Philippines for the |
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A B O N G C o c k f i g h t i n g |
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Behind this gruesome sport, however, is an all consuming male-oriented pastime fueled by a passion that often transcends into a form of common man's grail or a quasi-religion. It has been called a "national sport" – a designation that easily draws divisive argument. But, it is the "national pastime" – a sphere of activity where class lines blur, a game enjoyed with equal fervor by both the rich and the masa. Parity, however, is more imagined than real. The moneyed aficionados are usually involved with expensive brood cocks of pedigree lineage bred for "fastest kill" and trained for big money derby events, with a variety of breed-names as descriptive as: lemon, radio, white kelso, Madigan Grey, McClean, roundhead, claret, or sweater. In contrast, much of the rural-provincial folk are involved with training and conditioning their low-pedigreed mestizo cocks, usually for hack fights. For the rich, it is the "sport of kings" – of nerve and verve, macho and ego, and the tens-of-thousands of pesos or even millions won or lost with a shrug. And for the masa, a sport of dreamers, where they can pit their lowly-rural-bred against a burgis cock, betting their meager wages and rainy-day savings, high on a belief that on any day, with the luck of a parry-dodge-and-slash. . . and a prayer. . . his game cock can win.
In seeming parity, there are months of conditioning and training, diet regimens, tonics, shots and supplements – endless variations that always buy the rich an edge. It is an intense regimen of training dedicated to instill in the cock the skills for survival and the art of killing, for which they are rewarded with excessive doses of TLC – preened, stroked, massaged and shampooed. It is not an exaggeration to say that some men give more loving attention to his fighting cocks than to the wife and kids. This pastime has spawned
an industry that caters to fanatical devotees – importation of
hi-breed eggs, pedigreed breeding farms, training schools specializing
in fast kills, supplements and pharmaceuticals, specialized cock-doctors,
international derbies, and even cable television programs.
The
Derby The derby, once referred to as the "pintakasi," is the cockfighting event for the serious aficionado and deep-pockets. The cocks are paired according to weight. Each team enters with a team-name and a fixed "pot money" amount (ex: P10,000 for each of 10 teams makes a 100,000 total pot) that becomes the prize-money for the team with the most wins. A 3-cock derby may last deep into the night or past the midnight hours; a 7- or 9-cock derby may last for days.
Carambola is the occasional sabong sideshow - an entertainingly wild and zany labo-labo event that pits six to sixteen or more cocks at one time, simultaneously slashing-and-parrying until one cock remains standing. The winning owner claims all the dead cocks plus the prize pot money.
Game
Day In the cockpit (ruweda), the owners and cocks are assigned sides: MERON – for the one with the larger pot-money bet or favored game cock, the sign lit-up denoting llamado or favored status, and WALA, under an unlit sign, signifying dejado or long shot. The cocks are allowed a short time and distance to walk, for the betting spectators to observe stance, strut and gameness. Then the "casador" announces the opposing bets and when needed solicits amounts from the ringside bettors to equalize the bets. Then he shouts: Larga na! And spectator betting starts. The "kristos," betting managers sacrilegiously named for their Christ-like crucified stance, arms stretched out beckoning the spectators, taking bets, their hands and fingers wild in the sign language of bets and odds. The noise builds up to a din of deafening decibels. As the betting goes on, each cock is also allowed to peck on the other's head (kulitan), each to anger the other and maintain a level of aggressiveness.
Rarely, both the cocks die, and a "tabla" (tie) is called. Another uncommon occurrence is when both are disabled by wounds, neither one able to inflict a lethal slash, and after nine minutes, a tie or tabla is called. To
the owners, the loss is pecuniary, unemotional – there is no bonding
between cock and owner. These are, after all, mere sacrificial animals,
whose main purpose is to win, and to win as many before the inevitable
death. An occasional cock may be saved from the eventual death, retired
as "ganador" to sire a bloodline of genetic killers. To the
rich, death is accepted with a shrug, and "on to the next fight."
To
the masa, it is familiar exercise of pondering the lost wages,
the "so close" and "what ifs," at the same time
hoping his other gamecock will turn his fortunes around. The vanquished
cock is claimed by the winning side, "sambot,"
destined to a pot of celebratory chicken concoction, usually tinola,
to serve as side dish to accompany the alcohol fueled recalling of the
day's cockpit adventure and the re-telling of favorite sabong stories. |
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Photos and oil painting
by G.Stuart |
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© |
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