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Table football
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Table football (Bonzini style table).Table football (also called foosball) is a table-top game based on football (soccer). The origins of the game are lost in the mists of time, but most historians agree that the first tables probably appeared in France and / or Germany in the 1880s-1890s.
Contents [hide]
1 Origins
2 The game
3 Competition
4 Tables
5 Robots
6 Television and Film
7 See also
8 External links
[edit]
Origins
While several have claimed the honor of inventing the sport, no one has yet been able to produce irrefutable evidence of the exact time and place of the birth of the sport. Patents exist from as far back as the 1890s, and more detail on these are available in the external links section.
Table football is also known in the US as foosball, from FuÃball, the German word for football.
Table Football in different languages Region Language Translation Etymology
Brazil Portuguese pebolim; totó; futebol totó; fla-flu
Australia, Canada, United States English foosball; fussball from German FuÃball ("football")
United Kingdom English Table Football
Finland Finnish Pöytäjalkapallo combination of pöytä (table) and jalkapallo (football)
France French Baby-foot
Greece Greek ΠοδοÏÏαιÏάκι diminutive of ΠοδÏÏÏαιÏο
Germany German Kicker; TischfuÃball kicker = name of suisse company which got synonymous for the sport, TischfuÃball = the latter means "table football"
The Netherlands Dutch tafelvoetbal table football
Italy Italian calcio balilla; calcetto; biliardino
Portugal Portuguese matraquilhos; matrecos
Poland Polish piÅkarzyki small football players
Spain Spanish futbolÃn
Mexico Spanish futbolito diminutive of fútbol
Argentina Spanish metegol
Chile Spanish taca-taca onomatopoeic word describing sound when playing
Bosnia Bosnian karambol
Croatia Croatian karambol; stolni nogomet
Serbia Serbian karambol; stoni fudbal
Bulgaria Bulgarian джага; джаги
Turkey Turkish langırt onomatopoeic word describing sound when playing
Iran Farsi Futball Dasti
Czech Republic Czech fotbálek diminutive of fotbal
Slovak Republic Slovak stolný futbal
Denmark Danish bordfodbold table football
Hungary Hungarian csocsó
Belgium Dutch Kicker, sjotter
Guatemala Spanish Futillo
Thailand Thai à¸à¸¸à¸à¸à¸à¸¥à¹à¸à¹à¸° football table
Russia Russian наÑÑолÑнÑй ÑÑÑбол table soccer
Slovenia Slovenian namizni nogomet table football
[edit]
The game
To start play, the ball is served through a hole at the side of the table, or simply placed by hand at the feet of a figure in the middle of the table. Players attempt to use figures mounted on rotating bars to kick the ball into the opponent's goal. A ball may travel at speeds up to 40 mph (64 km/h) in competition. The sport/game/simulation requires quick reflexes with a delicate touch using the player's fine tuned motor skills, control and knowledge.
The basics include 'passing' the ball, where you have the ball in your possession with one bar, and pass it to another bar, and 'shooting', where you find a hole in the defense and attempt to score.
The winner is determined when one team scores a predetermined number of goals, say 3 or 11. A two-goal victory is most often required. In competition, every ball that enters the goal is counted, unless the player or players on the scoring team broke a rule during the play. Large events have referees that determine the infractions and penalties.
Foosball tables can vary in size, but a typical table is about 4 ft (120 cm) long and 2 ft (60 cm) wide. The table usually contains 8 rows of "foos-men", which are plastic, metal, wooden, or sometimes carbon-fiber figures mounted on horizontal metal bars. Each team of 1, 2, or 3 human players controls 4 rows of foos-men.
The arrangement of the foosballers is standard. Looking from left to right on one side of the table, you see:
Row 1 Your goalie 1 foosman (sometimes 3)
Row 2 Your defense 2 foosmen
Row 3 Opponent's attack 3 foosmen
Row 4 Your midfield 5 foosmen (sometimes 4)
Row 5 Opponent's midfield 5 foosmen (sometimes 4)
Row 6 Your attack 3 foosmen
Row 7 Opponent's defense 2 foosmen
Row 8 Opponent's goalie 1 foosman (sometimes 3)
Foosball strategy varies greatly. With teams of one human each, it is impossible for each person to control all four rows of foosmen simultaneously. Some players keep the left hand always on the goalie or defensemen and move the right hand among the other three rows. More aggressive players may take up an attack with the offense and midfield, leaving the goalie unattended.
With practice, it is possible to learn very fast "set-piece" moves, including the "snake", "pull-shot", and "front-pin". The pull shot is where you position the ball near the top of the oppositions goal. Then you pull your bar, which moves the ball downwards, and you aim for the hole or corner that is no longer guarded. The snake and front-pin both involve pinning the ball, or clamping the ball with your men. That way one can sway either direction.
[edit]
Competition
Foosball is often played for fun in pubs, bars, workplaces, schools, and clubs with few rules. Joan Avenue requires players to follow the "OFFICIAL RULES". "House rules" often include a ban on spinning your foosmen, so one's hand must maintain continuous contact with the handle. Also, there is the off-The-Feed rule, where if the ball is scored before it touches a player or bank the goal is given to the team who had been scored upon.
Foosball is also played in official competitions organized by a number of national organizations. Organized competition can be traced back to the 1940's and 50's in Europe. But the professional tours and bigtime money events began when the founding father of modern professional table soccer, Lee Peppard of Seattle, Washington, United States announced a "quarter million dollar tour" in 1975. Peppard went on to award several million dollars in prize monies and since his Tournament Soccer Organization went out of business in 1981 several orgs and promoters have continued holding large purse professional table soccer events worldwide. An international organization named ITSF (International Table Soccer Federation) was established in August 2002 to bring together all of them, as well as organizing World Championships.
Numerous local leagues exist around the world and there are huge differences in levels of skill between "pub" players and "tournament" players. A National League involving pub teams and University sides has recently been set up in the UK, and on an international level the ITSF World Cuptook place in May 2006 on a variety of ITSF-sanctioned tables in Germany to coincide with the FIFA World Cup. Austria, Germany and Belgium took the Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively.
[edit]
Tables
A Garlando style table with a game in progress
An 11-per-side Leonhart table football game in BerlinA vast number of different tables exist. The table brands used on the world tour and official ITSF tournaments are "French-style" Bonzini, "American-style" Tornado, "Italian-style" Roberto-Sport, "Belgian-style" Eurosoccer/Wood (Jupiter/ABC), "German-style" Tecball. Other major brands include Kicker, Garlando, Rosengart, Löwen-Soccer, Warrior, Lehmacher, Leonhart, and Smoby. There was also a 7-meter table created by artist Maurizio Cattelan for a piece called Stadium. It takes 11 players to a side. Another unique foosball set is the Opus Table created by the the Elevenforty company. Each table is hand-crafted, and each foosman is made to resemble his on-field counterpart.
Differences in the table types have great influence on the playing styles. Most tables have one goalie whose movements are restricted to the goal area. On some of these tables the goalie becomes unable to get the ball once it is stuck out of reach in the corner; others have sloped corners to return the ball. Other tables have three goalies, one in the center and one in each corner to reach the ball so sloped corners are not needed. Another major difference is found in the balls, which can be made of cork, plastic or even marble and metal, varying the speed of shots a great deal, as well as the "grip" between the man and the ball.
[edit]
Robots
Robots designed to play table football by roboticists at the University of Freiburg are claimed to be able to beat 85 percent of casual players. They use a camera from below a transparent table base to track the ball, and an electronic control system to control high torque motors to rotate and move the foosmen. Currently an expert player can beat the robot 10 games to 1. [1]. Foosbot is another foosball robot that currently claims to have never been beaten by a human.
[edit]
Television and Film
Appearances of Foosball tables and play in feature films and television series
FOOS : Be The Greatest © (USA, 2006)] – The History of American Foosball (Table Soccer or Table Football)
Long Shot (USA, 1981) Feature movie of a Foosball Championships starring 70's teen idol Leif Garrett. Also features an "over-the-top" ("Rainbow Shot") foosball stunt double closeup by pro Johnny Lott
Il Postino (1994, Italy) A female character flirts with the protagonist while playing foosball.
Dazed and Confused (1993, USA) Features a long scene in a foosball and billiards parlor.
Notting Hill (1999, USA) A stored foosball table is visible in Hugh Grant's character's flat
Friends (USA NBC 1994-2004). The show featured a Dynamo table in earlier seasons, and later a Tornado (Valley) brand table, the latter which is the standard competition table on the pro circuit in the USA. The stars of the show were also reported to play the game frequently. The foosball table is originally purchased in 1.12, "The One With The Dozen Lasagnas," when Joey and Chandler purchase it instead of a kitchen table, and Monica beats the boys at the game. It is stolen in 4.02, and another (The Tornado with green playfield, black & yellow men, and marbled sides) is purchased by Chandler in 4.07. friends-tv.org's FAQ claims a third table was used as a stunt table in 6.06, to depict a collapsed leg in the episode where Chandler fails to let Joey win at the game. The table is destroyed by Monica in the series finale, 10.18, The Last One, in order to rescue two pet fowl, Chick Jr. and Duck Jr., who were lost in the table by Joey. Other episodes that feature the table are 2.16, The One Where Joey Moves Out, and The One with the Prom Video with guest star Tom Selleck.
The Simpsons (1997, USA) In the episode entitled "Lisa's Sax", Homer is seen imagining himself playing foosball with The Scream at the Springfield Museum.
Cheers "Achilles Hill" (Season 9, Episode 13, Original Air Date 1991-01-10) Carla believes the foosball table is possessed. [2]
In Adam Sandler's The Waterboy, his mother refers to American football as foosball. This mis-pronunciation gained some popularity and is sometimes used in the same regard.
[edit]
See also
Sport
Subbuteo
Table hockey
Air hockey
[edit]
External links
Origins
History of Table football
History of Foosball (Table Soccer or Table Football) Movie - Now Available
International and national federations
International Table Soccer Federation
Foosball Australia
British Foosball Association
French table-soccer federation
German table-soccer federation
Danish table-soccer federation
VIFA, the main North American federation
R.T.S.F., Russian Table Soccer Federation
General sites
EZ-Board Foosball - A discussion forum covering foosball frequented by United States tournament and recreational table soccer players
Fooswatch.com - a foosball directory, foosball playing locations worldwide
Foosball website with tournament dates, forums, and stats
foosball.com, American site with rules, tricks, results
foosballheaven.com, American site, original host of rec.sport.table-soccer usenet FAQs
Inside Foos, American site, known for sports video of pro tournaments with color commentary
Foosworld.com - Tournament results, playing locations, player profiles, ratings and interviews
Foosball Game Table Differences - This webpage covers different types of Foosball Games available and things to look for before buying one.
The Foosball Fanatic - A Foosball blog
Local leagues
Tulsa Foosball
Calcetto International League
Oxford University Table Football Club
Cambridge University Table Football Society
Warwick University Table football Society
Colorado Foosball
New York City Foosball
San Antonio Foosball
Videos
HISTORY OF FOOSBALL MOVIE TRAILER
Official international P4P DVD shipping (free, like linux)
"Wicked Foosball Shot"
Foosball at Google Video
KiRo the Foosball Robot
Extreme foosball skills with slow-motion replays
Long Shot (1981) Feature movie with over-the-top foosball stunt double closeup by pro Johnny Lott
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_football"
Categories: Ball games | Indoor sports | Tabletop games of physical skill | 1937 introductions
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This page was last modified 13:34, 15 August 2006. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
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