; it's a genuine piece of tradition in rugby. Other teams are at liberty to pump themselves up as they please - Morris dancing is the usual suggestion, but wanting to ban the haka just because England hasn't got a proper equivalent of their own is a bit feeble.
Look at this fantastic Tonga v Samoa one, performed right in each others' faces - they they embrace and prepare to play. Beats me why anyone would want to do away with a spectacle like that.
Look at this fantastic Tonga v Samoa one, performed right in each others' faces - they they embrace and prepare to play. Beats me why anyone would want to do away with a spectacle like that.