Marble Football.

When I was a youngster in the 1960s I devised my own miniature football game called "Marble Football". Eventually this developed into a mutant form of "Subbuteo". The players were of course marbles or taws. A "Mum Rolette" semi-transparent ball provided, well, The Ball! I built goals from lego and used tiddlywinks etc. as pitch markers (my preferred pitch was 54 inches long). As in Subbuteo I employed a "Shooting\Offside Area", bordered by a line one third of pitch length. At one time I tried to align my rules with those of Subbuteo, but only did this up to a point. Of course, The Rules are still up for "Development" (they are half drafted in a paper folder somewhere). As in Subbuteo there is a "Possession Rule". However, every "move" of an attacker is followed by a move from a defender of choice plus one from the goalkeeper (a marble). These defenders cannot touch the ball (apart from the goalie in the goal area).
I also recall playing "Coin Football" in the sixth form. Each human player had one player: a penny (now would be a 2P) coin. The "ball" was a tanner (now would be a 5P). The goalposts were marked in pen or pencil on a desk - the pitch! (Our thumb-nails were used as goal-posts). We just took it in turns, no holds barred (no possession rule). A lad called Andrew Allen introduced the tactic of "tackling" whereby a "player" would "close down" the "ball" rather than hitting it. This was a good way of "smothering" an opponent. I made sure that such "tackling" was retained in "Marble Football". Andrew used a phrase, "Put up your dooks" when ready to shoot so you could place your thumb nails over the "goalposts!
Back to Marble Football: I ran my own "league" for many years. My star side was "Real Brown United", actually a mixture of brown and red marbles. "Yellow..." then "Golden Wanderers", "Green Spartans", and "Skyblues" were other sides. In the late 1960s I played my cousin Martin quite often. He had teams like "Yellow Vampires", "Bluelings" and "Grey Mirrors". We later discovered he has a colour defect, hence he often questioned whether I was using his players! His "Grey Mirrors" were actually sky blue! Still, he later became the manager of a semi-professional football team (the real thing) so he must have learnt something. Playing the real thing on my Mum's path with her cat with a tennis ball might have helped too. As he remarked, the cat was better than both of us! It was a poor Marble Football Player though: just pouncing on all the players and scattering them everywhere.
I also recall playing "Coin Football" in the sixth form. Each human player had one player: a penny (now would be a 2P) coin. The "ball" was a tanner (now would be a 5P). The goalposts were marked in pen or pencil on a desk - the pitch! (Our thumb-nails were used as goal-posts). We just took it in turns, no holds barred (no possession rule). A lad called Andrew Allen introduced the tactic of "tackling" whereby a "player" would "close down" the "ball" rather than hitting it. This was a good way of "smothering" an opponent. I made sure that such "tackling" was retained in "Marble Football". Andrew used a phrase, "Put up your dooks" when ready to shoot so you could place your thumb nails over the "goalposts!
Back to Marble Football: I ran my own "league" for many years. My star side was "Real Brown United", actually a mixture of brown and red marbles. "Yellow..." then "Golden Wanderers", "Green Spartans", and "Skyblues" were other sides. In the late 1960s I played my cousin Martin quite often. He had teams like "Yellow Vampires", "Bluelings" and "Grey Mirrors". We later discovered he has a colour defect, hence he often questioned whether I was using his players! His "Grey Mirrors" were actually sky blue! Still, he later became the manager of a semi-professional football team (the real thing) so he must have learnt something. Playing the real thing on my Mum's path with her cat with a tennis ball might have helped too. As he remarked, the cat was better than both of us! It was a poor Marble Football Player though: just pouncing on all the players and scattering them everywhere.
Labels: colour blindness, football, marbles, sport, subbuteo
2 Comments:
How do you play marble football? I have a miniature American football field that is made of wood and has wooden walls along the edges, but don't know how to play
1:14 PM
Damn! Sorry b have only just seen your comment. Marble football is my version of Association Football. Each marble is a player and each "team" takes it in turns to move. I use a possession rule whereby only the team in possession can play the ball. Miss the ball and you lose possession. Each goalie can play the ball ANY time it enters its own penalty area. Put simply, that's it.
6:09 AM
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