sábado, 25 de febrero de 2017

Brooms up!

This week I would like to talk about Quidditch. You know, this sport played in Harry Potter novels with flying brooms. You probably don’t know it is played in real life by real people!
Quidditch, as a real sport, was invented in 2005 in the United States. It has a lot of similarities with Rowling’s Quidditch (multiple balls, brooms, or the 6 rings) but of course, it also lacks of flying brooms, which is its most showy thing.

You must use a stick as a broom, and carry it between your legs while running. The 3 chasers must score points to the rival keeper, while dodging bludgers from the beaters. Last, we’ve got the seeker, who must run to catch the snitch, which is a tennis ball in a sock, carried by a neutral player.
Of course we haven’t got only snitches: we also have 3 bludgers (dodgeballs) and a quaffle (a volleyball). Each goal scores 10 points, and catching the snitch is 30 points (in the fictional sport, it is 150 points, so in real Quidditch, catching the snitch doesn’t ensure you to win). When the snitch is caught, the match is over.

It has a lot of rules like any other sports, but I think the most interesting one is the “Maximum four”, which means that there must not be more than 4 players (excluding the seeker) who are identified with the same gender. This allows people play as the gender they feel of, so it is a pioneer sport in this aspect.


If you feel interested, there is a complete rulebook, lots of information on the internet, and also a lot of professional teams in Spain, even a national team. Maybe you could be part of the first Extremadura quidditch team!

1 comentario:

  1. Last summer I played Quidditch in a summer camp, but with swimming pool churros.

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