Son Of Coco
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I can only comment on my experience in Korea, but when you're studying 14 hours a day, it doesn't leave much time for sport.You're saying Asians hate sport? Jesus
I foolishly assumed I could maybe get back into hockey over there given they have teams in the Olympics...never saw it being played anywhere once in the two years I was there. I saw baseball a couple of times, some social tennis and football etc, but for a kid it's a different world once they're in middle school. They study.
I don't think the system moves in its entirety elsewhere in all cases though. I teach English to some elementary school kids on a Saturday afternoon. It's essentially glorified child-mlnding so their parents can go shopping whilst abdicating their parental responsibilities (basically what the private tutoring system is in Korea), but the premise is the same as in Korea - more study = good. The result is essentially the same too - a lot of wasted time. Quite a few of these kids play organised sport, so they're not adopting the whole approach from home.
In short, it's not that Koreans hate sport, but they aren't really given the time to devote to it, generally speaking, during their formative years. This might be changing slowly, but I doubt it's done a full 180 yet. Extending this to all Asians is obviously grouping a lot of cultural backgrounds into the same sort of behaviours, which is very unlikely to be accurate.
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