Students of the Game
When the Aztec and Maya played it 500 to 1,000 years ago, the losers sometimes lost their headsliterally. Today scholars are visiting remote Mexican villages to study the oldest sport in the Americas, ulama, now on the verge of extinction
- By John Fox
- Photographs by Janet Jarman
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2006, Subscribe
“¡Déjamelo!” Jesús “Chuy” Páez shouts. “Leave it for me!” The nine-pound black rubber ball arcs high in the late-afternoon Mexican sky. Páez’s teammates scatter, fanning out diagonally to defend their end zone. With a running leap, Páez throws his deerskin-padded hip into the ball, connecting with a punishing thud and launching the ball fast and low across the hard-packed dirt court’s centerline.
“Your turn, old man!” Páez says as Fito Lizárraga, a youthful 56-year-old, prepares to return the ball. Bracing himself on the ground with one hand, Lizárraga pivots his hip to strike the ball low and sends it skidding back through the dirt. Lizárraga’s teammates close in fast behind him as players from both teams take turns flinging themselves to the ground, and the ball ricochets between hips like an oversize pinball. Then, with a dive worthy of New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter, Páez knocks the ball past Lizárraga and his teammates, sending it crashing into a chain-link fence at the end of the court.
On the sidelines, the 30 or so Los Llanitos hometown spectators erupt in cheers—a point scored in another Sunday afternoon pickup game of America’s oldest sport, ulama (from the Aztec’s word for it, ullamaliztli). Archaeologists say that communities from the jungles of Honduras to the deserts of northern Mexico have been playing versions of it for the past 3,500 years. Against all odds, this ancient game survived the rise and fall of the Olmec, Maya and Aztec civilizations, not to mention the devastation wrought by the Spanish Conquest.
Yet today ulama faces extinction. The players’ relative poverty and geographic isolation, a lack of natural rubber and competition from newer sports such as volleyball and baseball have driven it to the brink. The threat has brought together an odd coalition of academics, athletes and local businessmen trying to preserve it and study it for clues to how the ancient Mesoamericans lived.
Two professors at California State University at Los Angeles—archaeologist James Brady and art historian Manuel Aguilar—together with their students, form the Ulama Project. They seem unlikely sports fans. “For years, we archaeologists were stuck in a major rut,” says Brady.
“We’d go out, dig up an ancient ball court, date it and publish an article about it. But we rarely learned anything interesting or new about the game.” Brady and Sergio Garza, his graduate student at the University of California at Riverside, specialize in ancient Maya caves; even by day they sport flashlights on their belts, as if a dark, unexplored crevice might present itself at any moment. For Brady, ulama represents an opportunity to conduct what’s called ethnoarchaeology: by studying the modern game, he and his colleagues hope to better understand its past. “For so long,” he says, “archaeology had ball courts without people in them. By recording the game as it’s played today, we’re putting the sport, the enjoyment and the competition back into the ball court.”
The hour-and-a-half drive from the beach resort of Mazatlán to Los Llanitos (pop. 151) begins on a jammed coastal highway lined with fast-food joints and high-rise hotels and ends on a bone-jarring dirt road winding through withered cornfields. Just past a church and a corral packed with cattle, Brady, Garza and I pull up to the tin-roofed home of 28-year-old farmer Chuy Páez. Tan, trim and wearing buffed cowboy boots and a large silver belt buckle, Páez steps over a dog sleeping in the shade of the porch and extends a hearty welcome.
Inside his concrete-floor bedroom is Páez’s personal Wall of Fame. In one photograph, he’s captured in midair, arms out and hip thrust forward, just seconds after striking the ball. In another, Páez’s 11-year-old son, Chuyito, poses proudly in his deerskin loincloth, holding a ball that looks to be nearly half his size. As we tour the gallery, Páez reaches up into the rafters and unties a rubber ball from a hanging neckerchief. Then, leading us back outside, he positions me in one corner of the porch and walks ten feet to the opposite corner.
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Comments (58)
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I'm a weightlifter so a 9 pound ball wouldn't be that heavy to me, anyone wanna play?
Posted by Stan Johnson on September 18,2010 | 10:21 AM
I love this article but am unable to access any of the photographs that accompanied it. Is there a way to do this?
Posted by Debra Casado on March 2,2010 | 09:52 AM
There are ruins of an ancient court in La Chole, Guerro - interesting history!
Posted by Gao Go on January 23,2010 | 09:15 PM
This sport is really interesting. I liked how informative this article was. It gave me a great picture of how intense the game is and i think that it is crazy how long ago people played it! It would be really neat to see a game of this played today and it is cool how there are some people oput there who keep it going!
Posted by Mariluz on February 4,2009 | 10:10 PM
I think it is great kids my age are striving so hard to keep a sport that is part of their heritage alive.
Posted by Paco from Sra. Beckers class on February 3,2009 | 08:38 AM
It amazing how the roots for this game extended back to at least the 2nd millennium BC and evidence of which has been found in nearly all Mesoamerican cultures in an area extending from modern-day Mexico to El Salvador, and possibly in modern-day Arizona and New Mexico. I find it interesting how the word ulama comes from the Nahuatl word ullamaliztli a combination of ullama (playing of a game with a ball) and ulli (rubber). The game must have been very difficult as the ball was very heavy and they were not allowed to use their hands!
Posted by Regina from Sra.Becker's class on February 2,2009 | 06:30 PM
I found this article amazing. I don't understand how people can handle hitting a nine pound ball with there body parts (especially there heads). This sport is way to intense for someone like me. I have a lot of respect for the people who could play this ancient game.
Posted by Julio from Sra. Becker's class on February 1,2009 | 09:04 PM
It must be a very popular sport. If the village elders are playing it and they have museums dedicated to it i think that there on to a very historic discovery.
Posted by Ramon from Sra. Beckers class on February 1,2009 | 07:19 PM
This is a very interesting article. Ullamalitzi is unlike any other game because it is a combination of all different sports. I like how a game can go for days and there is no set time limit. I also find it interesting that people still remember this sport by reenacting games.
Posted by Baltasar from Sra. Becker's class on February 1,2009 | 01:47 PM
This article helped me understand the sport of Ullamaliztli. I think Ullamaliztli should be saved because it a important part of America's culture. I think Ullamaliztli should be preserved because no element of history should be forgotten.
Posted by Patricio from Sra. Becker's class on February 1,2009 | 01:02 PM
Very interesting sport. You would think most people would get arthritis from playing this though. Sad that such a great tradition may be lost eventually.
Posted by "Germán" from Sra. Becker's Class on February 1,2009 | 12:46 PM
it's amazing to hear that a sport that was played 3,500 years ago is still being played today although in a different version. i believe that Ullamaliztli must've been a very dangerous sport with such a heavy ball. it must've also been pretty exhilarating and adrenaline pumping for ulama players to know they were bascially playing for their lives. i was surprised to find out that some games could go on for hours or sometimes days with the awarding and subtracting of points. i hope this sport can be saved from extinction.
Posted by "Natalia" from Sra. Becker's class on February 1,2009 | 03:13 AM
It's cool that this game is still being preserved and played. It's nice that people today are getting the chance to see something that really happened so long ago. It's educational, and fun to watch!
Posted by David on January 31,2009 | 06:43 PM
I find it amazing that people still play this ancient sport! I was intrigued by how much description was given by the author and by how exciting the game sounds. After reading this article I understood how many of the games we play today were formed. I did not think that there could have a game that sounded as fun as rugby but after reading this article I found out how legendary the game of ulama would be.
Posted by "Oscar" from Sra. Becker's class on January 31,2009 | 04:05 PM
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