Kickball (also known as soccer baseball in most of Canada and football rounders in the United Kingdom) is a team sport and league game, similar to baseball. Like baseball, it is a safe haven game in which one team tries to score by having its players return a ball from home base to the field and then circle the bases. Meanwhile, the other team tries to stop them by tagging them "out" with the ball before they can return to the home base. However, instead of hitting a small, hard ball with a bat, players kick an inflated rubber ball; this makes it more accessible to young children. As in baseball, teams alternate half-innings. The team with the most runs after a predefined number of innings wins.
Kickball is typically played among young, school-age children, both as a playground game and as part of physical education (PE). The lack of both specialized equipment and highly skill-based positions (like the pitcher) makes the game an accessible introduction to related sports such as baseball and softball. In recent decades, it has gained popularity among adults, and today many cities are home to one or more organized kickball leagues for adults.[1]
Kickball was likely invented around 1910 in the United States and began to spread from about the 1920s onward, mainly via PE classes in public schools. It became an especially popular recess sport on playgrounds across the country in the 1970s,[2] and is now played in various forms in countries around the world, such as Canada, England, Japan, South Korea, and South America.
History
Kickball, originally called "Kicking Baseball" was claimed to have been invented as early as 1910 by Dr. Emmett Dunn Angell in his noted book Play: Comprising Games for the Kindergarten, Playground, Schoolroom and College : How to Coach and Play Girls' Basket-ball, Etc (1910). His description and field illustration in this book is both the closest and earliest known precursor to the modern game of kickball. He also notes that "The game seems to afford equal enjoyment to the children and it gives a better understanding of the national game (Baseball), and at the same time affords them an exercise that is not too violent and is full of fun.".[3]
A later documented inventor claim, as early as 1917, was by Nicholas C Seuss, Supervisor of Cincinnati Park Playgrounds in Cincinnati, Ohio.[4] Seuss submitted his first documented overview of the game in The Playground Book, published in 1917. This description includes 12 rules and a field diagram, and refers to kickball as "Kick Base Ball" and "Kick Baseball".[5]
In 1920–1921, "Kick Ball" was used by physical education teachers in US public schools to teach young boys and girls the basics of baseball. Around this time, the ball that was used was a soccer ball or volleyball. It was played by ten to 30 players and the field included a "Neutral Zone": an area not to be entered until the ball has actually been kicked. There was no pitcher, because the ball would be kicked from the home area, which was a 3 foot circle. The ball had to pass beyond the 5 foot line, and base-runners could only advance one base on infield balls. Teams would switch sides only after all team members had kicked.[6]
During this time, kickball was played on the same field as baseball except that there was only one base corresponding to a baseball diamond's 2nd base. Multiple players could be on base at a time, but all needed to get home before the last kicker kicked and the kicking order had retired.[7]
There were also two shortstop player positions: one between 1st and 2nd base and the other between 2nd and 3rd. Home plate was marked by a 3 foot by 4 foot rectangle on the ground.[8]
In April 1922, Daniel Chase, Supervisor of Physical Education for the New York State Department of Education, describes the earliest known account of adults playing kickball. This match took place at a conference of rural teachers in Mooers Forks, NY, where Chase was teaching games that the teachers could in turn teach to their pupils. They did not have a ball, so they made one out of an old stocking and some rags; it was about 7 to 8 inches long and tied off with an old shoelace. The construction of this makeshift ball was demonstrated to the rural teachers by Mr. Braddock Wells. The teachers were assigned numbers to create teams; odd numbers on one team and even numbers on the other. The team captains chose college names to represent each team name: the odds chose Yale and the evens chose Princeton. The game of "Kick Baseball" was the last game they played at the conference to decide the championship for the day. Ten players were chosen for each team and the remaining were organized into a cheering section. Yale kicked first. On the field there was no pitcher, but an extra shortstop between 1st and 2nd base. Chase recounts that only three innings were completed in the heat that day, with Yale ending up as the victor winning 3 to 2. Furthermore, the cheering sections showed great sportsmanship, applauding all good plays impartially.[9]
In the 1940s, American World War II correspondent Ernie Pyle reported kickball being played by U.S. soldiers during the Tunisia Campaign of 1942–1943.[10] In addition, "Kick Ball" was promoted as an informal game for soldiers by the United States Department of the Army from as early as 1943. In this more difficult variant of the game, all kicks had to be home runs, by beating the kicked ball back to home after consecutive passes to all basemen before throwing them out at home.[11]
Kickball gained prominence as a very popular recess sport and after-school game on playgrounds across the US in the 1970s.[2]
Field
Kickball is typically played on a softball diamond with an 8.5 inch to 16 inch diameter inflated rubber ball, such as a utility ball. As in baseball/softball, the game uses three bases, a pitcher's mound, and a home plate. Sometimes in less formal games, the field is not bounded by a fence (which traditionally surrounds a softball or baseball diamond), but is instead open. This may result in informal rule changes to accommodate the field, such as home runs being counted by number of bounces instead of by distance.
Kickball can also be played on a rectangular blacktop area with chalk or paint outlines.
Popularity among adults
While kickball was long mostly considered a child's game in the United States and Canada, over time it has gained popularity among adults as a recreational sport. In 1998, the World Adult Kickball Association was founded, and since the late 1990s and early 2000s, many US and Canadian cities have created kickball leagues for adults, while additional governing bodies have also been formed.[12] Some US cities even have multiple such organized adult leagues.[2] Kickball is also offered as an intramural sport on many college campuses.[13][14]
Popularity outside the United States
Kickball is popular among youth in South Korea. Known as balyagu [발야구 (foot-baseball)], it is a staple in physical education (PE) classes within elementary schools.
In Japan, kickball is played by elementary-school students and is known as キックベース(Kickbase).[15]
Kickball is a popular game played by elementary-school children in Canada, where it is usually referred to as either "soccer baseball" or "kickball."[16] In some areas it may also be referred to as "Chinese baseball" or "California kickball."
In England, the variation often played in PE lessons in schools is referred to as "Football-Rounders," a mix of association football and rounders.[17]
A related sport, "kickingball," is popular in South America, for example among Venezuelan refugees in Argentina.[18]
See also
- Baseball
- Softball – including slow pitch and fastpitch
- Matball
- Leg cricket
- Baseball5 – baseball with only a ball, batters hit the ball with a hand
- Tee-ball
- Little League Baseball
- Safe haven games, also known as "bat-and-ball games" (although bats are not always present)
- Wiffle ball
References
- ↑ "Join The Fun!". World Kickball Association. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
- 1 2 3 Parker, Suzi (25 August 2013). "The Zombies and Non-Prophets of Little Rock". Al Jazeera. New York City. Archived from the original on 29 January 2023. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ↑ Play: Comprising Games for the Kindergarten, Playground, Schoolroom and College : How to Coach and Play Girls' Basket-ball, Etc. Little, Brown, and Company. 1910. p. 190. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
- ↑ The Playground. Playground and Recreation Association of America. 1969. p. 240. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
- ↑ The Playground Book. Cincinnati Board of Education (Ohio), Cincinnati (Ohio). Board of Park Commissioners. 1917. pp. 82–83. Retrieved 2014-09-17.
- ↑ Mind and Body – A Monthly Journal devoted to Phycical Education Vol 27. The Mind and Body Publish Company. 1921. pp. 205–206. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
- ↑ University of the State of New York Bulletin, Issue 724. fortnightly. 1920. pp. 131–132. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
- ↑ School, Church, and Home Games. Association Press. 1922. pp. 41. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
kick ball.
- ↑ The Instructor, Volume 31. F.A. Owen Publishing Company. 1922. p. 26. Retrieved 2013-09-19.
- ↑ Here Is Your War; Story of G.I. Joe. H. Holt, New York. 1943. p. 28. ISBN 9780803287778. Retrieved 2012-02-21.
- ↑ Informal games for soldiers. U.S. government printing office. 1943. p. 6. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
- ↑ "Join The Fun!". World Kickball Association. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
- ↑ "Kickball". University of Arizona Campus Recreation. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
- ↑ University of Texas Intramural Sports. "Kickball". UT Austin Wikis. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
- ↑ "21 kick Baseball". Toyama Prefectural Board of Education. Retrieved 14 November 2013.
- ↑ Hinog, Mark (2017-08-25). "Canada's other term for kickball is 'soccer baseball,' which ... makes sense". SBNation.com. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
- ↑ "secondary Intra-school/Level 1 Resource" (PDF). Your School Games. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 September 2012. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
- ↑ Iglesia, Facundo (2022-10-04). "Kickingball: a mix of football, baseball and home for Argentina's Venezuelan refugees". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
External links
- Parker, Ashley (2006-09-15). "Getting a Kick Out of Kickball". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2006-11-26. Retrieved 2006-09-29.
- Skipp, Catharine; Dishongh, Kimberly (2006-08-21). "Trends: All for the Love of the Game". Newsweek. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
- Beja, Marc (2008-02-05). "Still Kicking". Washington Square News. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2008-10-16.
- Whirty, Ryan (2009-07-29). "Follow the red bouncing ball". CITY Newspaper. Retrieved 2012-01-02.