Classroom lesson 路 Sport馃嚨馃嚟 Philippines

Sepak takraw - kick volleyball

A sport that looks like volleyball, but you can't use your hands

What is it?

Sepak takraw is a sport played all across South-East Asia, including the Philippines. It looks a lot like volleyball - two teams either side of a net, hitting a ball over the net to each other - except the players are not allowed to use their hands. They have to use their feet, knees, chests or heads instead. It looks like acrobatic football and volleyball mixed together.

Tell me more

The ball is small and woven from rattan or plastic strips, with holes in it - about the size of a grapefruit. It feels firm but light. Players keep it in the air using any part of their body except their hands and arms. Skilled players can keep a rally going for ages, the ball flying back and forth in dizzying patterns.

The most amazing move in sepak takraw is the bicycle kick over the net. A player runs to the net, jumps high in the air, flips upside down, and smashes the ball over with the sole of their foot - all in a split second. It looks like something from a kung-fu film. Crowds gasp.

Each team has three players: one to receive the serve, one to set up the next shot, and one to attack. A bit like volleyball: pass, set, smash. But all done with feet. Matches are fast, full of jumps, and rallies can be over in two seconds or last for many shots.

Sepak takraw is played at school, in parks and in big international tournaments at the Southeast Asian Games. Filipino schools sometimes hold sepak takraw lessons in physical education, where students start by just learning to keep a soft ball up in the air with their feet for as long as possible.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How would your favourite sport change if you suddenly couldn't use your hands?
  2. 02What body parts do you usually use to play different sports? Make a list.
  3. 03Sepak takraw players do amazing acrobatic kicks. How do you think they train to do that safely?
Try this

Classroom activity

Try a 'no-hands rally' on the playground. In pairs, try to keep a soft ball (a beach ball, a balloon or rolled-up socks) in the air using only feet, knees and head - no hands. Count how many times you can pass it before it touches the ground. Try in groups of three. What is the highest score?

More about Philippines

Other things that make Philippines special

Want your class to meet Philippines?

Pick Philippineswhen you register and we鈥檒l show you the time-zone feasibility.

Register your classroom