13 January 2011

"Ear-pull event"

Vanessa Tahbone grimaces while competing against Nicole Colbert during the ear pull event at the 49th Annual World Eskimo-Indian Olympic Games July 23 at the Carlson Center in Fairbanks, Alaska. (AP Photo/Fairbanks Daily News-Miner/Eric Engman)
From the "Big Shots" compilation of the 100 Best Sports Photographs of 2010 (Part 3) at Boston.com's The Big Picture. 
The ear pull is a traditional Inuit game which tests the competitors' ability to endure pain.  In the ear pull, two competitors sit facing each other, their legs straddled and interlocked. A two-foot-long loop of string, similar to a thick, waxed dental floss, is looped behind their ears, connecting right ear to right ear, or left to left.  The competitors then pull upon the opposing ear using their own ear until the cord comes free or one player quits from the pain.  The game has been omitted from some Arctic sports competitions due to safety concerns and the squeamishness of spectators; the event can cause bleeding and competitors sometimes require stitches.
Here's a video of the women's competition in 2007:

2 comments:

  1. they should use rubber bands

    ReplyDelete
  2. I wonder how many people get their ears taken off?

    ReplyDelete

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