Ball boy

For other uses, see Ball boy (disambiguation).
A ballgirl at the 2014 French Open in tennis.
The skaters in yellow vests in the foreground are ball boys at this bandy game.

Ball boys/girls are individuals, usually youths, who retrieve and supply balls for players or officials in sports such as association football, American football, bandy, cricket, tennis, baseball, and basketball. Though non-essential, their activities help to speed up play by reducing the amount of inactive time.

Tennis

Ball boy (left) and line judge (right) during the 2005 Australian Open.
Two ball girls in pose offering balls to the player

In 1920, ball boys were introduced at Wimbledon. Ball boys are chosen from schools. Ball girls were introduced at Wimbledon in 1977. Due to the nature of the sport, quick retrieval of loose tennis balls and delivery of the game balls to the servers are necessary for quick play in tennis. In professional tournaments, every court will have a trained squad of ball boys/girls with positionings and movements designed for maximum efficiency, whilst also not interfering with active play. As well as dealing with the game balls, ball boys/girls may also provide the players with other assistance, such as the delivery of towels and drinks.[1]

Positions

Feeding

Feeding is how the ball boys and girls give the balls to the players. At different tournaments, they use different techniques for feeding. At some tournaments, bases have both arms in the air, then feed the balls with one arm; at others, they have one arm in the air which they feed the balls with and the other arm behind their back. When feeding the ball, they must also be aware of a player's preference. Most players accept the standard, which is for the ball boy or girl to gently toss the ball (from the position with their arms extended upwards) such that it bounces one time then to the proper height for the player to catch the ball easily.

Hiring

There are various methods for selecting the ball boys and girls for a tournament. In many tournaments, such as Wimbledon and the Queen's Club Championships, they are picked from or apply through schools, where they are selected by tournaments and they have to go through a number of selections and tests.[1] In some other tournaments, such as the Nottingham Open, Australian Open and the US Open,[2] positions are advertised and there are open try-outs.

Applicants are required to pass a physical ability assessment. In addition to fitness and stamina, the abilities to concentrate and remain alert are essential.

Association football

A ball boy at a football match in China in 2007

High-profile association football matches may employ ball boys to avoid long delays when a game ball leaves the pitch and its immediate vicinity. Typically positioned behind advertising boards surrounding the pitch, ball boys will try to be in possession of a spare ball at all times, so that this can be given to the players prior to the loose ball being retrieved. Ball boys are not permitted to enter the field of play.

Methods for selecting ball boys vary between grounds.[3] On occasion, away teams have complained about perceived favour of ball boys towards home sides.[3]

Association football ball boys hit the headlines in England in 2013 when, with his side trailing on aggregate in an away 2013 Capital One Cup match, Chelsea player Eden Hazard appeared to kick at an apparently time-wasting ball boy who was lying on top of the ball.[4] Hazard was subsequently sent off for violent conduct and suspended for three games.[5]

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ball boys and girls.
  1. 1 2 About Wimbledon - Behind the scenes, Ball boys and ball girls. wimbledon.org.
  2. Official Site United States Tennis Association - 2009 US Open Ballperson Tryouts.
  3. 1 2 Taylor, Louise (24 January 2013). "How football clubs choose their ballboys – and ballgirls". Guardian. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  4. Hytner, David (25 January 2013). "Chelsea's Eden Hazard may face longer ban for ballboy altercation". Guardian. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  5. "FA rules out increasing Eden Hazard's three-match ban for ballboy kick". Guardian. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
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