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Games We Played: Fuzzball

Steve · April 15, 2020 · 12 Comments

Welcome to the first installment in an occasional new series of blogposts called “Games We Played.”

The idea behind this series is to — in a quick and hopefully fun way — pass on to my grandchildren’s generation the games we played as kids. And by games I don’t mean Monopoly and Chinese Checkers and I certainly don’t mean any game that can be played sitting on the couch with a computer, tablet or phone in your hands.

I’m talking about the games we played outside with friends in the neighborhood. For me, that was in the late 1960s and early 1970s in a North St. Louis neighborhood called North Point, nestled up against Walnut Park, Baden and the St. Louis County line with Jennings. But what I’ve learned talking to some friends and family about these games is that our memories of the rules of these neighborhood and schoolyard games are widely inconsistent. Even the names of the games varied by when and where they were played.

But that’s kind of the point. We all remember the games and the rules differently not because we’re all old people losing our memories — although that most certainly is true in the case of some of my friends (naming no names here and present company excepted) — but because there were NEVER any firmly established rules to begin with. These were the games we made up ourselves or inherited from older siblings and changed to meet our own needs and abilities. Making up or adjusting the rules was all part of the game and, I think, that made us smarter, more resilient and more creative kids.

Today I begin with THE seminal game of my childhood. Fuzzball was one of many, many derivatives of baseball that we played in North Point. No doubt kids in other parts of the country played some version of this game, but this one has a distinct St. Louis heritage because its roots are tied to another St. Louis-born game called corkball, which was originally played with broomsticks and roundly carved and tape-wrapped pieces of cork from beer barrel bungs. That game became so popular that official bats and balls were eventually manufactured to meet the needs of the many who played it. According to a Wiki page, the game was played in the streets and alleys of St. Louis as early as 1890, and as time went on the game travelled around the country as St. Louis servicemen taught it to their buddies during World War II and the Korean War.

But enough about corkball, other than to say that little ball was hard and could blacken an eye or knock out a few windows if not played in a big old field (like the corkball fields at several city parks like Hickey Park in Baden) or inside a rectangular cage like those that popped up adjacent to taverns around town. It also hurt like a dickens when it hits you.

So for brevity, which is already waning I realize, let’s just say that in the interest of safety, the cost and hassle of window replacement and childhood innocence, someone eventually replaced the corkball with a tennis ball, which is, of course, how fuzzball got its name. The game could now be played in backyards, alleys and schoolyards without incurring the wrath of neighbors and principals. Usually. By the way, some kids burnt the fuzz off the ball to make it go faster.

Here’s a quick, two-minute video that teaches the rules given below:

+ The game was usually played with four players, two to a side, a pitcher and a catcher. There were no bases to run. It was simply a game of pitching and hitting. Here are the rules as we played it:

+ There’s no ump so no “called” balls and strikes. Just throw the ball over the plate.

+ Two strikes and you’re out.

+ One strike and you’re out if the catcher cleanly catches a swing and miss.

+ Foul tip behind the plate and you’re out. And by “plate,” I mean whatever was laying around, usually someone’s glove or jacket.

+ Foul tip caught by the catcher is a double play, if there is an “imaginary runner” on base. More on this in a minute.

+ Ground ball or fly ball caught by either player is an out.

+ Ground ball bobbled or past the pitcher is a single.

+ That single gives you an imaginary runner on base, and these “ghosts” move around the base path one base at a time with subsequent hits. A double would move the runner two bases.

+ See rule about double plays above.

+ A pop fly or line drive past or over the pitcher’s head is a double.

+ If you’re playing in a schoolyard with a fence, over the fence is a homerun and off the fence a triple.

+ If there’s no fence, you can designate anything you want as the homerun marker, of course.

Three outs and you switch sides. If the innings seem to be passing too quickly, you can always call for “double innings,” but any imaginary stranded runners do not get to stay on base when you begin the second set of three outs. Unless, of course, you change the rules.

That’s it. You can play with more kids and put people out in the field. You can play with just three and just rotate between pitcher, catcher and hitter. You can do what you want.

Until next time:

Get outside (when you can)
Play with your friends (when it’s safe to do so)
Make up your own rules.
Most importantly, have fun
.

Creativity, Games We Played, History, Sports and Culture

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jim Ford says

    April 15, 2020 at 10:14 am

    Very cool Steve. I have a Foosball table in my garage that I intend to bring to MRCC! Let the games begin!

  2. Kenny Hall says

    April 15, 2020 at 10:49 am

    …new band name…The Waning Brevity band

  3. Sue English says

    April 15, 2020 at 11:00 am

    Steve,

    This was fun to read, and I’m looking forward to the series. I didn’t play Fuzzball, but my mom bought plenty of tennis balls to keep around the house. The playing field was in our backyard, and we broke a lot of windows over the years. I think my dad got pretty good at replacing the glass in the windows.

    I don’t know if our grandkids will ever enjoy the times we had in our North County neighborhoods. There were so many kids outside playing we could usually come up with enough kids for two teams. If everyone else was inside, we would usually play “hotbox” where we had two baseball plates/two kids playing catch with one running trying to reach the bases safely.

    Take care,
    Sue

  4. admin says

    April 15, 2020 at 1:25 pm

    Thanks, Sue! So good to hear from you! Love “hotbox.” We called it “run-ups…”

  5. admin says

    April 15, 2020 at 1:26 pm

    Love this, Kenny. It’s hard to be brief…

  6. admin says

    April 15, 2020 at 1:27 pm

    Thanks, Jim…let’s not get Fuzzball and Foosball mixedup!

  7. Mary Costantin says

    April 16, 2020 at 12:10 pm

    Our version of a bat & ball game played in a semi-vacant lot on our block in a small 1940s/50s Hudson River town: pitcher had to be able to pitch up hill because Jonesy’s )Loy was basically a hill but it was OUR hill; batting—-if you got 32 fouls at one time in your turn up at bat, that counted as an out (yes, thirty-two times in one at-bat but do consider that our players ranged in age from not-quite five to maybe 13 and nobody was ever benched!) Thanks, Steve

  8. admin says

    April 16, 2020 at 1:48 pm

    Thank you, Mary, for writing and sharing your own story. Love the fact you got 32 (!) fouls! Hope you are dafe and well, my friend.

  9. Tom says

    February 27, 2024 at 10:09 am

    We played fuzzball on the South side in the 60’s. Lindenwood (StL) and Sappington (Crestwood) neighborhoods. We thought the name referred to the fuzz on a tennis ball, with rules coming from cork ball (e.g. Carondelet Sunday Morning Club). We used either a broom stick or a cork ball bat. I was a submariner without bending way over; in hindsight don’t know how I did it.

    Occasionally we would find a golf ball and slip it into the game. Usually knocking it so far away we didn’t bother going to get it.

  10. Steve says

    February 27, 2024 at 10:55 am

    Thanks for the note, Tom. It was a great childhood game, to be sure. I played once years later as an adult with some of the same guys and we still did okay, although I’m sure our fast balls were not so fast…

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About the Author

Steve Givens is a retreat and spiritual director and a widely published writer on issues of faith and spirituality. He is also a musician, composer and singer who lives in St. Louis, Mo., with his wife, Sue. They have two grown and married children and five grandchildren.

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