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LONGEST FOOTBALL GAME
Barotac Nuevo bats for Guinness record

By Nestor P. Burgos Jr.
Visayas Bureau
First Posted 05:14:00 01/19/2009

Filed Under: Soccer, records

ILOILO CITY—Residents of the football-crazy town of Barotac Nuevo cheered “goal!” each time a player scored. Two hundred sixty nine times to be exact.

In what could be a new world record, two teams played football continuously for 35 hours and 20 minutes starting at 8:35 a.m. Friday until 8:15 p.m. Saturday on the football field at the public plaza of the town, 30 kilometers northeast of Iloilo City.

After nine games, the Iloilo State College of Fisheries (ISCOF) team won by scoring 136 goals against the 133 of the Barotac Nuevo Comprehensive High School (BNCHS) team.

Each team won eight games and played to a draw three others including the last game.

“We believed we have set a new world record and the players are happy despite the fatigue,” Duffie Botavara, general secretary of the Barotac Nuevo Football Club and the Iloilo Football Association, said in a telephone interview.

Botavara said the previous record for the longest football game played was 31 hours in Australia. Aside from aiming for the record of the longest game played, Botavara said they also wanted to set the record for the most number of games played continuously.

Cheered by their town-mates, the two teams composed of 18 persons each played nine 90-minute games. Each game has two 45-minute halves with a 10-minute break between halves.

Nine referees working in three shifts officiated the game.

Botavara said because of the duration of the game, they slightly modified the rules and a “floating substitution” format was adopted. This allowed the unlimited substitution of players who returned to the game even after they have been substituted.

Football regulations allow only two substitutions per game and players who have been replaced cannot return to the game.

“We ensured that at any given time, nine to 10 players from each team were on the field while the others rested,” said Botavara.

The players did not sleep and only rested at the players’ quarters where they also ate, said Botavara.

The BNCNHS was composed of players 17 years old and below while the ISCOF players belonged to the collegiate division. Each team had a member of the national team.

“Many wanted to join the game but we had to turn them down because of the limited number of players allowed,” said Botavara.

For the special game, lights were installed at the public plaza for the first time but a white colored ball was used in the evening for easier visibility.

Botavara said around 3,000 residents flocked to the football field at its peak to watch the game and encourage the players.

The organizers of the event will send a video of the game to the Guinness World Records to authenticate and make the new record official.



Copyright 2009 Visayas Bureau. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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