Handball (schoolyard game) explained

Italic Title:no
Players:2 minimum
Skills:Manual dexterity
Strategy
Social skills
Hand-eye coordination
Endurance
Strength
Determination

Handball is a children's ball game widely documented in Australian schools, similar to downball. The rules of the game vary considerably across different sites and conditions, but it is generally played on a flat game court with lined square zones (occasionally with a wall for rebounds), and involves at least two players, who each occupies a square and take turns hitting a ball (often a tennis ball, squash ball or, occasionally, a bouncy ball) with their bare hands into other player's square(s). The game is very easy to set up and can be conveniently adapted to any environments where square/rectangular-lined flat grounds can be found, such as other gyms/arenas, parking spaces and even concrete slabbed driveways and footpaths.

In Australia and New Zealand, the sport is sometimes confused with European handball, an Olympic sport that is not widely played in either country.

History

On July 4, 1954, the American folklorist Dorothy Howard arrived in Australia. In the next nine months, she visited nineteen primary schools across the country to painstakingly document the folk games the children played. Among the children's games Howard recorded was four square, also known as handball, which was played in seven of the schools. The rules of the game varied between them, and many schools played with considerable deviations.[1] [2]

Rules

Basic rules

In popular culture

Handball has entered the meme culture. In March 2013, former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd released a video of him playing handball at Brisbane State High School, which led to him becoming part of a "handball meme". In late November 2017, Rudd played handball with students in a school in Brisbane, and the accompanying video - claiming he was the "king of handball" - reached 40,000 views on Facebook.[5]

Handball is the main theme of the children's television series, Handball Heroes, which aired on ABC Me (Then ABC 3) in 2013, as well as Hardball which aired on ABC Me in 2019.[6] [7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. McKinty . Judy . December 2016 . Losing our marbles: what's happening to children's folklore in schools? . Play and Folklore . 66.
  2. Web site: 2011 . Darian-Smith . Kate . Kate Darian-Smith . Factor . June . Four Square . 3 November 2023 . Childhood, Tradition & Change.
  3. Web site: Handball Rules for Kids . . February 22, 2017 . familiesmagazine.com.au . May 12, 2021 .
  4. Web site: High School Handball Tournament Grand Finale. . April 3, 2015 . Youtube . MontFilms . May 12, 2021 .
  5. Web site: Handball Memes. www.facebook.com. en. 2017-10-31.
  6. Web site: Handball Heroes. ABC Television. en-AU. 2017-10-31.
  7. Web site: Hardball. IMDb. en-AU. 2020-10-31.