BW Eagles Have a go at Ausball
- Thursday, April 12 2007 @ 11:57 am ACST
- Contributed by: Christopher P. Adams, Ph.D.
- Views: 4,493
(Alexandria, VA) In the shadow of the George Washington Masonic Temple here in Alexandria, Virginia, and with the snow melting on the George Washington Middle School Football field, 20 to 30 young men and women are out trying their hand at Ausball. It is a cold Easter Saturday morning but those brave souls willing to get out of bed are excited to put the footy boots on, kick some goals and have some fun. Ausball, is a version of "Rec Footy", developed for the US. It is a 9-a-side game played on a smaller oval (100 yards in length) with no tackling and various rules to encourage coed participation. According to the Eagles website, "No previous experience is necessary. Just some running clothes, maybe a pair of cleats or sneakers and plenty of enthusiasm."
This is the third week of the
Baltimore
Washington Eagles experiment with the Ausball concept. The first week
was an unmitigated success with 40 people showing up including 20 people new to
the game. The second week had low turn out as Washington DC's Cherry
Blossom Festival drew huge crowds and made parking near the Tidal Basin
impossible. After that "stuff up", the Eagles worked to book a field in
Alexandria (not easy during Spring Break). While not as many as the first
week, there are enough for three teams to play two games - a pretty impressive
effort given the snow and cold and the fact that many have left DC for the
Easter Weekend.
Denis Ryan, USFooty Kids National Director and BW Eagles founder, is pushing the
development of Ausball in the DC area and umpiring the first game. Ryan
sees a great opportunity for footy to fill a void in participatory sports that
occurs in the US after high school and college. According to Ryan, there
has been a huge upswing in organized coed sports that combine participation and
socializing. In Baltimore, where Ryan lives, Flag Football (American) has
grown tremendously in the last few years and the play-yard game of "kick ball"
has also had tremendous success. According to Ryan, "Ausball is a great
way to introduce the game and get a lot of people that have been sitting on the
fence involved in the game and in the Club. Some will want to try the next
step and play in the Metro games or for the Eagles or others will become fans of
the game."
I talked with Amy Bishop, wife of Eagle's Head Coach Matt Bishop, who was
sitting in the car trying to stay warm before the game. Bishop is
currently the leading goal kicker with the DC Punishment. Australian, but
a Rugby Leaguer by upbringing, Bishop is relatively new to the sport and enjoys
the Ausball concept. "It has been great. Lots of brand new players
including lots of new girls came down the first week and really enjoyed the
game." Bishop thinks that some of the rule changes are important.
"Having the rule that requires the ball go through a girl in the forward half
means that the boys don't just run a way with the ball."
The Eagles have three more weeks of their first Ausball season. It really
looked like a lot of fun. I might even be willing to dust off my footy
boots and have a kick.
A video companion piece can be viewed on youtube:
WFN
Ausball 4/7/07.