Softball
History
The first version
of softball was invented in Chicago, Illinois
in 1887
by George
Hancock, a reporter for the Chicago Board of
Trade, as a winter version of baseball. It was intended to be a
way for baseball players to keep in practice during the winter.
Yale and Harvard
alumni had gathered at the Farragut Boat Club in
Chicago to hear the score of the
annual football game. When the score was announced and bets were paid,
one person threw a boxing glove at another. The other person grabbed a
stick and swung at it. Hancock called "Play ball!" and the game began.
Hancock took a boxing glove and tied it into a ball. A broom handle was
used as a bat. The ball, being soft, was fielded barehanded rather than
with gloves like those which had been introduced to baseball in 1882.
Hancock developed a ball and an undersized bat in the next week. The
Farragut Club soon set rules for the game, which spread quickly to
outsiders.
Click on picture for video.
In 1895 Lewis Rober, Sr.
of Minneapolis
organized outdoor games as exercise for firefighters;
this game was known as kitten ball (after the first team to play it),
pumpkin ball, or diamond ball. Rober's version of the game used a
twelve-inch (305 mm) ball rather than the sixteen-inch (406 mm) ball
used by the Farragut club, and eventually the
Minneapolis
ball prevailed, although the dimensions of the
Minneapolis
diamond were passed over in favor of the dimensions of the
Chicago one.
Rober may not have been familiar with the Farragut Club rules. The
first softball league outside the
United
States was organized in Toronto in
1897.
The name softball
dates from 1926 (in addition to indoor baseball, kitten ball, and
diamond ball, names for the game included mush ball, and pumpkin ball).
Standard rules were agreed on only after the formation of the Amateur Softball
Association in 1933.
Sixteen-inch (406
mm) softball, also sometimes referred to as "mush ball" or "Super-slow
pitch" is a direct descendant of Hancock's original game. Defensive
players are not allowed to wear fielding gloves; however, a sixteen
inch softball is actually soft, and can be fielded safely with bare
hands. Sixteen inch softball is played extensively in
Chicago,
Illinois.
In the 1940s,
fast pitching started to dominate the game. Slow pitch was invented to
give batters a better chance to hit the ball.
After World War
II, Canadian soldiers introduced softball to The Netherlands.
In 1991, Women's
fast-pitch was selected to debut at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
In 2002,
sixteen-inch slow pitch was written out of the ISF official rules,
though still played extensively in the
United States under Amateur
Softball Association of America (ASA) rules.
The117th meeting
of the International
Olympic Committee, held in Singapore in
July 2005,
voted to drop Softball and Baseball as Olympic sports
for the 2012
Summer Olympic Games.
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