
This is Rotterdam’s Ahoy Arena, packed with fans for the Dutch korfball league finals.
Korfball has been played internationally for over 100 years. It’s recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), included in The World Games, and played competitively in about 70 countries.
It’s not a new sport. It’s a global sport that simply hasn’t broken through in the US – yet.
And that’s what makes this moment so full of potential.
While other countries are hosting nationally televised korfball championships, building youth pipelines, and developing Olympic pathways, we’re still doing the foundational work here: running clinics, training coaches, introducing new communities to the game.
One of our biggest challenges? Reliable access to gym space.
And yet – we bring our own equipment. We bring our volunteers. We make it easy.
What we need now are partners who see the bigger picture: those willing to support a sport before it becomes the next big thing. Because the momentum is already there. The global infrastructure is in place.
And the vision for where this could go? You’re looking at it.
