
Sport Game: all around the players

| Sport Game Encyclopedia: Danball |
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Danball is an invented sport played in the street by two teams of
opposing players. The object of the game is to have fun. Players attempt
to advance a ball, hitting it with implements called Dansticks, across
one of two goal lines to score points. Danball quickly spread around the
world after the World Wide Web became widely used in the mid-1990s.
History Danball was invented January 31, 1992, in the United States, just outside Anniston, Alabama, by a group of teenagers who attended Saks High School. The sport began as a chaotic exercise vaguely resembling road hockey. It was named in honor of Dan, a delivery driver for the Custom Pizza company, who'd brought pizza to the players a few hours before the invention of the game. Much of Danball's early allure was the ironic and subtly self-mocking tone in which the players declared themselves "world champions" in the World Danball League (WDL), which consisted of only one team, the Anniston Cavaliers. Danball was at that time talked about far more often then it was played. After most of the Saks group had left high school and gone on to various universities, some continued to play the game and shared it with new friends they met in college. In 1995, with the growing popularity of the Internet and the World Wide Web, former Saks students at Jacksonville State University and Auburn University created a Web page for the WDL. The page contained the first set of codified rules for Danball, and contact information for some of the game's creators. To the players' surprise, the then-fledgling Web directory Yahoo! included a Danball section in its sports category, and listed the WDL's home page. Soon, the players had been contacted by people from across the United States and around the world who'd seen the WDL Web page and decided to ty the game. Teams and leagues reportedly were formed in several towns in the U.S., as well as Belgium and New Zealand. Through 1996 and 1997, most Danball activity remained centered in Jacksonville, Alabama, a few miles from the game's birthplace. A 7-team league of Jacksonville State students staged several tournaments. After one of the game's inventors and major proponents left Jacksonville, interest waned and Danball's presence on the Web began to decline. In November, 2001, Andrew Ferguson of Melbourne, Australia, found the rules for Danball on the Web and formed several teams in that city. After modifying the rules, Ferguson's group changed the name of their game to Suburbanball, and dubbed their league the World Suburbanball League. In January 2006, Joe Walsh and Miles Clothier, two half drunk Irishmen in Broken Hill, Australia, started the Broken Hill Danball League (BHDL). The BHDL was started due to a lack of interest in the so-called normal sports like football, and also because they like pizza, an integral part of the danball experience. Known teams in the history of Danball The following teams and sub-leagues are known to have organized and played under the World Danball League. Most have since ceased playing. Suburbanball teams are not included. Anniston Cavaliers, Anniston, Alabama Ohatchee Blades, Ohatchee, Alabama Auburn Sawbones, Auburn, Alabama Members: Walton C. Gibson, John L. Griffin, Seth Mason MadScanners, Madison, Wisconsin SUNY-Cortland Danball Alliance, Cortland, New York Lilburn Lightning, Lilburn, Georgia Jacksonville State University Danball Alliance: Jacksonville Dragons, Jacksonville, Alabama Alexandria Argonauts, Alexandria, Alabama Wellington Warpigs, Wellington, Alabama Dalton Diamondbacks, Dalton, Georgia Trion Titans, Trion, Georgia Calhoun County Phishsticks, Jacksonville, Alabama Saks Blue Devils, Anniston, Alabama Belgian Danball League: Heavy BP’s Always Forever De Spelers Helli’s Flanders Broken Hill Danball League The Warriors (WEST) The Dominos (CENTRAL) The Arctic Petrels (NORTH) The Red Herrings (SOUTH) London, Ontario Danball League The Vikings Team Valerie How to play Teams and players Danball is usually played by two teams, each with three players on the field at a time. Free substitution is allowed, but only when play has been stopped. The Street The game is played on a 100-foot stretch of street, normally asphalt- or concrete-paved. The 20-foot area in the center of the street is called “no man’s land.” Goal lines are at both ends of the 100-foot section of street. The goal lines and the edges of no man’s land are usually marked with sidewalk chalk. Equipment Players use Dansticks to hit the Danball. Any object that can be easily carried by a player and used in the game without great risk to other players can be used as a Danstick. The Danball is normally made of plastic or rubber, and is spherical, from 12 inches to 18 inches in diameter. Kicking and handling of the Danball are not allowed. Beginning play and scoring Play begins with teams facing each other, standing on opposite sides of the field outside no man’s land. One team serves the ball to the other by hitting it across no man’s land. None of the players may enter no man’s land until the ball has passed through to the other side. After that, all players may roam freely about the field with pants down. Each team attempts to advance the ball past the opposing team and across the goal line by striking the ball and passing it among teammates. When one team scores a point, play is halted and the ball is served again, at the discretion of the scoring team. Play continues until one team has scored at least 10 points and holds a lead of at least 2 points. Pizza Feast Before a Danball match it is customary for all players to engage in a pizza feast, in honor of the day the game of Danball was invented. More detailed instructions are available from the Belgian Danball League's rules page. |
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