Vitilla: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Game |Term=Vitilla |Game Family=Baseball |Location=Dominican Rrepublic |Game Regions=Rest of World |Game Eras=Derivative, Contemporary |Invented Game=No |Description=<p>The ...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|Term=Vitilla | |Term=Vitilla | ||
|Game Family=Baseball | |Game Family=Baseball | ||
|Location=Dominican | |Location=Dominican Republic | ||
|Game Regions=Rest of World | |Game Regions=Rest of World | ||
|Game Eras=Derivative, Contemporary | |Game Eras=Derivative, Contemporary | ||
|Invented Game=No | |Invented Game=No | ||
|Description=<p>The game of <em>vitilla</em> ("vee-TEE-ya')</p> | |Description=<p>The game of <em>vitilla</em> ("vee-TEE-ya') is reportedly played widely in the Dominican Republic. "What Dominican doesn't play vitilla?," asked Yankee catcher Gary Sanchez. Several other Major Leagues attribute some of their skills to the game.</p> | ||
<p>". . . the concept is the same [as baseball] -- to hit a moving object with a stick. But because the vitilla is smaller than a baseball and moves unpredictable when thrown, and because the bat is thinner, some . . . believe playing it so regularly helped their hand-eye coordination."</p> | |||
<p>A <em>Times </em>article does not detail the game's rules, and it is not yet clear to Protoball whether batters actually run bases. A photograph suggests that balls and strikes are determined by whether a pitched cap hits a small (12 inch?) target set up behind the batter. </p> | |||
<p>The article refers to a similar game, called chapita, played in Venezuela.</p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
|Sources=<p>James Wagner, "Dominican Players Sharpen Their Skills With a Broomstick and Bottle Cap," <em><span>New York</span></em><span><em> Time</em>s</span> (Sports Sunday section), October 6, 2017.</p> | |Sources=<p>James Wagner, "Dominican Players Sharpen Their Skills With a Broomstick and Bottle Cap," <em><span>New York</span></em><span><em> Time</em>s</span> (Sports Sunday section), October 6, 2017.</p> | ||
<p>Accessed 10/9/2017 via search for <nyt broomstick bottle cap></p> | <p>Accessed 10/9/2017 via search for <nyt broomstick bottle cap></p> | ||
<p>May be at <em>https://nyti.ms/2yNiVE4</em></p> | <p>May be at <em>https://nyti.ms/2yNiVE4</em></p> | ||
|Comment=<p>Protoball welcomes additional details on the games rules, history, and spread</p> | |||
|Has Supplemental Text=No | |Has Supplemental Text=No | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 07:59, 9 October 2017
Game | Vitilla |
---|---|
Game Family | Baseball |
Location | Dominican Republic |
Regions | Rest of World |
Eras | Derivative, Contemporary |
Invented | No |
Tags | |
Description | The game of vitilla ("vee-TEE-ya') is reportedly played widely in the Dominican Republic. "What Dominican doesn't play vitilla?," asked Yankee catcher Gary Sanchez. Several other Major Leagues attribute some of their skills to the game. ". . . the concept is the same [as baseball] -- to hit a moving object with a stick. But because the vitilla is smaller than a baseball and moves unpredictable when thrown, and because the bat is thinner, some . . . believe playing it so regularly helped their hand-eye coordination." A Times article does not detail the game's rules, and it is not yet clear to Protoball whether batters actually run bases. A photograph suggests that balls and strikes are determined by whether a pitched cap hits a small (12 inch?) target set up behind the batter. The article refers to a similar game, called chapita, played in Venezuela.
|
Sources | James Wagner, "Dominican Players Sharpen Their Skills With a Broomstick and Bottle Cap," New York Times (Sports Sunday section), October 6, 2017. Accessed 10/9/2017 via search for <nyt broomstick bottle cap> May be at https://nyti.ms/2yNiVE4 |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Comment | Protoball welcomes additional details on the games rules, history, and spread Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Has Supplemental Text |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />