Sports by country (1983: Doomsday)

ANZC
With the destruction of Melbourne, Australian Rules Football suffered a devastating, but not fatal, blow. Though the sport had its centre in Melbourne, supporters throughout the state of Victoria, and elsewhere in Australia, fought to keep the sport alive. Footy, as it is popularly referenced as, has resurfaced as one of the most popular sports throughout the ANZC. The Australian Football League is the de facto sanctioning body of the sport, and is headquartered in Canberra. Its franchises are located in: Second-tier leagues exist in each of the Australian states, as well as in New Zealand and Hawaii.
 * Adelaide (Adelaide Crows, Port Adelaide Power)
 * Auckland (Auckland Hawks)
 * Brisbane (Brisbane Bears)
 * Bunbury (West Coast Eagles)
 * Canberra (Canberra Swans)
 * Darwin (Darwin Buffaloes)
 * Geelong (Geelong Cats)
 * Gold Coast (Gold Coast FC)
 * Hobart (Tasmanian Devils)
 * Jervis Bay (Jervis Bay Bulldogs, St. Kilda Saints)

Rugby union has a storied history in both Australia and New Zealand. While rugby league is set up on the AFL/American football franchise model, rugby union's top domestic competitions are set up by state and associated territories, as seen in the annualSuper 12 competition, comprised of provincial sides from Australia, New Zealand and Samoa, plus the nations of Tonga and Fiji. The ANZC sends three sides, Australia, New Zealand and Samoa/Hawaii to compete in theSix Nations Series against Chile, the United American Republic and Oceania (Fiji, Tonga and other islands). There has been discussion about expanding the series by inviting sides from the RZA, Singapore and/or New Britain. Club competitions are lower profile than their counterparts in league and the AFL, but exist in every state, governed by their repective state's sanctioning body for union. In 2004, the CRB (Commonwealth Rugby Board) professionalized the sport as to allow for better competition with rugby league for players.

Rugby league, with roots as the preferred rugby code in New South Wales and Queensland, has taken off in the last decade due to a perceived more-open, free-flowing style of play and the fact that the Australian Rugby League was willing to pay its players and, subsequently, was prevailing in competition with union for players through the early 2000s. The de facto sanctioning body for the sport, in the ANZC and worldwide, is the Australian Rugby League. The ARL was established in 1995 and is headquartered in Auckland. It is comprised of franchises, based on the American football model. Its franchises are: There is talk of expansion to Singapore, Fiji and/or Samoa in the next couple of years.
 * Auckland (Auckland Warriors)
 * Brisbane (Brisbane Broncos)
 * Canberra (Canberra Raiders)
 * Gold Coast (Gold Coast Titans)
 * Hobart (Tasmania Tigers)
 * Jervis Bay (Jervis Bay Rabbitohs)
 * Newcastle (Newcastle Knights)
 * Papua New Guinea (PNG Rangers)
 * Townsville (North Queensland Cowboys)
 * Wellington (Southern Orcas)

Association football (soccer) is rapidly growing in popularity, especially among youth. The Football Federation of the ANZC (FFA) was formed in 2004 after a reorganization of the previous overseeing domestic body, Soccer ANZC. The FFA formed a domestic league, the A-League, in 2005. It operates the league which, unlike leagues in other countries built on a pyramid model (several levels of leagues with promotion and demotion), is franchise-based (this is under review, as the Asian Football Federation has requested that FFA change to a pyramid model). The current franchises are:
 * Adelaide (Adelaide United)
 * Brisbane (Brisbane Roar)
 * Bunbury (Western Glory)
 * Geelong (Geelong Victory)
 * Gold Coast (Gold Coast United)
 * Newcastle (Newcastle Jets)
 * Townsville (North Queensland Fury)
 * Wellington (Wellington Phoenix)

Association football's popularity has been boosted by the national side's success in qualifying for the 2010 World Cup in the Celtic Alliance. Some observers believe in the far future, association football will become the dominant code in the country.

Cricket is the favored summer sport in the ANZC. The national cricket teams of Australia and New Zealand play a Test Match series with matches in Brisbane, Geelong (Boxing Day), Canberra (New Year's), Wellington and Christchurch. The ANZC Cricket Board is in discussions with its counterparts in New Britain, the Celtic Alliance and the East Caribbean Federation about restarting Test Matches and one-day international matches. Because of the logistical issues involved, such matches will not take place until 2013 at the earliest.

Regional cricket leagues exist in every state in Australia and in New Zealand, and there is discussion of expansion into Samoa and Hawaii.

Basketball, at the men's and women's adult levels, has had some success in recent years. ANZC athletes are approaching world-class status in several Olympic sports, such as swimming and track and field.

The most popular women's sports include association football, basketball and netball (a variation of basketball played only by women).

American football has gained longevity and popularity as a niche sport within the ANZC, its growth fueled by expats and refugees from the United States. The Oceanic Football League was founded in Samoa in 1991 as the American Football League, to tie it to the sport of American football and to distinguish the league from the Australian rules and rugby codes. Teams from across the Commonwealth and its associated states participate. The ten franchises are:

In 2010, the Oceanic Football League consists of ten teams playing in two divisions:

EASTERN DIVISION WESTERN DIVISION American football has certainly not surpassed the traditional sports of Australia and New Zealand, but it has become an important niche sport. After much discussion amongst owners, the AFL approved a name change to the Oceanic Football League in a hastily arranged owners meeting in mid-December. The OFL owners are expected to vote in January 2010 on whether to retain its headquarters in Pago Pago or move to other proposed locations, including Auckland.
 * Samoa Dolphins (Pago Pago)
 * Auckland Raiders
 * Brisbane Cowboys
 * Newcastle Giants
 * Canberra Colts
 * Darwin Bears
 * Adelaide Rams
 * Tasmania Browns (Hobart)
 * Western Broncos (Bunbury)
 * PNG Ropens (Port Morseby)

During the 1980s and early 1990s it looked as if baseball would join American football as a popular niche sport in Australia. The Australian League was formed in 1986 with six teams, and lasted until 1995. The Claxton Shield, the AL's successor, lasted from 1997 to 2002. Today, baseball is played at an amateur and youth level by Australian enthusiasts and the children of expatriate Americans; the ANZC Baseball Federation governs the sport, most particularly the ANZC's participation in international competition. Supporters are not optimistic about the sport reaching the level of popularity and participation as American football, much less the other football codes.

The highest-drawing sports in 2008 were the Australian Football League (36,000 per match), the Super 12 (21,000), the ARL (16,000), the A-League (15,000) and the American Football League (12,000).

In accordance with the Remembrance Act of 1995, no sporting events of any kind are played in the Commonwealth on 26 September.

Alaska
One of the most unique sporting events in the world is the Iditarod, a trail sled dog race began in 1973 and resumed in 1996. The old route went from Anchorage to Nome; today, the race still ends in Nome, but begins in Valdez.

Ice hockey has emerged as the predominant team sport, owing to the already existent support for the sport, as well as favorable weather conditions and the low expense of manufacturing basic playing equipment. Baseball is played at an amateur level by locals during the summer. Hunting, fishing and skiing also are popular.

Alpine Confederation
Ice hockey is considered to be the most popular team sport in the country. Alpine's national federation kept the sport alive in Europe post-Doomsday and was a leading force behind the reformation of the International Ice Hockey Federation.

The national association football team's shocking 1-0 victory over Brazil in the 2006 World Cup final spiked interest throughout the country in football. The Alpine First Division, established in 1990 by clubs from former Switzerland and Austria, has been considered one of the top European leagues for the past two decades. The Alpine Confederation will host the European Championships - the first since Doomsday - in 2011.

Skiing, both at casual and competitive levels, has taken off within the past ten years. The Alpine national federation is considered the de facto international governing body, but is working with the Norwegian and Vermont federations to form an independent global sanctioning body.

Assiniboia
The Assiniboians have restarted organized sports in the area to keep the populace happy.

Football: The country re-established the Blue Bombers, out of respect to destroyed Winnipeg. It currently plays in the North American Football League under American football rules.

Ice hockey: In order to pay respect to the most popular Canadian sport, the Assiniboians have revived the long-dead Jets hockey team, which plays in the NAU Northern Hockey League. Most of the towns have local hockey teams (ex: Niverville Clippers), and there is an annual tournament for a Stanley Cup-inspired trophy.

Bolivia
Association football (soccer) by far was the most popular sport in Ecuador pre-Doomsday and remains so to this day. Its domestic league is well-attended; its national team has qualified for every World Cup since the tournament's resumption in 1990, and made it to the semifinals in 2002 and 2006.

The indoor version of football, also known as futsal (or indor in Ecuador) is the most popular winter sport. Basketball is another popular indoor sport.

Tennis has taken on popularity in recent years among the middle and upper classes. Ecuadorians such as Nicolas Lapentti and Andres Gomez have done well in the South American-based ATP Tour.

Rugby union, heavily influenced by the growth of the sport in the United American Republic, has a rapidly growing fan and player base.

Ecuador is a member of and the International Rugby Board.

Brazil
Association football is by far the most popular sport; Brazil's national side has been the top-ranked team in the FIFA World Rankings for most years post-Doomsday, and is a heavy favorite to win the 2010 World Cup.

Most of the world's top active footballers - including Adriano, Kaka, Luis Fabiano, Maicon and Robinho - play in Brazil's domestic league.

Two of the best post-Doomsday players - Ronaldo and Ronaldhino - also hail from Brazil.

Domestic competition is split among national and state competitions. The national league is a pyramid system with four levels, and competition runs from April through December. The state championships are organized by the football federations of each state; the major state competitions run from January or February through April or May, while the smaller states w/o clubs playing in national competition have their seasons from April through October.

Some of the top clubs include (but not limited to) Palmeiras, Corinthians, Cruzeiro, Flamengo, Fluminense, Gremio, Internacional, Sao Paulo and Vasco da Gama.

After football, volleyball is the most popular sport, followed by basketball and motorsport.

Brazilian entrepreneurs, most notably former racing champion Emerson Fittipaldi, are at the forefront of a move to restart the Formula One auto racing series no later than 2013.

Jiu Jitsu - spearheaded by the Gracie family - is a martial-arts based sport that has been growing in popularity not just in Brazil but throughout the world, due to exhibitions in ANZC, Singapore, Mexico and Alpine Confederation.

Canada
Ice hockey remains the national sport. Even in the months after Doomsday, the sport was played locally; amateur leagues restarted in the mid-1980s. The Canadian Hockey League - considered to be the successor to the old National Hockey League - was founded in the early 1990s. It is by far the most popular league in the country for any sport. There are seven teams, including a recently admitted one from Aroostook. The teams are: The Gaspe Canadiens suspended play after Gaspe's recent invasion by Superior and Saguenay. There was speculation that the remainder of the CHL season could be cancelled due to the crises. However, the new Canadian government, specifically Prime Minister Walter Natynczyk, has insisted that the season will continue. 
 * The St. John's Senators (they took their nickname from the Ottawa club that played in the NHL from 1917 through 1934)
 * The Corner Brook Royals
 * The Nova Scotia Voyageurs
 * The Charlottetown Princes
 * The Gaspe Canadiens (named after the Montreal Canadiens)
 * The Iqaluit Nunavummiut
 * The Houlton Americans (Aroostook's team)

Canadian football is supported in part by the national government. The Canadian Football League restarted in 1994 and currently has four teams:
 * Charlottetown Maples
 * Nova Scotia Rough Riders
 * Nunavut Argonauts
 * St. John's Schooners

Curling and lacrosse are also popular, and association football (referred to as soccer in Canada) is starting to gain popularity among younger people.

Canada is a member of FIFA and the International Ice Hockey Federation.

Celtic Alliance
Within former Ireland, Gaelic games (Gaelic football, hurling, rounders and camogie) are the most popular, followed by association football, rugby union, cricket and boxing.

The Gaelic Athletic Association is the official sanctioning and overseeing body over the four Gaelic games throughout the Celtic Alliance.

Within the portions of the country formerly part of the United Kingdom and France, association football is by far the most popular sport, with many of the national side players coming from the portions of former England, Scotland, Wales and France controlled by the Celtic Alliance.

There is a three-tiered association football pyramid in the Celtic Alliance. The Celtic First Division and Second Division are the top two flights and include the following clubs:

There is discussion among some fans and officials of reviving some or all of the London-based pre-Doomsday football clubs. Aside from the issue of a lack of a population base to support all (or most) of them, Celtic football officials also have cited a desire for a "new" football club for residents of the rebuilt London to support.
 * Bohemians
 * Bray Wanderers
 * FC Brittany
 * Celtic
 * Cork City
 * Derry City
 * Drogheda United
 * Dundaik
 * Galway United
 * Heart of Midlothian
 * Hibernian
 * Liverpool FC
 * Milton Keynes FC
 * New London FC
 * Normandy FC
 * Rangers
 * St. Patrick's Athletic
 * St. Johnstone's
 * Shamrock Rovers
 * Sligo
 * Stromness FC
 * FC Wales

Rugby union and cricket are also seeing renewed interest throughout the country. Rugby league had disappeared post-Doomsday, but there is a small national federation attempting to renew interest in the sport, with help from the ANZC's Australian Rugby League.

Gaelic games have virtually no following outside former Ireland, although the GAA continues to attempt to establish them among the youth.

Golf has made a comeback of sorts in recent years, particularly as the famous St. Andrews Golf Course was salvaged and restored in 2008.

Chile
Association football is by far the most popular sport. Chile's national football team has had its best results in 1962, finishing third in the World Cup tournament it hosted, and with fourth-place finishes in 1986 and 1998.

Chile has also done well in the sport of tennis. Marcelo Rios was the top-ranked world men's player for six years, garnering favorable comparisons to such legends as Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe, until a back injury forced him to retire in 2004 at the age of 27.

Rodeo, skiing, surfing, and basketball are also popular.

Colombia
More to come

Costa Rica
More to come

Cuba
Baseball is the most popular sport by far; it is the national sport and more popular than even association football.

Cuba is considered by some experts to be the top baseball nation in the world, based upon the quality of its domestic league and its consistent excellent results in international competition over the years. Cuba's domestic league is government-owned and operated and considers its players to be amateurs, although their salaries are paid for by the government or the companies that sponsor their respective clubs.

The national football team came close to qualifying for the 2010 World Cup.

Basketball is a popular winter sport.

Deseret
Deseret's dominant religious body, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (aka Mormonism), operates amatuer sports leagues in numerous sports, including baseball, softball, soccer, basketball, football, ice hockey, volleyball, track and field, etc. In keeping with the traditions of the Church, no Church sanctioned athletic competitions of any kind are contested on Sundays (a tradition that dates back to Brigham Young University's participation in U.S. intercollegiate athletics).

Beginning in 2006, organized athletic competition was held on a domestic level and with teams from nearby Dinetah and the North American Union. pre- and post-Christmas high school basketball tournaments in Provo and Fillmore attract teams from all corners of the Deseret, as well as from the NAU and Dinetah.

There has also been talk of teams from Deseret joining the professional football and ice hockey leagues of the NAU.

BYU has approached universities in Lincoln, the NAU, Superior, Vermont and West Texas about some type of resumption of intercollegiate athletics, at least on a regional level.

Dinetah (Navajo Nation)
As the domestic situation stabilized, and Dinetah established a school system for its children and teenagers, the schools were invited to compete against their counterparts from Deseret. In recent years Dinetah high schools have played in tournaments against schools from Colorado, Wyoming and Montana.

Amateur American football, basketball, and association football leagues abound, and Dinetah leaders established the Dinetah Football (Soccer) Association in 2009 with the goal of joining FIFA and participating in qualifying for the 2014 World Cup.

Dominican Republic
Baseball is the most popular sport in this country, and many experts believe it to produce the best players. The Dominican does have an onseason domestic league, but its best players compete in the Mexican major and minor leagues. In the offseason, from October to January, the best players in the region come to the Dominican and compete in the Dominican Winter League.

The national team competes with Cuba for the title of the world's best side.

Basketball is another popular sport in the country. A semi-professional league has of late produced players who have signed contracts with Brazilian and UAR professional clubs, most notably Felipe Lopez and Al Horford.

Other popular sports are boxing and volleyball. Association football is a popular spectator sport, but the country has not done well on the international scene nor produced notable players in recent years.

East Caribbean Federation
Association football, overall, is the most popular sport in the country. But its degree of popularity over cricket, and even whether cricket is more popular, varies by region, and sometimes by island.

The nation currently is considered the standard-bearer for the sport of cricket. With very limited interest and participation from other countries in its region, and distance preventing regular competition against the world's only other remaining power, the ANZC, the East Caribbeans have had to compete against themselves. The national federation has taken the lead in reestablishing the International Cricket Federation, and is currently gauging interest in the sport in other parts of the world (most notably Sri Lanka, the ANZC, the Celtic Alliance and New Britain).

Association football is also extremely popular, especially with the national team having qualified for the 2010 World Cup. Dwight Yorke, a native of Trinidad, is a veteran of Argentine professional football and is considered perhaps the East Caribbean's best-ever footballer.

Eastern Texas
Sports in the so-called Republic of Texas (a group of small city states in the eastern portion of former Texas) was described by a West Texas military soldier as "what might be if you took modern sports and transported them back to the old West."

American football is played as it was pre-Doomsday, although the type of ball the locals have been able to manufacture have forced the sport to become more of a running game than a passing game. Helmets are a hybrid of leather with facemasks made out of copper, iron or other metals.

Baseball also is played as it was pre-Doomsday, although the ball is more "dead" (which has cut down on home runs); home plate is made out of wood; and batting helmets are made out of cast iron, with primitive, cotton-based padding inside.

Association football, known as soccer in the region, is the third most popular sport.

Ecuador
More to come...

Egypt
More to come....

Fiji
is played in Fiji and the nation often plays with in the Six Nations competition. Fiji is one of the few nations in the world that play Australian rules football. Fiji is also a member of the and.

former France
Football is the most popular sport among the numerous republics found in former France and in its overseas territories. Many of them have recently joined FIFA, the sport's sanctioning body. The European republics have also joined UEFA (Union of European Football Associations), football's sanctioning body in Europe. All have had some sort of domestic competition going on for the past several years, and many are in the process of scheduling friendlies to gauge their standing among other European nations.

Other popular sports throughout former France include tennis; rugby union; handball; basketball and cycling.

Greece
Greece was the birthplace of the Olympic games and the host nation for the first revival of the summer Olympics in 1896. In the ensuing years since Doomsday, various sports have captured the interest of the various peoples within the Confederation of Greece.

Association football remains the most popular sport. The top flight is the Alpha Ethniki, which resumed play in 1989 and currently consists of 12 clubs throughout the Confederation, most notably New Olympiacos FC and New Panathinaikos.

Basketball is the second-most popular sport. Although Greece was one of the founding members of FIBA (Federation Internationale de Basketball) in 1932, the sport didn't take off in popularity until several years after Doomsday.

The Hellenic Rugby Federation, established in 2004, oversees the rapid growth of rugby union in Greece. The next step is official membership in the sport's international sanctioning body, International Rugby Board.

Greece is considered the world power in the sport of water polo, and has had success and interest in such traditional Olympic sports as athletics and weightlifting. Equestrian sports are gaining interest, especially within the North Africa portion of the Confederation.

Guyana
More to come....

India
More to come....

Indonesia
More to come....

Israel
More to come....

Japan
Traditional Japanese sports, in particular sumo wrestling and various forms of martial arts, have enjoyed a renaissance since Doomsday. The sports were pushed by the government as national sports and disciplines, and are extremely popular.

Despite anti-American sentiment, Japan is still known to play the sport of baseball at a competitive, professional level. Observers from Siberia reported seeing practices by professional teams and a few Japanese league games in Kyoto, and being told that the government was pushing for fundamental changes to the game to make it significantly different from the "American pastime." To date, the fundamentals of the game in Japan have not changed, as doing so would make it impossible for Japanese teams to ever compete on an international scale.

Some western sports not strictly associated with the United States, particularly track and field and association football, are played at all levels in Japan.

Cuban officials have approached Japan's baseball federation about playing a series of games sometime in 2010. Japan is said to be more receptive to joining FIFA, especially given its good relations with the ANZC and the Phillippines, than to joining the League of Nations.

Kentucky
Intercollegiate basketball and horse racing were two of the most popular sports in the former state of Kentucky pre-Doomsday.

People's love for those two sports persisted over the years.

Basketball has been the national sport since the Commonwealth became an independent nation, and is played at all age levels. The national high school tournament is extremely popular. There are plans to start a semi-professional league, the Kentucky National Basketball Association (KNBA) in 2010 or 2011. However, government officials have been surprised at the overwhelming popular support for resumption of intercollegiate athletics, in particular the men's basketball program at the recently reopened University of Kentucky in Lexington.

Although UK has not played a game since the spring of 1983 - its last full season before Doomsday - lore of the program has stayed alive over the years. Supporters see UK basketball as a potentially unifying national symbol, and are pushing not only for the establishment of a national intercollegiate sports association, but for competition with universities in other countries. Presently, supporters have informally discussed scheduling games with counterparts in Superior, Vermont and Virginia.

The recent reopening of Ellis Park in Henderson represents what officials hope is the rebirth of the horse racing industry.

Other traditional U.S. sports, including American football, baseball and golf, are also popular.

Lincoln
Though baseball and basketball are played, it is American football that the Lincolnites are obsessed with. Their love for the sport goes back to the loyal and enthusiastic following the University of Nebraska team enjoyed in the region pre-Doomsday.

There is a 20-team amateur American football team in the country. The government continues to support a professional franchise, the Lincoln Cornhuskers. It has rejected supporters' desire to compete in the North American Union league, due to an ongoing dispute with the NAU regarding territory belonging to the former U.S. state of Nebraska, but is said to be considering applying for membership in the RSNFL (Republic of Superior National Football League).

Malaysia
More to come....

Mexico
Association football remains the top sport here. The top division of its domestic league, the Primera Division, is considered the third best in the world, after the top divisions in Brazil and the UAE.

The Primera Division consists of 18 teams playing in three groups of six teams apiece, and is split into two seasons - the apertura (opening) season, from August through December, and the clasura (closing) season, from January through May. The current teams are:


 * America (Mexico City)
 * Atlante (Cancun)
 * Atlas (Guadalajara)
 * Guadalajara (Guadalajara)
 * Cruz Azul (Mexico City)
 * Chiapas (Tuxtla)
 * Mexica FC (Mexica DC)
 * Monarcas Morelia (Morelia)
 * Pachuca (Pachuca)
 * Puebla (Puebla)
 * Queretaro (Queretaro)
 * Pumas (Mexico City)
 * San Luis (San Luis)
 * Santos Laguna (Torreon)
 * Estudiantes Tecos (Zapopan)
 * Toluca (Toluca)
 * Acapulco FC (Acapulco)
 * Real Mexica (Mexica DC)

The Mexican national team is considered to be a contender to reach the World Cup championship match in 2010.

Baseball is a close second in popularity. The Mexican and Nacional Ligas are considered to be the successors to the United States's Major League Baseball, and have the top talent in the world besides Cuba.

The franchises, by league, are:

Mexican Liga


 * Campeche Pirates
 * Guadalajara Leones
 * Mexica Tigers
 * Mexico City Reds
 * Puebla Parrots
 * San Luis Potosi Athletics
 * Tabasco Olmecs
 * Veracruz Red Eagles

Nacional Liga


 * Acapulco Dodgers
 * Mexica Diablos
 * Mexico City Rangers
 * Minatitlan Oilers
 * Oaxaca Warriors
 * Quintana Roo Tigers
 * Toluca Giants
 * Yucatan Cubs

Other sports that have gained interest are boxing, basketball and American football, in large part because of the presence of many American refugees. Boxing already enjoyed tremendous participation and interest before Doomsday, and the entrance of Americans into the country increased that interest further. American football has been played on the intercollegiate level in Mexico since its beginnings in the country. Most of the Americans came from states where intercollegiate football was held in the highest regard, and have transferred that loyalty to the Mexican universities. A semi-professional American football league was founded in 2007.

Mexico has also recently joined the International Rugby Board in rugby union and the International Ice Hockey Federation in ice hockey. American expatriates formed a thriving amateur ice hockey federation in the early 1990s, and a semi-pro league has taken the ice this fall for its first official season. Golf is more of a popular participatory sport, but Lorena Ochoa has the distinction of being the world's top female golfer. Racquetball, polo, tennis and taekwondo are notable minor sports. Although more theater than sport, lucha libre is almost as popular among spectators and the public as football.

Municipal States of the Pacific
On April 26, 2009, the Central Committee announced that they will be sponsoring a new baseball league, the. The league is currently being organized with the help of officials from Mexico's baseball league and observers from the sports federations of the ANZC and Chile. Member cities will be allowed to sponsor teams to compete in the league. It is the hope of the Central Committee that friendly competition between member cities will help promote unity and cooperation in the MSP as a whole.

The first season is scheduled to start in 2010. The initial eight teams are:


 * Bay City Athletics
 * Coos Bay Pirates
 * Crescent City Giants
 * Gold Beach Dodgers
 * Medford Padres
 * Port Orford Mariners
 * Redding Cubs
 * Yreka Angels

Australian rules football, rugby (both union and league) and association football have also become popular in the MSP, due in large part to the influence of Australians and South Americans who helped the locals set up the national government. The MSP has recently become a member of the and. Locals are attempting to revive the traditional American sports of basketball and American football.

New Britain
Association football proved to be the one sport that all ethnic groups had a passionate interest in, and has been a very important social unifier for the entire country. Its national side has qualified for the 2010 World Cup.

Rugby union, popular in both England and former South Africa, has garnered a tremendous following in its own right. The national team is nicknamed the Lions. New Britain's national federation has approached the ANZC about joining the Five Nations Series and has discussed forming an African Series with the RZA and Union of South Africa federations.

Other sports garnering interest include cricket and tennis. Its national cricket federation has expressed interest to the ANZC, the East Caribbean Federation and the RZA about resuming Test Match series in some form by 2013.

Niue
Despite Niue being a small country, a number of different sports are popular. Rugby is a popular sport played both by men and women. Netball is played only by women. There is a nine-hole golf course at Fonuakula. There is a lawn bowling green under construction. Football is popular as evidenced by the Niue Soccer Tournament.

Nordic Union
Ice hockey is by far most popular, in all member nations. Norway and Sweden's national teams have competed with the Alpine Confederation in recent years to be the top national side in the sport.

Cross-country skiing also is a popular winter sport in Norway, both participatory and spectator; Norwegians also enjoy biathlon is popular in Norway.

Golf and handball are popular in Sweden; pesapallo (similar to baseball) and ski jumping in Finland; handball and basketball in Iceland; and sailing, handball, badminton and gymnastics in Denmark.

Association football is the most popular spring and summer sport throughout the Union. Each member state has its own domestic league, with clubs also competing in the annual Nordic Cup competition.

Athletics are also popular in all member nations.

North American Union
Within the states that comprise the provisional United States government, the traditional American sports - American football, baseball, basketball and, in the northern states, ice hockey, along with tennis and golf - retained their interest and popularity among the public.

In Alberta and Saskatchewan, people are interested in the same sports as their U.S. counterparts, with a few notable distinctions. Ice hockey is the most popular team sport. The Canadian version of American football is the preferred code in the two states. And, the Canadian sport of curling has retained some interest and popularity.

In the nation of Lakotah, sports meshed well with Lakotahian life, particularly basketball and American football. Basketball is very popular in Lakotah, and former high school and college coach Larry Brown has worked for years helping build up the sport in Lakotah and elsewhere in the NAU. Lately, as news of the outside world has come to Lakotah, some in the country have proposed that association football (aka soccer) be considered as a national priority, with the idea that as the world's preeminent sport, it would help raise Lakotah's awareness and status in the eyes of the outside world. Many tribal leaders have failed to understand this, but nevertheless preliminary work on establishing a Lakotah Football Association has begun.

The oldest existing gridiron football club in North America, the Saskatchewan Roughriders, are based in Saskatoon and play in the North American Football League, under American football rules.

Professional leagues
There are professional leagues for American football and ice hockey. The key here is they are 'professional' in the sense that players do get paid for their services, but not enough for them to give up their day jobs. Thus, games are played on the weekends, which has the added effect of easing travel expenses.

The North American Football League teams are:
 * Assiniboia Blue Bombers
 * Billings Cowboys
 * Dodge City Chiefs
 * Lakotah Warriors
 * Nebraska Cornhuskers
 * Saskatchewan Roughriders
 * Wyoming Broncos

The Northern Hockey League teams are:
 * Assiniboia Jets
 * Billings Rangers
 * Lakotah Thunderbirds
 * Lethbridge Oilers
 * Medicine Hat Maple Leafs
 * Red Deer Canucks
 * Saskatoon Riders
 * Swift Current Flames

North Germany
Assosiated football is by far the most popular team sport. In 1999, the government and major businesses formed a semi-professional league, the Nord-Deutsche Bundesliga (NDB). The consists of two divisions of eight clubs each. At the end of each season, the team at the bottom of is relegated to the NDB II, to be replaced by the top team in the NDB II. Several clubs are based in Freisland.

The governing board of the NDB is in discussions with their counterparts in the Kingdom of Prussia to revive the annual German Cup tournament.

North Germany is a member of FIFA.

Ice Hockey is gaining in popularity, due to a North German team in the Nordic Union's ice hockey league.

Pakistan/Afghanistan
After the Islamic Revolution of 1984, athletic competitions were prohibited on pain of death. The ban was later rescinded at the insistence of Pakistan's neighboring states. The two most popular sports are cricket and association football. Cricket matches are today regulary played domesticly, as well as with teams from allied nations. There has even been unoffical discussions with Sri Lanka and the UPI about resuming international matches.

Pais del Oro
Association football helped unify this country in its early days. It remains by far the most popular spectator sport. Its national team has qualified for the World Cup.

Athletics, basketball, tennis, golf, handball and cricket also are contested.

Paraguay
More to come...

Peru
More to come....

Piedmont Republic
More to come for this recently discovered republic....

Portugal
Association football is the main sport in Portugal.

Cristiano Ronaldo, one of the world's top footballers who plays professionally in Brazil, and the 2008 FIFA World Footballer of the Year, is considered a national hero.

Martial arts, athletics, and such aquatic sports as surfing also are popular.

Prussia
Association football is, as it was pre-Doomsday, the most popular sport. The 1.Bundesliga, established in 1996, is the top flight in Prussian football, followed by 2.Bundesliga and 3.Bundesliga. Hertha Berlin is considered the top club. Other top clubs include Dynamo Berlin, Bayern Berlin, 1.Union Berlin, FC Neuer Konigsberg and SV Babelsburg 03.

Basketball, cycling and tennis also are popular sports in Prussia.

Puerto Rico
Baseball is the most popular sport in a country that sends its best players to the Mexican professional leagues. The Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League, which plays in the winter, has operated for over a century. The champion advances to the Caribbean World Series

Association football and basketball are also very popular. Boxing, equestrian sports, martial arts, distance racing and track and field also have strong support bases.

Cockfighting is legal in Puerto Rico and is as heavily wagered on as horse racing was in the pre-Doomsday United States.

Saguenay
This country may have broken away from Canada, but it still shares a love of ice hockey with its now-rival nation.

As a symbol of the alliance between Saguenay and Superior, the Nordiques de Saguenay, have been accepted as an expansion team in Superior's RSNHL in 2010. It is rumored that the team containes several members of the disbanded Gaspe Canadiens of the CHL who defected to Saguenay

Singapore
The country's association football team is one of the best in the Asia/Oceanic region. Singapore also hosts a popular domestic six-team league.

Rugby league has become more popular in the small nation than rugby union, leading to speculation that a local team may join the ANZC's National Rugby League.

Singapore is a "test nation" as the International Rugby Board experiments with the revival of the sport of rugby sevens, a version of rugby union played by seven players per side.

Singapore's athletes in badminton and table tennis are considered to be the best in the world.

Socialist Siberia
Sport is strictly controlled by the government, which seeks to develop world-class athletes in every Olympic sport, both individual and team. Domestic ice hockey and association football leagues are very popular, and some national players have found their way into European hockey and the domestic ANZC and Singapore football leagues.

Boxing has also become very popular, as basic boxing techniques are taught as early as in elementary schools and it is a popular indoor sport. The Socialist Siberian Boxing League is currently looking for countries to participate in a possible international boxing championship held in the USSR.

Superior
The government sponsored the Tri-League Games Act in 1989 to finance professional leagues in baseball, American football and ice hockey; the football league is the most popular of the three.

Each of the three leagues is run by an independent Board of Commissioners. Each Board is given broad powers to ensure the franchises remain financially viable and competetive. In extreme circumstances, the Boards have the authority to revoke an ownership groups franchise.

The RSNFL (Republic of Superior National Football League) has franchises in ten cities, with the top four teams competing in a single-elimination playoff, with two semifinal games and a championship game played in January at Lambeau Field in Green Bay: The RSNBL (Republic of Superior National Baseball League) has franchises in eight cities, with the top two teams playing for the RSNBL Championship at the end of the season in September:
 * Green Bay (Green Bay Packers)
 * Houghton (Houghton Bears)
 * Iron Mountain (Iron Mountain Steelers)
 * Mackinaw (Mackinaw Vikings)
 * Madison, Wisconsin (Wisconsin Badgers)
 * Menominee (Menominee Colts)
 * Marquette (Marquette Lions)
 * Sault Ste. Marie (Sault Ste. Marie Rams)
 * Stowe (Stowe Eagles)
 * Thunder Bay (Thunder Bay Bombers)
 * Houghton (Houghton Giants)
 * Iron Mountain (Iron Mountain Dodgers)
 * Mackinaw (Mackinaw Cubs)
 * Madison, Wisconsin (Madison Brewers, renamed from the Madison Badgers; name change takes effect for the 2010 season).
 * Marquette (Marquette Tigers)
 * Sault Ste. Marie (Sault Ste. Marie White Sox)
 * Stowe (Stowe Senators)
 * Thunder Bay (Thunder Bay Blue Jays)

The RSNHL (Republic of Superior National Hockey League) has franchises in ten cities, with four teams advancing to the playoffs. The best-of-seven semifinal and championship series are contested in April: Two expansion teams are scheduled to added in 2010: Even after Doomsday, Baseball was inherited from the mother nation of the United States to become the national pastime, along with other sports such as American Football and Ice Hockey. Golf has also become popular on the Upper Peninsula, though it is mainly relegated to the elderly, and no organized national tournament of any sort has yet been formed by the government.
 * Escanaba (Escanaba North Stars)
 * Houghton (Houghton Jets)
 * Iron Mountain (Iron Mountain Rangers)
 * Mackinaw (Mackinaw Black Hawks)
 * Madison, Wisconsin (Madison Badgers)
 * Marquette (Marquette Red Wings)
 * Menominee (Menominee Bruins)
 * Sault Ste. Marie (Sault Ste. Marie Flyers)
 * Stowe (Stowe Capitals)
 * Thunder Bay (Thunder Bay Maple Leafs)
 * Chicoutimi, Saguenay (Saguenay)
 * Redwood (Redwood Islanders)

Tennis, softball, track and field, cross country, volleyball, and soccer are played by many, albeit at either an informal level, or formally in youth leagues, middle and high school competition and adult amateur leagues.

A slowly growing tourist attraction is the Green Bay Packer Hall of Fame Museum in Green Bay. Located at Lambeau Field - the last known remaining National Football League stadium - the museum contains an extensive amount of Packer and NFL memorabilia dating back to the early 20th century. It includes items owned by Superior entrepreneur Elliott Gold and donated on a rotating basis.

The Superior Soccer Federation was established in 2007 by enthusiasts to develop the sport in their country. It is a member of FIFA, with the condition of establishing a formal league by 2015.

Taiwan
Baseball is the national sport of Taiwan, a legacy of decades of Japanese rule. A six team professional league is based in Taiwan. There is also a Little League competition throught the country. Other popular team sports are association football, basketball, field hockey and handball.

Various martial arts, such as taekwondo, karate, and kung fu are popular as both spectator and participatory sports.

Tonga
More to come...

Union of South Africa
In former South Africa, association football was the most popular sport amongst the black majority and colored minority, while the white minority preferred rugby union, cricket and golf.

Football is the runaway most popular sport currently in the region, including the nations that comprise the new Union of South Africa. Golf has all but been abandoned, seen as a symbol of the long-disbanded apartheid government. Rugby union and cricket had been, too, but have reemerged as (so far) minor sports in the area. Their status is helped by the work being done by New Britain's federations, who are presenting both sports as opportunities for all peoples to compete in several sports (including but not just football), and by the participation and popularity of the two sports among black and colored peoples within New Britain itself.

New Britain's sports federations and the RZA provisional government are currently working together to help organize football, rugby union, cricket and athletics in the region.

United American Republic
Association football, as in most other countries, is not only the most popular sport but deeply engrained into the culture. The UAR's World Cup victory in 1990, the first World Cup held since Doomsday, is fondly remembered by fans.

Diego Maradona, the popular Argentine football star who is thought to have died on Doomsday while in Spain as a member of FC Barcelona, was the "honorary captain" of the 1990 UAR national team. Popular folklore portrayed Maradona as the "Angel of the Albicelestes" who watched over and helped the team to victory.

The UAR has produced many great footballers in its brief history and that of its predecessor nations Argentina and Uruguay, including Gabriel Bautista and Javier Zanetti. Lionel Messi, the favorite for 2009 FIFA World Footballer of the Year award, plays for the UAR club Newell's Old Boys.

The domestic league boasts some of the best clubs in the world outside of Brazil, including Boca Juniors, Independiente, Newell's Old Boys, Racing, River Plate and San Lorenzo de la Almagro.

UAR citizens also enjoy and watch a variety of other sports, including basketball; the UAR has won the past three FIBA (Federation de Basketball Association) World titles.

Rugby union is growing in popularity and stature. Tennis, field hockey, motorsport, men's volleyball, polo and golf are widely played and watched as well.

Venezuela
More to come...

Vermont
People generally like to participate in activities and sports more than watch it, but an amateur baseball league and a semi-pro ice hockey league are popular.

The Vermont Hockey League teams are:


 * Manchester Bruins
 * Torrington Whalers
 * Burlington Islanders
 * Dartmouth Rangers
 * Montpelier Capitals
 * Barre Flyers

The owners of the Manchester Bruins hockey team in the Vermont league are pursuing membership in either the Canadian Hockey League or the Republic of Superior Hockey League for the 2010-11 season. The owners had been given the go-ahead in November 2009 to pursue this; however, with the RSNHL recently accepting an expansion team from Saguenay, Vermont officials are now said to be against Manchester's membership in the league, citing Vermont's need to protect its neutrality.

The Vermont government is said to be supportive of a professional regional league, consisting of teams in Canada and Vermont, along with Aroostook, Saguenay and possibly Superior. However, due to the ongoing conflict between Canada and Saguenay, the prospects of such a league, for the foreseeable future, are slim at best.

Vermont is likely to be the first nation in the former United States to resume intercollegiate athletics. The sanctioning body is provisionally called the Vermont Collegiate Athletic Association (VCAA) and is said to be open to membership from other area nations, as well as competition against universities from other North American nations. Competition will commence in the 2010-11 calendar year in American football, men's and women's soccer (association football), men's and women's basketball, men's and women's athletics, men's and women's tennis and baseball. The founding members are:


 * University of Aroostook
 * Dartmouth University
 * Franklin Pierce University
 * University of New Hampshire
 * Norwich University
 * University of Vermont

The VCAA is reported to be in discussions with universities in Deseret, Kentucky, the NAU, Virginia and West Texas regarding scheduling games for next season.

Victoria
Ice hockey is the most popular sport in this survivor state from old Canada. The Victorian Hockey League, created from the remnants of the British Columbia Hockey League and expanded, currently has twelve teams:

Island Conference
 * The Comox Valley Chiefs
 * The Alberni Bulldogs
 * The Cowichan Capitals
 * The Nanaimo Clippers
 * The Campbell River Eagles
 * The Victoria Grizzlies

Mainland Conference To emphasize Victoria's British roots, traditional British sports of cricket, rugby union, and association football have been heavily promoted by the government. Every public school in Victoria is required to include these sports in their athletic activities (the Washington territories will be required to do so as well beginning in January 2010). This has been criticized by the CRUSA as an attempt to "De-Americanize" the youth of former Washington.
 * The Prince Rupert Sea Wolves
 * The Powell River Kings
 * The Everett Silvertips
 * The Port Angeles Ravens
 * The Mt. Vernon Giants
 * The Bellingham Ice Hawks (current Cromwell Cup champions)

While there are no organized professional leagues, baseball and American football are still popular in the Washington territories, with organized competitions at the youth and amateur adult levels and in the middle and high schools.

Virginian Republic
The government looked to sports as a way to help increase the morale of its citizens (and, for that matter, its own military, many of whom enjoyed the domestic leagues as much as the citizens did). Football, baseball, basketball, track and field, tennis, wrestling, swimming, volleyball and golf each have government-sanctioned organizations that oversee their respective sports.

West Texas
American football is still king in this part of old Texas. High school football on Friday nights is a near-sacred tradition in the country, and the West Texas Interscholastic League's two divisions (11-man and eight-man) are followed as closely as professional and collegiate football were pre-Doomsday.

A six-team semi-professional league that plays games on Saturdays and Monday nights is also very popular. The teams were named after two franchises in the old U.S. National Football League and four teams from universities in former Texas. Almost all games are played in Midland and Odessa, with occasional regular season and exhibition games in other towns throughout the country. The teams are:
 * Aggies
 * Cowboys
 * Longhorns
 * Mustangs
 * Oilers
 * Red Raiders

A semi-professional baseball league also garners interest during the spring and summer. Teams are located in
 * Big Spring
 * Fort Stockton
 * Midland
 * Monahans
 * Odessa
 * Sweetwater

Association football is mainly referred to in West Texas as soccer,or futbol. It is popular on both the high school and semi-pro levels and has solidified itself as the nation's second-most popular sport. Most of the 12 club teams in the nation's top flight are based in Midland and Odessa; Army FC, sponsored by the military and based out of Fort Stockton, is one of the better sides. West Texas established the West Texas Football Association, and joined FIFA in December 2009, thanks in no small part to the help of Mexico's national federation.

One interesting phenomenon is that although the Anglo majority tended to prefer American football in the early years of the country, and the Latino minority soccer (and both groups enjoying baseball), over the years both groups, along with the African-American minority, equally participate and enjoy all three sports.

Basketball is the most popular indoor sport. Golf is mainly a participatory sport, contested by more affluent residents. Track and field is limited to youth and high school competition, although with the resumption of the Summer Olympics in 2012, that is anticipated to change.

Work on building a 50,000-seat stadium at the University of West Texas, to host American football and soccer matches and track and field events on both domestic and international levels, will begin in March 2010.

Despite criticism from conservatives, West Texas sports federations - particularly in association football - are developing closer ties with their counterparts in Mexico.

Wisconsin
The Green Bay Packers, which was founded in 1919 and was the third-oldest franchise in the old NFL, was restarted in 2006 as an expansion franchise in the RSNFL (Republic of Superior National Football League). The franchise intially was going to play in Madison, Wisconsin, in keeping with its origins as a franchise based in old Wisconsin. However, complaints from league and Superior political officials led to the team being taken over by the Green Bay territorial government. It plays in a rebuilt Lambeau Field. Madison officials decided to "professionalize" the University of Wisconsin's athletic teams and use its Badgers identity, and the university's facilities, for all of its teams in the Republic of Superior professional leagues. The football franchise plays at the restored Camp Randall Stadium. The RSNHL (Republic of Superior National Hockey League) franchise plays off campus at Veterans Memorial Coliseum. The baseball franchise, renamed the Brewers (after the old Milwaukee Brewers baseball team) for the 2010 season, plays its home games at Madison Park, built in downtown Madison, with a view of the National Capital Building in the outfield.

Woodbridge
Cricket and Football are played by the civilian population whereas American Football and baseball are still popular with serving and former members of the ex-USAF units that used to control the nation. The organisations that run cricket and football within Woodbridge hope to apply for membership of the ICC and FIFA respectively in the next few years. The current league champions in football are Woodbridge FC and Saxmundham CC are the current WCA (Woodbridge Cricket Association) league champions