Ball-Stock: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
(Categorize Tags into Eras and Regions) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Game Family=Baseball | |Game Family=Baseball | ||
|Location=Germany | |Location=Germany | ||
|Game | |Game Regions=Europe | ||
|Description=<p>per Dick, 1864. A team game like rounders, but having large safety areas instead of posts or bases. A feeder makes a short gentle toss to a batter, who tries to hit it. The batter-runner then chooses whether to run for a distant goal-line or a nearer one, for which there is a smaller chance of being plugged. The nearer station can hold several runners at once. Three missed swings makes an out, as does a caught fly. Versions of Ball-Stock are found in British and American | |Game Eras=1800s | ||
|Sources=<p><span>Dick, ed., | |Description=<p>per Dick, 1864. A team game like rounders, but having large safety areas instead of posts or bases. A feeder makes a short gentle toss to a batter, who tries to hit it. The batter-runner then chooses whether to run for a distant goal-line or a nearer one, for which there is a smaller chance of being plugged. The nearer station can hold several runners at once. Three missed swings makes an out, as does a caught fly. Versions of Ball-Stock are found in British and American boys’ books in the mid-Nineteenth Century.</p> | ||
|Sources=<p><span>Dick, ed., </span><em>The American Boys Book of Sports and Games: A Practical Guide to Indoor and Outdoor Amusements</em><span> </span>(Dick and Fitzgerald [reprinted by Lyons Press, 2000], 1864)<span>., pages 112-113.</span></p> | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 08:07, 4 July 2012
Game | Ball-Stock |
---|---|
Game Family | Baseball |
Location | Germany |
Regions | Europe |
Eras | 1800s |
Invented | |
Tags | |
Description | per Dick, 1864. A team game like rounders, but having large safety areas instead of posts or bases. A feeder makes a short gentle toss to a batter, who tries to hit it. The batter-runner then chooses whether to run for a distant goal-line or a nearer one, for which there is a smaller chance of being plugged. The nearer station can hold several runners at once. Three missed swings makes an out, as does a caught fly. Versions of Ball-Stock are found in British and American boys’ books in the mid-Nineteenth Century. |
Sources | Dick, ed., The American Boys Book of Sports and Games: A Practical Guide to Indoor and Outdoor Amusements (Dick and Fitzgerald [reprinted by Lyons Press, 2000], 1864)., pages 112-113. |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Comment | Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Has Supplemental Text |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />