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Stickball Rules (for making heroes)

September 2, 2009

Show me a kid standing at a manhole cover with a broom handle over his shoulder and I’ll tell you about a young boy who is dreaming big dreams of major league baseball. Stickball creates heroes out of the most ordinary children. There aren’t too many moments in a young boy’s life that lift his spirit as much as connecting a broom handle with a hollow rubber ball and watching it sail in the air down the street.

My first ever at bat in stickball was on First Street in front of the Assumption School in Peekskill, New York. I was excited to play a new game. A game reserved (in my mind) for the older boys just a year earlier. But as excited as I was, I was even more nervous. Would I make a fool of myself and hit nothing but air? Would I embarrass myself in front of the big kids that I admired? The pressure was on – no doubt about it. But I pushed the anxiety down and stood beside the manhole cover with determination. I took the first pitch. “Swing batter, swing batter” they taunted at me from the street. The second pitch came in and I took a chance. That baby flew to the end of First Street and ended up soaring over the Peekskill Museum on Union Avenue. I knew that I nailed it as soon as the broom contacted the ball. I was a hero. At least in my mind.

Let your child be a hero.

Here are the rules for Stickball:

What you need: A broom handle and a hollow rubber ball (preferably a Spaulding)

Ideally played: In the street

There are so many different versions of stickball. If you have enough players to have a catcher, this is an awesome street game. Otherwise, it’s nice to have a wall behind the batter with a chalk box for the strike zone. Ideally, you will have a pitcher, infielder, outfielder and a batter (but if played in a courtyard with walls, you can play with as few as two players).

In the street, balls were delivered to the batter either as a slow, one-bounce pitch by a pitcher or al fungo (throwing the ball up yourself and hitting it after one bounce). When played in a courtyard with a wall behind the batter, fast pitch normally reigned. Normally, rules specified that a ground ball, not stopped and controlled by a fielder was a single (others discounted ground balls). A fly ball over the pitcher was a single. A fly ball dropped by the outfielder was a double and a fly ball over the outfielder was a triple. A home run was usually determined by a distance marker. If you played 3-on-3, one of the batting team members would act as catcher if played in the street and the other would be the make-believe runner on the bases, advancing bases as determined by the hitting rules. In stickball, bases weren’t covered defensively, so there wasn’t any tagging out or actual base running. As in baseball, the side was retired after three, but sometimes two outs.

There was also a version of stickball called half-ball, where the pimple ball was actually cut in half for play. The half-ball was held by the pitcher between the index finger and the thumb and delivered with a spin so that it looked like a full ball to the batter. Half balls were easy to hit and thus, one strike was normally considered an out. Stickball, what a game!

Stickball was simply a fun, exciting and hero-making activity that most of us played when we were growing up several years ago. When was the last time you smacked a ball over the roof of a building?

What are your memories of stickball?

6 Comments leave one →
  1. Tom permalink
    August 3, 2010 7:18 pm

    I am happy to say that my 13 year old was curious about stickball since I talked about playing when I was a kid. I ordered a stickball bat and spauldings on line and today he got his chance to see what it feels like to connect on fast pitch.

    It was great!!

    Thanks for the story, it is right on target with my memories.

  2. August 5, 2010 11:15 am

    Right on Tom! I am so encouraged when I see young children playing ball with friends today. Too often, they are connected to some sort of gadget inside. It was awesome that you opened that door to our past for him! It’s also great to see that the Spauldings are still available!

  3. John Martino permalink
    January 28, 2011 9:38 am

    There was a rule where the stickball bat would be placed on the ground lengthwise in front of home plate. The ball would then be rolled toward the bat and when it hit the ball would pop straight up and had to be caught. Don’t remember why this was done and to what end. Does anyone remember anything about this rule

  4. January 31, 2011 5:14 pm

    That’s right John. I mention this version in the book. In bat ball, the batter pitches the ball to himself using a toss-and-bounce and the other players field the ball. The fielder who gets the ball first can run toward the batter until the batter places the bat down in front of him on the street (placed width ways, exposing the full length of the bat to the field.)

    When the bat goes down on the ground, the fielder must stop running. From the point that he stops at, he then rolls the ball toward the bat. If the ball hits the bat, it will jump. If the batter catches the ball when it jumps (or if the fielder misses the bat) then the batter is still up (sometimes, points are awarded to the batter when this happens.) If the batter misses the ball when it jumps off the bat, then the fielder who threw the ball gets a turn at bat.

    Great fun!

    • mike filippone permalink
      October 25, 2011 1:33 pm

      I never played stickball that way,but every neighborhood had their own rules.whichever way you played,it was a great game. I play every Sun.,and I cant wait for next Sun.I’m 75 yrs old….What memories !!!Thanks for reading my story..

  5. October 25, 2011 4:16 pm

    Happy Birthday Mike!

    You are so right. The beauty of childhood play (back in the day) was that rules were adapted from street to street, town to town.

    Tom

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