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Downball(wall and ball game)

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School Playground Wall
School Playground Wall
Downball bounces on ground before wall


Downball is a wall and ball game mostly played by children on the Australian continent[1][2][3][4]. It is also played on the North American continent where it is known as "Chinese" variation of the wall and ball game.

Downball is a game of bouncing a ball against a wall and taking it in turns to hit it back with your hand.

Downball is a popular schoolyard game played against a wall with a ball.

In reference to Australian Primary Schools: "The most popular ball game played against a wall in today’s schools – called Wall Ball, Handball or Downball".[5]

Downball is similar to other wall and ball games in that a wall is required. However one rule sets the game apart from other wall and ball games. The rule is that once the player hits the ball, the ball must bounce once then hit the wall next. Otherwise play stops and last player to hit the ball is out.

The downward path of the ball so that it bounces before hitting the wall is where the "down" part of the name Downball comes from. This feature of the game provides for some characteristics of game play including:

  • the ball rebounds up of the wall and then travels in an arc backwards towards the ground and bounces
  • the balls travel backwards of the wall is slowed
  • more time is available to get to the ball and take a shot which allows a slower paced game and facilitates group play

Group play is the most common form of the game and the number of players is only limited by the size of the wall and the available space. The server holds serve until they default their serve or go out. Players take turns returning the ball. Players go out if their attempt to return the ball is not successful. Also if the ball bounces twice after rebounding of the wall then the player closest to the ball goes out. Play continues until all but one player is out and the last remaining player is the winner of that game.

Downball is commonly played at recess (‘recess’ is the term describing free playtime in mid-morning) and lunchtime in primary schools.

Downball is commonly played with a tennis ball or rubber ball on a wall of a school building or school playground. It is also played in community playgrounds on multipurpose walls and on practice walls at community tennis clubs.

Downball naming conventions in Australia

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For many years in Australia both Downball and Downball (squares game) proponents have called each game "Downball". This naming problem is based on local folk-law or tradition.

Where Downball is the more popular game the name Downball refers to Downball. Where Downball (squares game) is the more popular game the name Downball refers to Downball (squares game).

Where both Downball and Downball (squares game) are popular Downball refers to Downball and Downball (squares game) goes by alternative names Four square or Handball (schoolyard game).

Generally speaking having two games both called Downball does not cause a problem in play because Downball (squares game) goes by alternative names.

North American variation

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This variation of Downball has the defining ball bouncing on the ground before the wall[6][7][8]. The "Chinese" variation[9] is a game version that utilise street sidewalk squares as a court against a building wall.

Timeline

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Playing Downball

Bouncing a ball against a wall game is first mentioned in 1916[10].

On July 4, 1954, the American folklorist Dorothy Howard arrived in Australia. In her ten months in Australia in 1954–5 as a post-doctoral Fulbright scholar based at the University of Melbourne, she travelled across the land, collecting and documenting children’s games and verbal lore in cities, country towns and small rural communities. Her meticulous work laid the foundation for research into children’s folklore in this country.[11]

wall and ball game on the sidewalk
wall and ball game on the sidewalk

Published in 1975, "The great American book of sidewalk, stoop, dirt, curb, and alley games" by Fred Ferretti and Jerry Darvin[12] details "Chinese" variation of the wall and ball game that utilise street sidewalk squares as a court against a building wall as follows:

  • two sidewalk squares against a building wall - played in Queens and in the West Oak Lane section of Philadelphia
  • five sidewalk squares against a building wall - played in Brooklyn's Bay Ridge section

Starting in 2010, the Childhood, Tradition and Change Project research team visited nineteen primary schools across the Australian continent to take a detailed sample of playground games being played. Downball was recorded as being played at school_05[13], school_10[14] and school_14[15].

Today, Downball is part of the physical education curriculum at primary schools where children develop the skills of hitting and control of the ball by hand[16] before embarking on tennis, volleyball and badminton.

In the future Australia's population is expected to reach 30 million by 2030. With the concomitant growth of Australian suburbs including new primary school and new community playgrounds, multipurpose walls are being built allowing more people to play Downball in Australia[citation needed].


Downball belongs in the ball game category but is not a squares game. Downball belongs in the wall and ball game category but is not a hand squash game.


See also

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squares games

hand squash games


Citations

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  1. ^ a b "Downball". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/OED/7637506882. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ MEAGAN ROOTH, JEMMA RYAN (13 July 2019). "Diamond Strikes the Right Note". Geelong Advertiser. p. 15. Retrieved 15 July 2024 – via The Wikipedia Library.
  3. ^ Barnes, Josh (14 November 2018). "Schools set to benefit". Diamond Valley Leader. p. 5. Retrieved 15 July 2024 – via The Wikipedia Library.
  4. ^ "Ballin' for the farmers". Maroondah Leader. 9 October 2018. p. 5. Retrieved 15 July 2024 – via The Wikipedia Library.
  5. ^ Mckinty, Judy (December 2016). "Losing our Marbles: what's happening to children's folklore in schools?". Play and Folklore (66): 37–44.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  6. ^ Hume, Donald (Jan 2005). "Recreational Games for Physical Education". Strategies. 18 (3): 27–30. doi:10.1080/08924562.2005.10591137. ISSN 0892-4562.
  7. ^ Gutelle, A (1989-08-01). "Games Kids Play Grab a Ball and Play! These "'City"' Games Are Great Anywhere". Sports Illustrated for Kids. p. 44. ISSN 1042-394X. Retrieved 2024-07-23 – via The Wikipedia Library.
  8. ^ Jones, R. F. (1969-05-26). "ALL-AMERICA ALL THE WAY". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 30, no. 21. p. 82. ISSN 0038-822X. Retrieved 2024-07-23 – via The Wikipedia Library.
  9. ^ Ferretti, Fred; Darvin, Jerry (1975). The great American book of sidewalk, stoop, curb and alley games. New York : Workman Pub. Co., page 78-79.
  10. ^ Douglas, Norman (1916). London Street Games. The St. Catherine Press, page 5.
  11. ^ Factor, June (May 2004). "Tree Stumps, Manhole Covers and Rubbish Tins: The Invisible Play-Lines of a Primary School Playground". Childhood. 11 (2): 142–154. doi:10.1177/0907568204043049. ISSN 0907-5682.
  12. ^ Ferretti, Fred; Darvin, Jerry (1975). The great American book of sidewalk, stoop, curb and alley games. New York : Workman Pub. Co., page 78-79.
  13. ^ Melbourne, The University of. "Downball - Ball Game - Childhood, Tradition and Change PUBLIC DATABASE". ctac.esrc.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  14. ^ Melbourne, The University of. "Downball - Ball Game - Childhood, Tradition and Change PUBLIC DATABASE". ctac.esrc.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  15. ^ Melbourne, The University of. "Downball - Ball Game - Childhood, Tradition and Change PUBLIC DATABASE". ctac.esrc.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  16. ^ "BOROONDARA PARK PRESS Issue 6" (PDF). 26 Apr 2024.

Further Reading

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Primary Sources