Dubai Telegraph - K-pop cheerleaders: the 'flowers' of South Korean baseball

EUR -
AED 4.261442
AFN 76.991205
ALL 96.676399
AMD 444.099239
ANG 2.07712
AOA 1064.056579
ARS 1628.581775
AUD 1.780277
AWG 2.093011
AZN 1.975061
BAM 1.955356
BBD 2.339769
BDT 141.957791
BGN 1.956499
BHD 0.43747
BIF 3428.662979
BMD 1.160367
BND 1.512531
BOB 8.027179
BRL 6.154123
BSD 1.161616
BTN 103.011628
BWP 16.537891
BYN 3.962601
BYR 22743.187832
BZD 2.33637
CAD 1.62765
CDF 2522.637666
CHF 0.922608
CLF 0.027318
CLP 1071.726028
CNY 8.238081
CNH 8.248849
COP 4354.62425
CRC 582.257857
CUC 1.160367
CUP 30.749718
CVE 110.239988
CZK 24.171774
DJF 206.863065
DKK 7.468051
DOP 74.821734
DZD 151.348967
EGP 54.574832
ERN 17.405501
ETB 179.983862
FJD 2.644434
FKP 0.880613
GBP 0.880167
GEL 3.127337
GGP 0.880613
GHS 12.720114
GIP 0.880613
GMD 84.123172
GNF 10083.538362
GTQ 8.90398
GYD 243.004865
HKD 9.020169
HNL 30.560539
HRK 7.536002
HTG 152.184815
HUF 383.831327
IDR 19423.378628
ILS 3.755231
IMP 0.880613
INR 102.815397
IQD 1521.854709
IRR 48851.439198
ISK 147.204062
JEP 0.880613
JMD 186.574453
JOD 0.822693
JPY 179.610262
KES 150.209432
KGS 101.474178
KHR 4659.902563
KMF 491.995393
KPW 1044.329481
KRW 1695.524916
KWD 0.355919
KYD 0.96808
KZT 608.921843
LAK 25208.28053
LBP 104028.997014
LKR 356.319155
LRD 210.842162
LSL 19.92338
LTL 3.426262
LVL 0.701895
LYD 6.337562
MAD 10.741063
MDL 19.609551
MGA 5193.732083
MKD 61.563026
MMK 2436.569148
MNT 4145.922016
MOP 9.30079
MRU 45.998771
MUR 53.167984
MVR 17.874685
MWK 2014.308258
MXN 21.258214
MYR 4.815152
MZN 74.205747
NAD 19.92338
NGN 1676.079881
NIO 42.753247
NOK 11.707659
NPR 164.815764
NZD 2.046777
OMR 0.44617
PAB 1.161636
PEN 3.917411
PGK 4.911801
PHP 68.404734
PKR 328.374136
PLN 4.223555
PYG 8185.142885
QAR 4.234439
RON 5.084501
RSD 117.17403
RUB 94.337773
RWF 1688.487799
SAR 4.351569
SBD 9.566253
SCR 16.480925
SDG 697.969783
SEK 10.952813
SGD 1.510594
SHP 0.870576
SLE 27.146431
SLL 24332.307904
SOS 662.738209
SRD 44.77797
STD 24017.248459
STN 24.49402
SVC 10.164694
SYP 12829.951313
SZL 19.915052
THB 37.665821
TJS 10.722367
TMT 4.072887
TND 3.415825
TOP 2.793885
TRY 49.119139
TTD 7.877213
TWD 36.157604
TZS 2828.547066
UAH 48.818182
UGX 4147.05908
USD 1.160367
UYU 46.219513
UZS 13985.826776
VES 274.035457
VND 30581.465066
VUV 141.751425
WST 3.264942
XAF 655.796904
XAG 0.02273
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.135949
XCG 2.093625
XDR 0.815601
XOF 655.805379
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.776487
ZAR 19.798872
ZMK 10444.687636
ZMW 26.109076
ZWL 373.637612
  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.84

    -0.25%

  • RBGPF

    0.3500

    76

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    14.4

    -1.04%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    15.66

    -0.26%

  • BCC

    -0.7000

    68.34

    -1.02%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    77.65

    +0.35%

  • RELX

    -0.5100

    40.82

    -1.25%

  • BCE

    -0.0750

    22.755

    -0.33%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    71.07

    +0.62%

  • CMSD

    -0.0430

    23.947

    -0.18%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    12.3

    -0.16%

  • JRI

    -0.0640

    13.586

    -0.47%

  • GSK

    0.5150

    47.695

    +1.08%

  • BTI

    0.6200

    54.75

    +1.13%

  • BP

    0.1250

    36.655

    +0.34%

  • AZN

    0.8000

    89.9

    +0.89%

K-pop cheerleaders: the 'flowers' of South Korean baseball
K-pop cheerleaders: the 'flowers' of South Korean baseball / Photo: Anthony WALLACE - AFP

K-pop cheerleaders: the 'flowers' of South Korean baseball

In baseball-mad South Korea teams of professional cheerleaders pumping up players and fans with elaborate K-pop routines are as integral to the games as beer and fried chicken.

Text size:

Imported by American missionaries more than 100 years ago, baseball is South Korea's most cherished spectator sport, beating out even football.

There are no cheerleaders in Major League Baseball in the United States, but they are central to the spectacle in South Korea as they relentlessly dance, cheer and lead the fan chanting throughout entire games.

Even when stadiums were devoid of supporters during the height of the pandemic, the players requested that the cheerleading teams continue to perform every innings, saying it was too depressing without them.

"We usually performed facing the players not the empty seats so we were really able to watch the game and cheer in earnest," 21-year-old Mok Na-gyeong, a cheerleader with the number-one ranked SSG team, told AFP.

"We receive thank-you messages from players saying they got an extra dose of energy from us," she said, adding that players sometimes request tweaks to their "introduction songs".

Every baseball player in South Korea's KBO League has a song written for them by their team. When they step up to the batter's box, their music is blasted out into stadiums and the cheerleaders start dancing.

- 'Flowers of the game' -

Bae Soo-hyun, 37, is South Korea's longest-serving cheerleader and has been performing at SSG Landers Field in Incheon for nearly two decades.

The public perception of cheerleaders has changed, she said, from women in short skirts who dance to professionals who act as a "bridge" between players and fans.

Usually, between four and six SSG cheerleaders perform on a stage in front of one section of the stand.

Their uniform includes a white crop-top with lace over it and silver epaulets, plus wedge trainers to give them extra height.

For Bae and her colleagues it is a full-time job.

"Without us there wouldn't be coordinated cheering for the players," she said, describing how she and her team lead fans through dance routines and chants for specific players.

"Our cheerleading helps players focus more at bat and on the mound. We unite the fans."

South Koreans are so accustomed to cheerleaders running through their routines with every twist and turn of the game that to watch baseball without them is unthinkable, she said.

"We are the flowers of the game... it would be far less entertaining if we weren't there!"

South Korea has a strong culture of fandom.

The fans of K-pop sensations BTS are known as ARMY, for example, and their collective power has been brought to bear on everything from disrupting Trump rallies to fundraising for Ukraine.

South Korean baseball fans have a "strong sense of loyalty to their teams, they see us cheerleaders as practically family members too", she said.

- The 3s policy -

South Korea's professional baseball league is a legacy of former president Chun Doo-hwan, who seized power through a military coup in 1979, crushing democracy movements nationwide.

In a bid to distract South Korean civilians from politics, he then eased tight controls on popular culture in what would become known as the "3s policy" of promoting sports, sex and screen.

He abolished curfews, poured money into the film industry, especially into promoting "erotic" movies, and established professional baseball and football leagues.

"Chun tried to divert critical attention drawn to his dictatorship by launching a pro-baseball league," said Song Gi-seong, a sports journalist at broadcaster MBC.

"While there was a political ulterior motive behind the launch, it has turned out to be South Korea's most popular sport league over the past 40 years."

Initially the military regime used "an element of coercion" to force companies to sponsor teams and support the new leagues.

"But in hindsight it laid down the groundwork for baseball to become a sizeable sports industry."

Professional teams created their own cheer squads in the 1980s and began using them as an "active audience marketing strategy", according to the Korea Cheerleading Association.

The strategy worked, and now for many fans, the synchronised cheering in the crowd is as important as the action on the field.

Park Han-eol, 23, who was watching at SSG stadium while waving a Korean flag, said that the cheerleaders bring "positive energy to the ballpark".

The games would feel "empty" without them, Park added.

A.Padmanabhan--DT