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im looking for the name of a sport possibly american where a scoop is used as an entension of the arm.

2006-09-25 08:59:50 · 12 answers · asked by jeff lemon 1 in Sports Other - Sports

12 answers

It is called jai alai. Very popular in southern florida. They use that scoop to throw a ball against a wall and then catch it when it comes back. Somewhat similar to raquetball.

2006-09-25 09:03:32 · answer #1 · answered by B-Money 5 · 0 0

Jai Alai. Check the spelling, I'm sure I misspelled it! really popular here in South Florida and Puerto Rico.

2006-09-25 09:07:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Pilota in Basque and Catalan, pelota in Spanish, or pelote in French (from Latin pila) is a name for a variety of court sports played with a ball using one's hand, a racket, a wooden bat (pala), or a basket propulsor, against a wall (frontón in Spanish, frontoi in Basque, frontó in Catalan) or, more traditionally, with two teams face to face separated by a line on the ground or a net.

The Hellenic people, historians say, among the variety of games they played, “amused themselves intensely playing pelota.” An important group of Greek writers gave their opinion about the origin of the game of pelota. Agalis, a man of the humanities from the ancient island of Corfù, attributes its invention to the princess Nausicaa, who lovingly took the warrior Ulysses into her arms.

Homer, in epics VI and VII of his Odyssey, immortalizes and reflects that damsels amusing themselves with the game of pelota. “When damsels and Nausicaa had their appetites satisfied, they took off their veils and played pelota together...” Discovered in 1926, a recording on the walls of Athens, dated approximately 600 years before Christ, shows a scene of the game of pelota celeste or “Ukrainian.”

These quotations defer quite a lot from the current pelota game. But almost all authors have given in the temptation of the genesis of sports and attribute the Greeks the parenthood of pelota. Alexander the Great had his pelota instructor, Aristonicos de Cariste, on the Portico of the Parthenon.

Literary quotations reference the games of pelota between the Greeks and the Romans. The scarce research into clarifying the era of the pelota accepts that Romanisation, where it occurred, implanted the game of pelota in Europe. In the old continent, pelota games took root in France, the Netherlands, England and the Iberian Peninsula.

In the 12th century, there is a gradual increase of documents that support the expansion of the game of pelota. In the Middle Ages, it is evident that courtiers, nobility and the kings had their so-called “trinquetes.” France is the pioneer in the game of pelota, with respect to its possible similarity with modern times, including two modalities: “la longue paume” and the “courte paume”.

In the 13th and 14th centuries, the “paume” game spreads throughout all of France. A. de Luze, a studious of pelota evolution, in 1933 counted the existence of more than 300 “tripots,” or games of pelota, during a time that spanned from the 13th century to the 14th century. The first news of the “long” game comes on the verge of the French Revolution.

In Spain, there are scarce indications with respect to the game of pelota. However, it is significant to point out references in this regard by Quevedo, Cervantes, Calderón de la barca, Zabaleta, etc. Goya’s 1779 painting, “the game of pelota,” truly records a pala [bat] game among a group of courtesans.

In the 17th century, the preferred game of pelota was the “long game” using a glove or “laxoa.” It is in the last decade of the 19th century when the most representative modalities of the game take root: mano [hand], pala, “remonte” and “cesta-punta,” and these modalities were exported to a large part of the world. Cesta-punta is the modality that becomes the most universal. America becomes the continent that receives the game of pelota which the Basques take with them in their culture.

In the 20th century, professional play begins to bud. Organized competitions begin in 1925. Tournaments spring up everywhere under the push of federative and business entities. Fondness of the sport extends through this century, although cyclical curves show periods of splendour and decadence.

In the amateur arena, the World Championships, initiated in San Sebastián in 1952, are set up as the most important pelota event. It is a re-encounter every four years among those countries that pay honour with the greatest fervour to the sport of pelota.

2006-09-25 22:43:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Jai alai. The "scoop" is called a cesta.

2006-09-25 09:09:40 · answer #4 · answered by TheOnlyBeldin 7 · 0 0

jai alai. it's popular in spain and france, particularly the basque areas. the rules are similar to raquetball, and the ball can travel up to 180 mph

2006-09-25 09:09:14 · answer #5 · answered by C_Millionaire 5 · 0 0

http://www.fla-gaming.com/miami/
Jai Alai is the name of a racketball type sport. See the above link

2006-09-25 18:37:42 · answer #6 · answered by Superstar 5 · 0 0

I think it's called Jai Alai (pronounced "Hi-Al-Eye").

2006-09-25 09:03:25 · answer #7 · answered by Neil B 2 · 0 0

I think it is lacrose

2006-09-27 00:48:26 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

think it is lacrose in uk

2006-09-25 09:05:09 · answer #9 · answered by ROBERT M 1 · 0 0

lacrose?

2006-09-25 09:02:56 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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