I was in Dallas this weekend and saw my old elementary school and this reminded of a game we played called 'smear the queer'. Basically whoever had the ball everyone else tried to tackle. Being eight years old at the time I had no idea what the game's name meant. Even if the game's name was changed I doubt too many schools would let you play it anymore.
As to Onceler's comment I can't imagine the idea of telling kids they can't run.
I was in Dallas this weekend and saw my old elementary school and this reminded of a game we played called 'smear the queer'. Basically whoever had the ball everyone else tried to tackle. Being eight years old at the time I had no idea what the game's name meant. Even if the game's name was changed I doubt too many schools would let you play it anymore.
As to Onceler's comment I can't imagine the idea of telling kids they can't run.
I bet you were the d-bag that people intentionally threw the ball to so that they could kill him and that you would never catch the ball because you're a dandy but you got killed anyway.
I used to play the same thing. I remember running and then jumping into a slide to trip fellow classmates... and we were running on pavement. Seriously, we would run at full speed and just slide on the parking lot to knock each other down. It was awesome. Every one of my pants would have holes in the knees. Mom had to patch them several times. Catholic school FTW
Those deemed as "nonpassive recreational activities without significant risk of injury" include hide and seek, bocce and Frisbee.
I do hate this kind of stuff. A few schools near me banned running at recess last year.
You have to let kids be kids; there is risk of injury when you just step out of your front door, if people want to take it to extremes. Everyone should re-watch "Finding Nemo"; you just can't live your life in fear...