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Home→Categories Spaldeen games→Boxball - Page 7 << 1 2 … 5 6 7 8 9 >>

Category Archives: Boxball

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On my block, there were…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 24, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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On my block, there were a few more games played with either the Spalding ( courser better feel) or Pensie Pinkie. The first was stoop ball. On Haring Street in front of 2450 the stoop consisted of 4 steps. Each step was assigned a point value. The bottom three 100 points if hit directly on the point while the top step 500 points ( more hazardous). Games were for 1000 pts with 5 pts for hitting the stoop and catching it on 1 and only 1 bounce. 10 pts were gotten if the ball hit the stoop and caught on a fly ( not the point area). You were out if the ball was caught with more than one bounce, errored, or missed the stoop entirely(trying to hit the top stoop and failing, and finally hitting one of the elder mean you can’t play here or block the stoop from us using it to go down B00000000.Games could be either one on one or teams.Box ball ( 2 squares of concrete lenthwise), Box baseball ( 3 squares lenthwise), 4 person boxball ( 4 squares in a square pattern) and finally stoopball baseball. Finally I might add, actually the best balls for stickball off the wall was the cheaper no-name ones. They were usually 5 – 10 cents each (spalding 25 cents) softer, either yellow or pink and could be manipulated such that you could throw a really mean sinker Knuckleball, and a wicked slider that broke of the end of the table. Unfortunately they split easier too.

Posted in Box Baseball, Boxball, Other Spaldeen games, Stickball, Stoopball, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged Off the Wall, Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

off 164th and the concourse,…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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off 164th and the concourse, in the mid-late 50’s, we played mostly 1 bounce “fungo” (self hit) stickball with a spaldeen. hits dtermined by distance. in riverdale from 1960-69, we played with a shaved tennis ball (which curved, threw screwballs) against a chalk box in the ps 24 schoolyard. sometimes had an outfielder. that was MY game. also played bench ball, punch ball, stoop ball, and curb ball (back in the old neighborhood-the concourse). and box ball.

Posted in Boxball, Bronx, Curbball, Locales, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Stickball, Stoopball | Tagged Riverdale

[no title]

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 29, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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Curtis Sliwa, the Stickball Commissioner is now at the mike. “I’d like to thank all the people for coming out and celebrating what this little pink ball meant for us growing up in the streets of NYC. Stickball in the streets, stickball in the schoolyard, punchball, handball, boxball, and the 100 different games that we played. This ball was an important part of what it meant to grow up in the City of New York, then, twenty years ago it vanished like the Dinosaurs of old. But thanks to Spalding it’s now back Thanks to John Campi of NY Daily News who understood the importance of these games to the youth of our city, and how they actually helped make the streets safer because people were out there playing the games. Today’s contest is the kickoff for the competition that will be taking place in NYC and Hudson County. Today is an exhibition -a distance contest. We’re going to see if the people can hit the legendary 3 sewers. Stepping up to the plate will be 10 members from the Fire Department led by the Commissioner Tom Von Essen, 10 members from the Police Department, led by Commissioner Howard Safir and a celebrity team lead by the greatest manager of all Joe Torre. The celebrities will bat first.

Posted in 1999 Stickball Classic, Boxball, Manhattan, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Special topics, Stickball | Tagged Police Plaza

In the early days in Sunnyside,…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 27, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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In the early days in Sunnyside, Queens, when we were kids, we didn’t have a lot of space to run around in our little courtyard. Our ball games were usually against a brick wall or on concrete pavement. All the boys and girls played together – running bases, stick and boxball, single-double-triple, etc. Of course the girls did the A My Name is Alice thing, and we also played Hit the Ball on the Penny. For all these games, the ball of choice was almost always a Spaldeen. They had a good feel and a good bounce – and, as I recall, a good smell when they were brand new (that didn’t last long, maybe two paces out of the store and that was it…)

Posted in Boxball, Clap and Rhyme, Other Spaldeen games, Queens, Spaldeen games | Tagged "A My Name Is Alice...", running bases, spaldeen types

I grew up on the lower east…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 27, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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I grew up on the lower east side of Manhattan in the late 50’s early 60’s. I am sure we called the game SKELLZIE. Our day would start off with a visit to the A&P on Bleecker and Leroy st. There we would, err……… borrow a cap from a Prell shampoo bottle, (it was plastic and tappered from top to bottom). It held lots of wax and your favorite, lucky penny. We would then go to the public park on Carmine street and play the game. The guy that worked for the parks deptartment, Rocky, was good enough to paint a Skellzie board on the ground for us. As I can remember, Rocky was a great guy always willing to do things for the kids in the neighborhood. I can’t remember the size of the board, although I’m sure what seemed very large back then probably wasn’t so. I don’t think the board could have been much more than 5’X 9′. When we tired of playing the game we would play Buck-Buck, Box Ball, Stoop Ball, and maybe if it was hot enough go for a swim in the Hudson. Things have certainly changed in 40 years, oh well! Any way, looking forward to seeing the final version of the Skellzie board. Keep the faith. Mike

Posted in Boxball, Johnny on the Pony, Locales, Manhattan, Other Spaldeen games, Skully, Stoopball | Tagged I grew up..., Lower East Side

July,1939,The Bronx. Six…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 25, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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July,1939,The Bronx. Six of us were playing a pickup game on Daley Ave. (between Tremont and 178th St)right in front of the “Mad Doctor’s” house because it always ticked him off. This day he called the cops. As the Squad car rounded the corner, someone yelled, “Cheese it, the Bulls” We scattered to various spots on the sidewalk and tried to look innocent, so that the cops would just keep going. But they didn’t. The stopped in front of the Doctor’s house who came out and began fingering the guys. The cops herded five of the six ( and the stick) into the Squad Car and hauled them down to the 48th Precinct Station. The 6th player (me) had ducked into a doorway and escaped notice. As soon as the coast was clear, I (like Paul Revere)sounded the alarm to a few parents who had to pay a nickle (each way) to take the Tremont Ave. trolley to the police station and “bail out” their kids. The lectures and the warning didn’t impress us because we were back the next day, right in front of the Doctor’s house playing stickball, curbball, stoopball, slugball, and/or boxball. In those days, we paid 5c for a Leader and 15c for a Spaldeen. One day we found a golf ball and used it to play stoopball until I got a great hit that broke a neighbor’s window. We scattered because we knew she was an old grouch and wouldn’t give back the ball.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Boxball, Bronx, Curbball, Other Spaldeen games, Stickball, Stoopball | Tagged slugs (the game)

“By Bruce Deitchman on…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 20, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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“By Bruce Deitchman on Wednesday, May 26, 1999 – 12:05 am: Please allow me to share my views on the subject. IMHO, Spaldeens (as they are pronounced) are the proper tool for games such as stickball, however I have found Pennsy Pinkies more appropriate for Chinese handball and boxball.“ I gotta agree with everything the guy above me here says. Additionally, the Spaldeens were great for the game of Steem. Where a few guys choosed up sides and ya pitched the ball to the batter as if it were a hardball. A box for the strike zone was drawn on a wall with chalk behind the batter, and the pitcher paced off (I forget how many) several yards to the chalk drawn pitchers mound. Regular balls and strikes added an more action. Ground rules varied depending on how many players were in the game. This was one of my favorites when I was a young teenager. We usually played in the school yard courtyard. Spaldeens were the ball of choice because of their liveliness bouncing back to the pitcher when the batter missed your pitch. 🙂

Posted in Ace King Queen, Boxball, Other Spaldeen games, Stickball | Tagged Chinese handball, Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Folks, On Sunday June…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 11, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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Folks, On Sunday June 13 from 12 to about 5, we’re going to be on Flatbush Ave – near Grand Army Plaza – along Prospect Park between the library and the zoo. We’d love to have people come visit us and play a game of punchball, skully, boxball – or take a whack at a new Spaldeen in our Benefit Stickball event. Can you imagine – Flatbush as the stickball field!! If you can’t come – check it out on-line, we’ll be putting pictures and stories from the event. See ya then.

Posted in Boxball, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Special topics, Stickball | Tagged 1999 Back to Brooklyn Festival

In St Louis in the ’60s…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 7, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsJune 7, 1999
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In St Louis in the ’60s and ’70s we used to play four-square, as well.

Posted in Boxball, Other Spaldeen games

I grew up in West Philly…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 31, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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I grew up in West Philly in the 70’s. what we called “Box Ball” was played on a “baseball diamond” (anything would do…never on a real field) played with a tennis ball, pink rubber ball (solid) , or a white rubber ball (hollow). The game was played like baseball except instead of a pitcher the batter would drop the ball and hit the ball with their fist.. aiming at someone they felt couldn’t field or just over someones head… and you would run the bases and score like in baseball.. 3 outs per inning… never heard of what everyone else calls “box ball” anyone else out there that remembers playing such a game and what you may of called it????

Posted in Boxball, Other Spaldeen games, Philadelphia | Tagged I grew up...

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