Rubenstein's Revenge Explained

Juggling Pattern:Rubenstein's revenge
Minimum:3
Difficulty:6/10 >3.5
Siteswap:52233
Period:5
Parity:odd
Synchronicity:asynchronous
Symmetry:symmetrical
Other:A simplified animation of Rubenstein's Revenge that omits the clawed catches

In toss juggling, Rubenstein's Revenge is a 3-ball juggling pattern named by George Gillson after its inventor, Rick Rubenstein.[1] Along with Mills' Mess and Burke's Barrage, it is one of three well-known named juggling patterns that involve complex carries and crossed arm throws. Rubenstein's Revenge is usually considered the most involved and difficult of the three.[2]

Description

Rubenstein's Revenge is a shape distortion of the three-ball Siteswap 52233. A shape distortion means that the throws are done from non-standard positions, in this case, using crossed arm movements. The varying heights can be represented in Siteswap notation by the numbers 52233. In this notation, each of the numbers represents one particular throw in a sequence of five throws.

This is one round of Rubenstein's Revenge.

In addition to the varying ball heights, Rubenstein's Revenge incorporates elements of chops, claws and orbits. While the ball thrown as a 5 is in midair, the two other balls are carried in circular orbits around each other. These balls are then thrown and caught with the palm of the hand turned at an odd angle as in claws. One of these balls is caught with a downward diagonal movement as in chops.

The overall pattern results in a fluid and natural spiraling motion of the hands and balls. The trick is difficult to understand, especially from a written description.

References

  1. Gillson, George. Beyond the Cascade: Step-by-Step Guides to 88 Classic 3-Ball Juggling Tricks. p 68, The Ugly Juggling Co: UK 1993.
  2. Dancey, Charlie. Charlie Dancey's Encyclopædia of Ball Juggling p 128. Butterfingers: Bath, England 1994.

External links