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Category Archives: Locales

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I must say that this site…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 11, 2003 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
Original author: Pedro Berdeguez Jr [e-mail]
 

I must say that this site took me back to my youth at 109st btwn Madison & 5th Ave in Manhattan in the late 60s to mid 70s…I’ve read all the messages! I had one of best “caps” ever made. I found an old school chair,removed the metal floor things on the bottom of the legs and filled them with candlewax. They were almost indestructable, slid great and was so difficult to “blast”.Boy, that was one of my favorite games to play…Thanks for this site and for bringing me memories of those days…signing off, a true Killer Diller!

Posted in Manhattan, Skully

Hello, my name is “Pete”….

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 6, 2003 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014
Original author: Pedro Berdeguez Jr. [e-mail]
 

Hello, my name is “Pete”. I was featured in Jim’s book,”Hanging Out-City Kids,City Games”(1974)as the inventor of the game “Psyche Job”. I’m the one in the t-shirt,and my brother Tony(refered to as “Chuck” in the basketball section)is wearing the headband.Jim,time has passed but you’ll remember me and the gang of 106th and 3rd Ave in Manhattan. Jim,if you’re still out there,it would be really special if we could connect!Here’s my email address: the way,I still have the signed copy of “Hanging Out…” you gave me in Madison Square Garden the evening the book was first put out to the public!I hope to hear from you soon.Meanwhile, I’ll keep the “spauldeen” bouncing on the bars…Your friend,Pedro “Pete” Berdeguez Jr.

Posted in Hanging Out, Manhattan, Site suggestions

Wow! Its great to read…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 5, 2003 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
Original author: tcmits1
 

Wow! Its great to read about how other’s have played Skelly. I remember spending many summers playing it (as well as kick the can, catch and kill, ringolerio, tops, ….). My block (In Brooklyn, Gratten St, not far from Knickerbocker Ave) had great glass bottle top players. Its kind of sad that with all the high tech games, todays kids won’t have that kind of physical experience. Yeah, I exaggerate. But, maybe not, I wouldn’t let my kids play in the street; not with todays vehicular pace. While dialing a cell phone you could go over many skelly boxes!

Posted in Brooklyn, Skully | Tagged Summer

I fell in love with a Girl…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on January 5, 2003 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Rudolph J. sCIALO (rudy) [e-mail]
 

I fell in love with a Girl Named Honey in the late 60’s – we went to SBHS. I had to leave Brooklyn in a rush, went into the service and did not communicate with her until 2002 – she is still wonderful. If anyone questions love at first sight or any kind of true love, don’t – it will stand any test if your honest and loyal. I heard it said that her husband is a wonderful man, I know he is truly blessed. See, I now realize the value of the treasure I lost. But I also realize that the brief moments I held that treasure, changed me forever. From the time I met her Honey has been the best part of my heart, this has save my life on more than one occasion. Honey will always be special to me. I have been married for almost 23 years now and the only person on the face of the earth I love more than Honey is my wife. A Book I know well, talks about this, in part it says “Love does not look for its own interests – It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things – Love never fails – There remains faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” Cherish the people you love and who love you and never take love for granted. RJS – “Let It Rain”

Posted in Brooklyn, Young romance

Someone just informed me…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 16, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
Original author: Marilyn [e-mail]
 

Someone just informed me of this site. What fun it is! I was thrilled to see a basket of Spaldeens in the store and bought a half dozen. I don’t think I ever bought one as a kid because during WWII rubber was rationed and the only place you could get them was on the black market. We acquired ours on the roof when the boys lost them playing stickball. We would retrieve them and wash them in hot water, that revived the bounce and we played these familiar girls games. No one in the store where I bought them understood the meaning of these precious balls. I had fun bouncing them on the counter. I remember “A” my name best but the other games ring a bell too. Thanks for sharing. I grew up in The Bronx, near Crotona Park.

Posted in Bronx, Clap and Rhyme, Girl games, Stickball | Tagged I grew up...

I grew up in Bensonhurst…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 13, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
Original author: Dak [e-mail]
 

I grew up in Bensonhurst in the 60’s and we definitely had our choice of Pensie Pinkies or Spaldeens. We used to get them at Doc’s (later to become Egg Haven) across the street from PS. 97. Though I was a Spaldeen fan, Pensie Pinkies never went dead and never split open. But, there was nothing like writing on a new Spaldeen with a Bic pen. Ahhhhhh!

Posted in Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games | Tagged I grew up..., Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

We played the “traditional”…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 12, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Marauder [e-mail]
 

We played the “traditional” stickball when I was a kid in Queens, NY, but we used a loaded whiffle-ball bat with a taped up barrel for a little extra weight. To us, it was a kids’ game. We grew out of it as we improved at baseball. We couldn’t all play on the same little league team and hardball was too expensive (we were ghetto) and didn’t have 18 guys who could play hardball to get a game going. Softball…face it, softball is for girls and old men. We took up fast-pitch (wall) stickball in schoolyards. Nowdays we play in a league all over the NYC metro area. There is no running the bases; the batter gets credit for a hit if the ball passes certain distances (marked out on the field) without being cleanly fielded or caught on the fly, as the case may be. Most players use either a metal bat, a combination wood/metal bat or a wooden bat with sheet metal rolled onto the barrel- it’s too hard to make solid contact with the old, broomstick-style wooden bats. Rules limit the size of the barrel. The kink is that we play with shaved and singed down tennis balls (We use old ones with not as much air in them). The effect is less resistance, so the ball is pitched faster and breaking pitches have some sick movement. Because the ball is also smaller than a conventional tennis ball, it is much harder to get a hold of one. However, pitching this smaller, lighter ball probably does even more damage than a baseball does to your arm over the long run. Typically, the games are low scoring with a ton of strikeouts. The top pitchers frequently strike out 15-20 batters in a 9-inning game. Basically, if the guy has good control, you’re going to be up against it. No-hitters happen, especially during doubleheaders, when games are only 7 innings. You don’t usually scratch out runs. Most scoring comes from home runs. During the playoffs, when both teams have their aces going, you’ll get 1-0 games where teams get less than 5 hits per side. But that’s what makes the game all the more intense. Any run you can scratch out matters immensely. There have been many leagues over the years. In the late 80s/early 90s there were about 200 teams of all skill levels. Because most of the better players joined forces and consolidated into super-teams, fewer people play now but the competition is much tougher.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Queens, Stickball, Stickball rules

Great scene of johnny on…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on November 28, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
Original author: mikep
 

Great scene of johnny on the pony during the begining credits of “a bronx tale” starring Robert deniro and Chazz P….brings back memories…i remember wearing headbands fashioned out of white handkerchiefs and sleeveless tea-shirts..to add to a stereotype…

Posted in Bronx, Johnny on the Pony, Other Games

Any out there from east…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on November 25, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 25, 2002
Original author: Stu Koenig [e-mail]
 

Any out there from east 56th St. and Linden Blvd. mid to late 1940’s to around 1950-51? Went to P.S. 232 (Winthrop Jr. High School). The Tomahawks of East 56th St. Billy Simon, Bobby Brown, Big and Little Louis, Owen Seitel, Mike Walsdorf. We played our games in the big alley on E. 56th St. If you remember, send e-mail.

Posted in Brooklyn, Locales

In Bensonhurst Brooklyn…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on November 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
Original author: Paul L [e-mail]
 

In Bensonhurst Brooklyn we played another version of boxball. We used 4 boxes and the pitcher threw the ball bouncing it in the 2nd, 3rd and 4th box in quick succession. The batter had to hit the ball back into the 1st box in front of the pitcher. Caught was out, out of the box was out. One bounce a single, etc. we considered the most advaced form of box baseball and the older kids were very good at throwing the ball in the 3 boxes with all kinds of spins and reversing bounces. You could almost have he ball grazing the ground by the third bounce and very difficult to hit. The games we played that were offshoots of punchball or slapball depended on how many players were available. We called them triangle (3 bases) and squareball (4 bases) They were played the width of the gutter (street). There was a chalk square in front of the batter that the pitcher had to lob the ball into for a strike. The batter could slap any pitch. Justballs was selling spaldeens as of a year ago.

Posted in Box Baseball, Boxball, Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball

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