**popping in for a moment**
I just have to say that I find all of this cricket information very, well, informative. Wish I'd known all this ten years ago when I first read Life, the Universe, and Everything. Large chunks of that book made no sense to me whatsoever.
Of course, that's pretty much par for the course when I'm reading Adams. I completely and totally did not get the end of Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency because I went into it not knowing a damn thing about "Xanadu" or Coleridge. This led to an amazing epiphany in the middle of Junior Year British Lit class.
I just have to say that I find all of this cricket very, well, informative. Wish I'd known all this ten years ago when I first read Life, the Universe, and Everything. Large chunks of that book made no sense to me whatsoever.
Just to make it even weirder: he originally wrote that story as a Doctor Who spec script called
Doctor Who and the Krikketmen.
When you Americans say "dodge ball" do you specifically mean the type of game we saw in "The Pack"?
That's the one. And I think anyone who wants to play it again is nuts.
There was something on the news a few months ago, about how they were getting teachers to teach children those playground games because they are being forgotten. Kids don't just play like they used to, so games like four-square, skipping (the rhymes) and red-rover aren't being passed down to kids. It's also part of an attempt to make kids more active again.
I don't see a lot of kids playing like they used to. Mostly it seems to be supervised play-- when it happens at all, which we almost never had. (Though an adult was just a "MOM!" away.) the only kids I ever see playing unsupervised belong to someone in my co-op, and they
really
could use the supervision.
Kids don't just play like they used to, so games like four-square, skipping (the rhymes) and red-rover aren't being passed down to kids.
What's four-square? I'm wondering if it's similar to the handball (or hand tennis) that we used to play when I was at high school.
But have you seen the UK equivalent, Bulldog? 30 kids each side of a "pitch". They run at each other and try and force the other side back. No rules
The only times I can remember choosing teams for games was in school, when teachers chose the captains and then make the captains choose the teams. (I hated being a captain, because if I didn't choose the best players first, I'd get hassled, but if I didn't choose my friends first, they'd be mad at me, so pretty much I had a choice between being hurt physically or mentally. I'd usually choose physically, since I was pretty well aware that the fourth-grade politics of who's friends with whom would last a whole lot longer than some bruises.)
When we were playing something like street hockey, we all had roller blades, but there was only one kid who had pucks and sticks, so he'd decide who was on which team. (And he'd usually decide pretty fairly, since after the first few times, it's no fun to play against a bunch of kids you can easily beat.)
I've heard a lot of stuff about how damaging playing tag is, but that's actually one of the most adaptable games ever. We usually had two trees designated as bases, and the rule was that you could stay on base for 30 seconds at a time. When I started having knee problems, the rule was that I could stay on base for two minutes. My best friend's youngest sister, born when we were in third grade, has Down Syndrome. For awhile when she was a toddler, when she wanted to be involved in whatever fun was going on but couldn't walk yet to actually play, we'd sit her in the middle of the yard and designate her as a base, so people would always be stopping to sit down and hold her hand a play with her for a minute or so. TV/Book tag was also great for those of us who were better at thinking fast than running fast, but the kids who liked running could still do a lot of it, if that was how they wanted to play.
What's four-square? I'm wondering if it's similar to the handball (or hand tennis) that we used to play when I was at high school.
You draw a big square, divided into four smaller squares, on the blacktop. One kid stands in each square, and you bounce a playground ball between each other, and there are some rules that I can't remember about where it's allowed to bounce and the order in which people have to hit it.
have you seen the UK equivalent, Bulldog? 30 kids each side of a "pitch". They run at each other and try and force the other side back. No rules
I have.
shudders
And I thought having to play rugby was bad.
It's like handball, but not against a wall. We used to play "British" Bulldog growing up. We also used to pllay what we called soccer-baseball, and something called "All around the World". Did other people play Elastics?