Dribbling
In sports, dribbling is maneuvering a ball by one player while moving in a given direction, avoiding defenders' attempts to intercept the ball. A successful dribble will bring the ball past defenders legally and create opportunities to score.
Association football
In association football, a dribble is one of the most difficult ball skills to master and one of the most useful attacking moves. In typical game play, players attempt to propel the ball toward their opponents' goal through individual control of the ball, such as by dribbling (the usage of technical maneuvers). In order to go past an opponent, dribbling can involve a wide variety of manipulative tricks and feints; Ronaldinho would often employ elaborate skills and feints, such as the elastico, in order to beat defenders.[1]
Dribbling is often invaluable especially in the third part of a pitch or at the wings, where most attacks take place. Dribbling creates space in tight situations where the dribbler is marked (closely guarded by a defender), and the dribbler can either score or create scoring chances after a successful dribble. However, dribbling, if poorly mastered and used, may result in the loss of possession either when the ball is intercepted or tackled by a defender. Some players prefer getting past players with speed and physicality, such as the winger Gareth Bale,[2][3][4][5] some players go straight at opponents and look to go past them directly with a nutmeg (kicking the ball through their legs), such as Luis Suárez,[6] whereas others may use feints, control, agility, and acceleration to evade tackles, such as Lionel Messi.[7][8]
A skillful dribbler is often hard to dispossess; unsuccessful tackles (which do not reach the ball) may result in a useful free kick situation and a reprimand for the offender in the form of a penalty card. At the 2018 FIFA World Cup, Belgium playmaker Eden Hazard, renowned for being difficult to dispossess, set a World Cup record for successful dribbles completed in any World Cup game since 1966, with a 100% success rate in ten dribbles against Brazil.[10]
Early references to dribbling come from accounts of medieval football games in England. For example, Geoffrey Chaucer offered an allusion to such ball skills in fourteenth century England. In the Canterbury Tales (written some time after 1380) he uses the following line: "rolleth under foot as doth a ball".[11] Similarly at the end of the 15th century comes a Latin account of a football game which was played at Cawston, Nottinghamshire, England. It is included in a manuscript collection of the miracles of King Henry VI of England. Although the precise date is uncertain it certainly comes from between 1481 and 1500. This is the first account of an exclusively "kicking game" and the first description of dribbling: "[t]he game at which they had met for common recreation is called by some the foot-ball game. It is one in which young men, in country sport, propel a huge ball not by throwing it into the air but by striking it and skillfully rolling it along the ground, and that not with their hands but with their feet... kicking in opposite directions".[12] It is known that dribbling skills were a key part of many nineteenth-century football games at English public schools with the earliest reference to ball passing coming in 1863 rules of The Football Association.[13][14]
Basketball
In basketball, dribbling is bouncing the ball on the floor continuously with one hand at a time. It is the only legal way that a player may maintain possession of the ball while walking or running.
James Naismith's original rules said nothing about dribbling, merely stating that passing the ball was the legal way of advancing it. Players soon developed the strategy of "passing to themselves", which Naismith himself both endorsed and admired for its ingenuity, and which evolved into the dribble as it is known today. The first known team to dribble was Yale University in 1897.[15]
The dribble allows for much faster advancement and thus more opportunities for scoring. It also provides an opportunity for a crafty player on the opposing team to "steal" the ball in mid-bounce. Once a player stops dribbling the ball and holds it, the player normally must either pass it to another player or take a shot; if the player dribbles and then holds the ball in any way (either grasping it with their hands or arms, or "palming" it, i.e. holding it too much toward its underside during the act of dribbling) then continues to dribble, the referee stops the play, signals either "double dribble" or "carrying", and turns the ball over to the other team. A "double dribble" may also be called if the player tries to dribble with both hands at the same time.
Dribbling should be done with finger pads and the fingers should be relaxed and spread, The wrist should be pushing the basketball, and the forearm should be moving up and down. Skilled ball handlers bounce the ball low to the ground, reducing the risk of a defender reaching in to steal the ball. Adept dribblers can dribble behind their backs, between their legs and change the speed of the dribble, making the player difficult to defend, and opening up options to pass, shoot or drive with the ball.
The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) was founded in 1927 to oppose a move to eliminate dribbling from the sport.[16]
Water polo
In water polo, dribbling is the technique of moving the ball while swimming forward. The ball is propelled ahead of the player with the wake created by alternating armstrokes, and often accompanied by occasional nudges using the nose or forehead. Since ball contact is minimal, this creates advantage for the ball carrier advancing the ball; the defender may not make contact unless the attacker is touching the ball. Using short, and rapid arm strokes with high elbows, the dribbling player is often able to shield the ball from tackling attempts by the opposing team, particularly those chasing from behind or approaching adjacently. This aggressive defensive technique ensures any tackling attempts, successful or not, risk potential injury as the turbulent elbow motion is considered legal by FINA, and so a defending player must avoid contact in their attempts to steal the ball from the dribbler.
Related skills
The requirement that a player perform 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 dribbling is related to:
- the "solo" in Gaelic football, kicking the ball to oneself while running
- the "hop" in Gaelic football, bouncing the ball on the ground and back to oneself while running
- the running bounce in Australian rules football, bouncing the ellipsoidal ball on the ground and back to oneself while running
See also
References
- "Ronaldo de Assis Moreira". fcbarcelona.cat. FC Barcelona. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- "Gareth Bale: why Inter are going to bid £40m for Tottenham star". guardian.co.uk. Guardian News and Media. 27 January 2011. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
- "Gareth Bale far from done at Madrid". Football España. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- Mark Fleming (4 November 2010). "Strength, skill, stamina, speed. How do you stop Gareth Bale?". The Independent. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- David Cartlidge (2 December 2016). "FourFourTwo's Best 100 Football Players in the World 2016: No.6 – Gareth Bale". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- "WATCH: Luis Suarez nutmeg David Luiz twice in Barcelona's win at PSG". Sky Sports. 16 April 2015. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015.
- Fabio Monti (8 April 2010). "Controllo, corsa, tocco di palla Perché nel calcio piccolo è bello". corriere.it (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- Guillem Balague (2 December 2013). "Lionel Messi's improbable progression from struggling youngster to world super star". telegraph.co.uk. The Telegraph. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- "Hall of Fame: Garrincha". ifhof.com. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
- "World Cup Stats Insider: Brazil's Achilles heel, terrific individual performances behind Belgium's win". Fox Sports. 9 July 2018.
- Chaucer, Geoffrey. "The Knight's Tale". Canterbury Tales. Project Gutenberg.
- Coulton, George Gordon (1949). Medieval Panorama. Cambridge University Press. p. 83.
- "History of Football - The Global Growth". FIFA.com. 1994. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
- "The History of the FA". The Football Association. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
- “The Evolution Of Professional Basketball”. Digital Archives
- "What is the NABC and what does it do?". Retrieved 31 March 2012.