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Saturday, June 14, 2008

How Kenya Tchoukball was born!



The history of tchoukball in Kenya dates back to September 2005 when a group of Five Starehe Boys Went on an Ambassadorial mission in the United Kingdom to launch what has been commonly known as "The Starehe Way" During the mission, we toured Norfolk schools and were hosted by Flegg High School where we met a highly hyped Physical Education Trainer, Graham Young, who was also a tchoukball coach and a very dedicated tchoukball advocate in the United Kingdom. We were naturally interested in tchoukball, which was a game we had never known or played before.
We asked to learn the game and just after 10 minutes of learning we were able to play our first match! We loved it! We enjoyed it! It was great and we vowed to bring the game back home. Graham was a kind man; he offered us a pair of frames and three nice tchoukballs with which to start the game in Africa.... That was the birth of Kenya tchoukball!

Look out for more information on the development of Kenya tchoukball and uncover the role of Graham Young, Yahya Sebit, Nina Crisp, Julio Calegari, Flegg High School, Starehe Boys' Centre, Rift Valley Academy, Kennedy Miruka and the many others in the onward growth of tchoukball in Kenya.

You may also want to visit the following sites:

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=8345019&ref=ts#/group.php?gid=17501958946
http://uaetchoukball.blogspot.com/

What is Tchoukball?


Tchoukball is a non-contact sport, which combines the pace and excitement of handball and volleyball to make it the fastest handball sport around. It's a relatively new sport that was invented by Swiss biologist Dr Hermann Brandt in the late 1960s and introduced to the public in 1970.

Tchoukball is played by two teams of nine, and the aim of the game is to shoot the ball at one of the two frames set in a semi-circle at either end of the pitch. There are three main positions to play – shooter, centre pivot and inner. Shooters do the scoring, centre pivots concentrate on keeping the ball moving and inners defend the frame area.To score a point, the ball must hit one of the frames then bounce back outside the semi-circle without being caught by the rival team. It doesn't matter which end of the pitch you score. When the ball is passed or caught each player may only hold onto it for three seconds. Players can only move three steps while holding the ball, and teams are only allowed three passes before they must shoot.

Although a full size international court is 40m by 20m, the size can be varied to suit the age group and the number of players and space available. As Tchoukball is a non-contact sport it can be played by boys and girls as young as seven or eight. Like volleyball it can also be played on a variety of surfaces – indoors on wood, outdoors on grass.

For further information on Tchoukball see the International Tchoukball Federation website http://www.tchoukball.org/ and http://www.genevabeach.ch/

1 comment:

Patrizio Fergnani said...

Wonderful. We play tchoukball in Ferrara, Italy. In 2 years there are almost 80 tchoukers. You can see photos and videos about italian tchoukball on www.tchoukball.it. or on youtube http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=BayRCFXA-CQ

My sister lives in Iringa (Tanzania) see http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=G_2UZ1eKV7I or www. nyumba-ali.org and perhaps next year we'll go there and we can try to teach Tchpoukball. Stay in contact