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Kicking it 1999 style

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Category Archives: Spaldeen games

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Okay, here’s a suggestion….

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 17, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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Okay, here’s a suggestion. Problem is, it’s not tongue in cheek, and technically it’s not losing money, more like giving it away. If you’re all about street games, take the money to the streets! Start with New York since that seems to be where many of our roots are. Have a city-wide street games tournament and exhibition – give prizes and award money! Get sponsors – that way they can lose their money too! Maybe make it an annual thing. Imagine streets of the City closed off to punchball games, stickball games, skelly (or skully depending on where you were from), jacks, jump rope, etc. If it loses enough money in New York, you can take the show on the road and lose money in other urban areas.

Posted in Punchball, Site suggestions, Skully, Stickball | Tagged Streetplay business goals

I grew up in the Greenpoint…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 17, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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I grew up in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn in the fifties and sixties. We played both basic versions of stickball, the “strikeout” format, with a box chalked on a wall for the strike zone. We usually played this version down by the East River docks, where the streets were lined with boxy wharehouses. Hits were scored based on which story of the wharehouse on the opposite side of the street the ball hit. First floor was a single, etc. Balls caught off the wall were out. Fast and exciting game, and you could have as few as one per side, because fielding was minimal. Even a hard hit shot simply rebounded off the wharehouse wall. The other format was the one more like baseball. With sewers for home and second and first and third somewhere in between. The ball was pitched underhand on a bounce. Someone with longer fingers (like me) could put spin on the ball to make it move in practically any direction when it bounced. We included the sidewalks as fair territory, but hitting a car on the fly was out. But as most people know, rules varied practically from block to block, and it was advisable to get them straight before playing on an “away” court. One time we were visiting another team, and they tried to tell us we forfiet the game because we lost the ball. With these and other games we would keep ourselves busy all day. When I go back to the neighborhood, I don’t see anyone playing street ball, and I wonder what they’re doing with their time.

Posted in Brooklyn, Stickball, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged I grew up..., Off the Wall

Whenever we didn’t have…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 16, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 16, 1999
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Whenever we didn’t have a ball, we would take a wire coat hanger, shape the bottom into a small circle, and fish balls out of the sewer. Somehow, no one got sick. The balls were usually pretty dead, but you couldn’t beat the price. Also, if a new ball went down the sewer, we would fish it right out.

Posted in Other Spaldeen games

Absolutely! I was very excited…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 15, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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Absolutely! I was very excited to hear recently that Spalding is going to make and sell those wonderful pink balls again. I have not seen NY kids play stickball ( only adults in organized leagues),stoopball and many other creative outdoor games. I hope that will change.

Posted in Reader Stories, Stickball, Stoopball | Tagged video game debate

Izzy et al: SPALDEENS…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 15, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 15, 1999
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Izzy et al: SPALDEENS are back! Read all about them on this great site and go out and buy them!

Posted in Other Spaldeen games

I’ve heard about this game….

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 15, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 15, 1999
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I’ve heard about this game. How far would the ball actually go? And did you really take a perfectly good rubber ball and split it to play this?

Posted in Other Spaldeen games

I grew up in the 50’s in…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 14, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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I grew up in the 50’s in Brighton, a part of Boston. We played 2 versions of halfball, usually with 2 players per side. There was a wall version where anything off the wall was a hit, depending on height. However, if a fielder caught a line drive or a rebound off the wall, all baserunners were erased. In the street version we hit for distance. Strikes and fouls were outs. Believe it or not, there was a front page story in the Wall St. Journal in 1985 about the summer joys of halfball.(I still have it). It claimed that the game was only played in two cities: Boston and Philadelphia, and the best teams from those areas were about to play the 1985 “World Championship” tournament in a schoolyard in Charlestown, Mass.

Posted in Boston, Halfball, Other Spaldeen games, Wallball / Off the Wall/Point | Tagged I grew up..., Off the Wall, Summer

We had a neighbor, old man…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 9, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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We had a neighbor, old man Gurren, who had a French Renault Dauphine with the two tone horn. He claimed the car had great gas mileage. Everyday before he left for work he’d blow the horn on both tones and wake everybody up. The neighbors were really bent out of shape. This guy was a blow hard, always cutting down American cars and to make things worse, he worked at the Ford Plant in Cincinnati and what was even more of a blow was that I was definitely a Chevy man (of 9 years old). We use to go to St. Joseph’s Church Friday Fish Fry each week and ever since old man Gurren bought that “frenchie” car old man Gurren was always braggin about his French import. He blasphemed American cars and to a kid that could name – by sight – every American car produced in the last 10 years and the various models, old man Gurren was committing a large unforgiveable sin. Yes a Fish Fry, what else does a Catholic boy do on Fridays, who lives across the street from a Catholic church and whose mother is about to marry a man who has a daughter whose is a Benedictine Nun. I decided old man Gurren had to be stopped and I hit upon a plan that would make this guy look ridiculous. Every night for about two weeks I would sneak to this guy’s car and from a gas can I snitched from a landscaping truck parked nearby, I’d fill up his gas tank. Now our neigborhood was small and old man Gurren would go right after supper and sit in Holman’s bar or pitch horseshoes while betting on the horses at Klainies’ bar and tell outlandish stories of the fabulous gas mileage he was getting in his Renault Dauphine Deluxe – 50-60 miles to the gallon and by the end of two weeks everybody believed him to be a fool, as he was claiming 75-80 miles to the gallon when my step-dad to be’s Chevy was getting 14 miles per gallon. This was my own effort to get everyone to buy American. The men called him crazy and stupid. The guy who ran the local gas station backed him up and told everybody that he hadn’t seen old man Gurren in for gas for at least two weeks, but all of the men just figured he was going into another area to buy gas. Old man Gurren was becoming the laughing stock of our neighborhood. My plan was working. I didn’t tell anyone I was doing this to old man Gurren. And I planned it to be sweet revenge for American made cars. I never thought about the damage I was doing to the dealer who sold Renaults or the poor suckers who were either running there to get these wonderful cars, only to be disappointed when the cars didn’t get 75 miles to the gallon of gas or the people who stayed away from the dealer. Today I would probably be in the center of some kind of law suit. It all ended when I got caught “borrowing” the gas can from the landscaping truck one night by Mr. Bowman who owned the landscaping truck. He thought some one was stealing his gas and he sat on the Dolan’s porch one night and saw me and followed me. He told me he wanted all the gas back, and I said I couldn’t pay for it because it was 19 cents a gallon and I didn’t have the money but I promised I’d get him the gas back little by little as long as he didn’t tell my soon to be step-dad cause I’d get the beatin’ of my life. Mr. Bowman wanted to know why I was stealing the gas and filling up old man Gurren’s gas tank and I told him about my revenge on old man Gurren, he couldn’t stop laughing. Mr. Bowman knew that old man Gurren was actually telling the “truth” down at Holman’s bar – as old man Gurren knew it. Mr. Bowman told me he would not rat me out if I replaced his gas. I was temporarily relieved but how could a nine year old earn enough gas money now that school started up again? I thought long and hard running many senarios through my young brain. I finally hit on an idea that was beautifully simple – if I could put gas in old man Gurren’s car, I could get gas out. My idea was to siphon the gas out of old man Gurren’s car every night until I “paid back” Mr. Bowman. And so I did, a length of old garden hose that Queenie our hound had chewed up in a fit of anger and Mr. Bowman’s gas can. I can’t believe I did it, but every night for close to two weeks, after old man Gurren’s lights were off, I slipped out of my bedroom window, down on to our kitchen roof, grab the 5 feet of old garden hose I stashed in the gutter and drop to the ground and head for Mr. Bowman’s truck, grab the gas can and sneak to old man Gurren’s car. I’d take off the gas cap, slide the hose in until it bottomed out and suck like heck on the hose. Several times I had to repeat the process because a car was coming down the street or some one was staggering home from Holman’s or Klainie’s bar. Nobody would call the cops for somebody filling a gas tank, but taking gas out would be a reason to stop a kid of 9 years old. Some nights I’d spill a half gallon in the gutter just trying to get the hose from my mouth to the gas can. One night I got gas in my mouth and was sick for two days. Mr. Bowman heard I’d gotten sick and got word through to me from my …

Posted in Ace King Queen, Reader Stories | Tagged pranks and troublemaking, Summer

BOB— Close—I…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on May 1, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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BOB— Close—I think they were called Pensey Pinkies. In my neighborhood, we used to go in cycles, sometimes “Spaldeen” was the pink ball of choice, and sometimes, we went through a Pensey Pinky phase.

Posted in Other Spaldeen games | Tagged Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Grew up on Wilson Street…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 29, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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Grew up on Wilson Street and Lee Avenue in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Attended Boys High School. Most friends went to Eastern District or Seward Park High School. Most of us played punch ball with a “baby line.” three steps to Germany, Johnny on the Pony, Chinese handball and box ball. We read and traded comic books. “Action Comics, Detective Comics, Marvel, King Feature Comics and read the comics in the newspapers. Dick Tracy, (my favorite), Smiling Jack with Fat Stuff losing a button to a ubiquitous chicken who followed him everywhere. Saturday matines for 5 cents we saw a chapter (Tim Tyler’s Luck or Flash Gordon) the Paramount News (Monkees do the craaaaziest things,)two or three features, a cartoon and sometimes a door prize announced from the stage. I could go on forever and include the radio programs for which we raced home from the school playground to hear.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Boxball, Brooklyn, Johnny on the Pony, Locales, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball | Tagged Chinese handball

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