Running bounce
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A running bounce, or simply bounce, is a skill in the sport of Australian rules football when a player, while running, bounces the ball on the ground and back to himself.
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[edit] The Skill
Football is played with an ellipsoidal (oval-shaped) ball, rather than a spherical one, so the technique for bouncing one back to oneself while running requires practice. To execute a running bounce, a player should:
- Hold the ball: in his preferred hand; with that hand on top of the ball towards the end closest to his body, and; with the ball angled around 30° upwards from the horizontal;
- While running, push the ball firmly to the ground around 1.5-2m in front of him, angling the ball so that it strikes the ground towards the end furthest from the player's body, tilted slightly downward.
Executed properly by a player running at a normal pace, the ball should bounce directly back into his waiting hands.
Players need to readjust the distance of their bounces when running at different paces. When running faster, the ball must be bounced further in front of the player, and when running slower, the ball must be bounced closer. At very slow or stationary paces, this correction is more difficult, because it is difficult to correctly angle the ball for the return bounce at such a short distance.
Australian children (in Australian rules football states) generally learn how to execute running bounces over a few years while they play at school and in junior levels, so to top-level players, the running bounce is a natural skill. Outside of these states, however, it is a skill few people possess.
Nevertheless, bouncing an oval-shaped ball is still a volatile skill. Even top level players will occasionally lose the ball while bouncing it, by accidentally bouncing the ball on its point, only to see it quickly skid away from him.
[edit] Rules
The rules of football state that a player running on the field with the ball must take a running bounce at least once every fifteen metres. If they run too far without taking a running bounce, the umpire pays a free kick for running too far to the opposition at the position where the player oversteps his limit. The umpire signals "running too far" by rolling his clenched fists around each other - similar to false starts in American football or traveling in basketball.
While the distance of 15m is explicit in the rules, the lack of markings on the ground make it impossible for umpires to accurately judge these free kicks. Regular watchers of football generally have a feel for the average time between running bounces which "feels right", and umpires usually penalise players when they exceed this by more than a few steps.
[edit] Touching the ball on the ground
Instead of executing a running bounce, players may bend over and touch the ball onto the ground, never actually letting go of it. This has the disadvantage of taking much longer, increasing the risk of being caught, but it has the advantage of reducing the risk of making a bad bounce and dropping the ball. The skill always used on rainy days when the mud or water on the ground makes a regulation bounce impossible, but is also used by some players, particularly in lower levels, who never perfected the running bounce.
[edit] Statistics
Running bounces are most commonly made by attacking half-back flankers, also known as link-men. They generally accept the ball from a rebound, and have wide space in front of them to run into, giving teammates time to create options at half-forward. Link-men Jason Gram of St Kilda and Kade Simpson of Carlton were both in the AFL-wide top 5 for running bounces in 2006.
[edit] Related Skills
The requirement that a player performs a specialist skill in order to be allowed to run with the ball is common and necessary in many sports. Introducing these skills prevents players from taking the ball in hand and running the length of the field unchallenged. In this way, the running bounce is related to:
- dribbling in basketball;
- the solo (kicking the ball to oneself while on the run) in Gaelic football.
The running bounce should not be confused with the ball-up, also often referred to as a bounce. The ball-up is an unrelated umpiring skill used to restart play from a neutral contest.