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PostPosted: 22 May 2004, 23:55 
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Thursday, May 20, 2004

PORTLAND, Ore. — If you were one of those kids who never got picked for the dodgeball team, you get a second chance.

The grade school game is now hot among young adults.

"It's ridiculously fun. It's high-energy, you don't stop moving. There's sensory overload," said Colleen Finn, who founded the Portland adult dodgeball league this year.

And throwing a ball hard at someone can be fun, too.

Grown men and women are turning dodgeball into a recreational sport, with pickup games and championship tournaments.

The game's visibility may well grow after this summer's release of a movie starring Ben Stiller, "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story." It's the tale of a group of misfits who want to save their gym from a takeover by a fancy fitness center.

Finn founded the Portland league, which just wrapped up its season, as an indoor activity for kickball players during the city's infamously rainy winters. Word quickly spread, and in less than two weeks she had eight teams.

Players have to be at least 21, because Finn, 25, doesn't want anyone to feel left out if the teams go out for beer after the game.

Fittingly, games are held in the gym of a former elementary school.

"There's always that kid who wasn't picked for a team in the fifth grade," Finn said. "This is the perfect chance for redemption."

The idea is to have fun, so rules are loose. Ten players line up on each end of a court with a line of balls between them. The whistle is a signal to grab the balls and hurl them at each other. If you're hit, you're out; the first team without players loses.

Cameron Levine, the 28-year-old captain of Portland's America's Freedom team, was looking for a group activity that involved "some kind of exercise." He felt limited to pickup basketball games, until he saw an Internet posting for the Portland league. He and several friends signed up.

Between running to catch balls, trying to dodge them and throwing them at opposing players, the movement is constant. While that makes it excellent exercise, dodgeball isn't for the out-of-shape.

"It helps to develop coordination. It's jumping, it's lateral movement, it's throwing. There's a lot of things that enhance fitness. But you typically need to be fit to do it," said Dr. Linn Goldberg, professor of medicine and head of the division of health promotion and sports medicine at Oregon Health & Science University.

Levine said injuries are rare, but at the end of a particularly heated game his arm is sore.

A few years back, the hitting that's intrinsic to the game gave dodgeball a bad reputation in school yards, and some schools talked of banning it.

But the hitting is what appeals to the grownups.

"We got a guy in the foot and took him off his feet. It was awesome," said Sean Tufts, a linebacker who played intramural dodgeball at the University of Colorado. He was recently drafted by the Carolina Panthers.

At Kent State University in Ohio, Olsen Ebright is manager of the campus dodgeball club. Pickup games started in 2003, and the game is now officially recognized as a club sport.

"I'm a senior now, and I have so much stress. But on Fridays I get to go throw balls at people for two hours, and the stress is gone," the 22-year-old said. "It's a blast."

There's even a governing body for dodgeball - the National Amateur Dodgeball Association which holds seven tournaments a year, including the Outdoor Nationals July 23-24 in Schaumburg, just outside of Chicago.

While organizer Bill DePue says the average age for dodgeball enthusiasts seems to be in the mid-20s, a few years ago, one team had players over age 60 in the tournament. All were graduates of the same high school.

"I think it goes back to the fact that everybody's played it," DePue said. "Whether it was dodgeball, bombardment or whatever you want to call it."


"The power to Destroy the planet, is insignifigant to the power of the Air Force----Mudd Vader


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PostPosted: 23 May 2004, 01:35 
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"Growing old is mandatory. Growing up is optional"

"Retreat, hell! We just got here!"-Captain Lloyd Williams, 2nd Marine Division, Belleau Wood, France, WWI


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PostPosted: 23 May 2004, 23:32 
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Oh Man, it has been one of my dreams to have an adult dodgeball team.
Time to hit people in the nads!

Anyone see that dodgeball commercial with Randy Johnson?
It's killer.<img src=icon_smile_wink.gif border=0 align=middle>


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PostPosted: 24 May 2004, 08:59 
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Location: Missouri
if they dont use bowling balls, they're all wusses

"We sleep safely in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would harm us". George Orwell

Fighting For Justice With Brains Of Steel !
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PostPosted: 24 May 2004, 19:16 
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Joined: 27 May 2003, 18:48
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Location: Still fighting the indians in Western Massachusetts
You could be sadistic and throw bowling balls caoted in Greek fire at people standing under a sprinkler. Just a thought.Adds a little spice dont ya think.

By this time tomorrow I shall have gained either a pearage or Westminster Abbey........Nelson

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PostPosted: 24 May 2004, 22:51 
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Favorite tactic: Pitching one ball up in the air, and while the opponent tries to catch it, nail him in the groin with the second ball you hid behind your back...

Wonder if they have a team at WSU?...

I don't just think outside the box...I turn it inside out with my mind.


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PostPosted: 24 May 2004, 23:29 
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Horrido, and i thought i was the only one to do that.

We have an airforce version of it except with Racketballs. WE play 4 on 4 on all 4 walls, But the idea is to score hits and not returns. And that is how you play a heater match in a phonebooth <img src=icon_smile_evil.gif border=0 align=middle>

"The power to Destroy the planet, is insignifigant to the power of the Air Force----Mudd Vader


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PostPosted: 24 May 2004, 23:32 
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Mudd,

Whatta' ya' think of that game the pilots invented called "crud"?


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PostPosted: 25 May 2004, 01:38 
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Joined: 02 Aug 2002, 14:24
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We would also coordinate simultaneous shots at opponents next to each other, just on the outside of either of them. They'd focus on dodging the incomming, but tended to forget about dodging each other.

How do you fit eight people in a raquetball court (other than me and 7 well-oiled bikini babes)?

I don't just think outside the box...I turn it inside out with my mind.


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PostPosted: 25 May 2004, 02:22 
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Tritonal i was a running back, if you would see me in person you would know why, although i'm a little smaller these days. Crud became my alltime get even activity, besides mentaly breaken folks down..lol

I also have a nice 3 generation brunswick pooltable with leather pockets, slate table and a custom embroidered felt top. Where else could a young allstar running back get to punk the Vice Wing King <img src=icon_smile_evil.gif border=0 align=middle>

Problem is today that, its very open now and popular. You can find crud clubs and so forth, what used to be a Fighter pilot fraternity event hs become very mainstream. all bases have several leagues etc.

It actually became funner overseas than in conus. Usually a squadron picks a local offbase joint, and thats where the full on contact versions are usually paid, outside of prying sissy's.

here is a link to a personal website of mine i have collected various rules and versions o the game.

Feel free to print them out..

http://www.moonlighter.microworld.com/game_of_crud.htm


"The power to Destroy the planet, is insignifigant to the power of the Air Force----Mudd Vader

Edited by - mrmudd on May 25 2004 01:29 AM


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PostPosted: 25 May 2004, 08:44 
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Funny, Crud is almost identical to what my friends and I did with the billiard balls on my dad's billiard table at age seven...before I was instructed otherwise with a silver plastic wiffleball bat.

I don't just think outside the box...I turn it inside out with my mind.


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PostPosted: 25 May 2004, 09:58 
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Thanx Mudd.


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