Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Shelter in place with Wiffle ball

- Matt Sieger

Looking for a backyard game to safely play during this COVID-19 season? Look no further than the great pastime of Wiffle ball.

I was pleased to learn that the history of Wiffle ball began in the year of my birth, 1953. From a very young age and up until my teenage years, I played Wiffle ball in my backyard or on the sandlots of my suburban town in northern New Jersey. It was also great on vacations, as you could set up for a game of Wiffle ball wherever you went, even on the beach.

The beauty of the game was that the ball wouldn’t travel very far, which was ideal for backyards and enclosed areas. When our boys were young, they enjoyed playing Wiffle ball in our rather small backyard. They could be home run hitters by smashing the ball over our nottoo-distant fences (a lot of trips for me to the neighbor’s yard).

It was practical considerat­ions that led David N. Mullany of Fairfield, Conn., to design the Wiffle ball for his 12-year-old son, David, to use in their backyard. The younger David and his friends had begun to play a game in the Mullany yard with a perforated plastic golf ball and a broomstick handle. They had given up on baseball and soft

ball because they couldn’t find enough players, there was no field available and they had broken too many backyard windows.

Young David tried to throw curves and sliders with the tiny golf ball, but he told his dad it was killing his arm. His father had been a semi-pro pitcher and knew that throwing curveballs was harmful to young arms. So he got some ballshaped plastic parts from a nearby factory and, on his kitchen table, cut various designs into them and sent his son out to test them.

The design with eight oblong perforatio­ns on one half of the ball worked the best. Young David and his friends could throw curveballs, sliders, screwballs, sinkers and rise balls. That led to a lot of strikeouts, which the kids called “whiffs.” Hence the name Wiffle ball was adopted.

Not long after that summer, Mullany produced and sold the first Wiffle perforated plastic balls. The game caught on fast and now the balls are available across the U.S. and in many countries around the world.

The Wiffle Ball is about the same size as a regulation baseball, but is hollow, lightweigh­t, of resilient plastic, and no more than 1/8 inch (3 mm) thick. The ball manufactur­ed today is nearly identical to the original ball.

The rules are based on those that young David and his pals used in the backyard.

The field is laid out with foul lines and markers for single, double, triple and home-run areas. The recommende­d size of the playing field is a minimum dimension of 20 feet wide (approximat­ely eight paces) at the home run markers by about 60 feet long (about 23 paces) from home plate to each home run marker on the foul lines.

Single markers are placed approximat­ely 24 feet from home plate on the foul line. Double markers are placed approximat­ely 20 feet in back of the single markers on the foul line. Triple markers are placed on foul lines 20 feet back of the double markers.

You can play the game with only two players, but you can comfortabl­y include up to five players per team — pitcher, catcher and a fielder in each of the hit areas — single, double and triple. There is no base running.

A batter can make an out in three ways: 1) He or she swings at a pitched ball and does not foul tip the third strike. A foul tip caught by the catcher does not count as an out with two strikes. 2) The batter hits a fly ball that is caught in fair or foul territory. 3) The batter hits a ground ball that is caught while the ball is still in motion in the single area.

If, for example, the batter lines a ball that lands in the air in the double area, it counts as a double even if the fielder retrieves the ball while it is still rolling. The fielder must catch the ball in the air. The same applies in the triple area. Fielders cannot go beyond the triple area to attempt to catch a home run.

Bunting is not allowed and the batter cannot obtain a base on balls.

Wiffle ball is one of the safest sports around, so the Wiffle Ball company was shocked when in 2011, the State of New York proclaimed that Wiffle ball, kickball, freeze tag and dodgeball were “unsafe” and a “significan­t risk of injury” for children. The state declared that any summer camp program that included two or more of such activities would be subject to government regulation.

Wiffle Ball executives originally thought the order was a joke, and the story became a frequent source of ridicule and amusement. People from across the nation successful­ly pressured the New York legislatur­e to remove Wiffle ball and other tame entries from the list of high-risk activities.

After the reversal,

State Sen. Patricia Ritchie of Watertown, N.Y., said, “At a time when our nation’s No. 1 health concern is childhood obesity, I am very happy to see that someone in state government saw we should not be adding new burdensome regulation­s by classifyin­g tag, Red Rover and Wiffle ball as dangerous activities. I am glad New York’s children can continue to steal the bacon and play flag football and enjoy other traditiona­l rites of summer.”

Now that our nation’s No. 1 health concern is the coronaviru­s, I am happy to see that the game of Wiffle ball, invented over 65 years ago, is still a safe backyard sport that can be enjoyed by all.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES, FILE ?? Former Giant Barry Bonds participat­es in a family Wiffle ball game before the start of a 2007 tilt against the Braves.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES, FILE Former Giant Barry Bonds participat­es in a family Wiffle ball game before the start of a 2007 tilt against the Braves.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States