Stickball
Stickball
has been a part of Choctaw life for hundreds of years. Opposing
teams use handcrafted sticks or kabocca, and a woven leather
ball, or towa. Each team tries to advance the ball down the
field to the other team's goalpost using only their sticks, never
touching or throwing the ball with their hands. Points are scored
when a player hits the opposing team's goalpost with the ball.
The earliest historical reference to Choctaw stickball was a Jesuit
priest's account of a stickball game around 1729. During that period,
the Choctaws lived in towns and villages scattered across the area
that is now southern Mississippi. When disputes arouse between these
communities, stickball provided a peaceful way to settle the issue.
These games were hard-fought contests that cold involve as few as
twenty or as many as 300 players.
In his book The Mississippi Choctaws at Play: The Serious Side
of Leisure, anthropologist Kendall Blanchard describes what
an 18th century game might of looked like:
"The nature of the playing field was never strictly defined.
The only boundaries were the two goalposts at either end of the
playing area and these could be anywhere from 100 feet to five miles
apart, as was the case in one game in the 19th century...
"There were no boundaries on the sides of the playing field,
and the game's action simply followed the ball. Many times spectators
were rousted from comfortable vantage points as the fleet-footed,
fast-swinging...athletes scrambled after a far-flung pass...
"The rules, like the layout of the playing field, were ambiguous
and limited to only three or four stipulations. Of primary importance
was the restriction that no player was to touch the ball with
his hands, using instead only his sticks to carry and throw the
small ball. At no time were spectators allowed to interfere with
the process. If they did, a penalty was assessed against their
team...
"While players could tackle, block, or use any reasonable method
to interfere with the other team's movement of the ball, there
were implicit limits to acceptable violence."
Mississippi Choctaws continue to play stickball. When the first
Choctaw Fair was held in 1949, stickball was an important event,
but it involved only a handful of teams. Today, anywhere from 8
to 10 teams meet during the fair in a single-elimination tournament.
The championship game closes out the fair, with the fans filling
the Choctaw Central High School football stadium to cheer their
teams on.
Modern
stickball has a few more rules than tis historical predecessor.
These are printed and distributed to all players before the fair
begins. The game is played in four fifteen-minute quarters. Players
still score points by hitting a post which is set up in the middle
of the football goal post. They still advance the ball without touching
it, using their kabocca. The appearance of the players is
different, too. For most of the 20th century, players
wore handmade uniforms consisting of pants hemmed just below the
knee and open-necked, pullover shirts. These were made in the community
colors and decorated with the diamond patterns found on traditional
clothing. In the late 1970's, there uniform gave way to gym shorts,
but many players now wear headbands with the diamond design in community
colors.
Stickball, as it is played today, remains a uniquely Choctaw sport
and a symbol of tribal identity. So that boys will have a chance
to develop their skills there are two age divisions for young people's
teams. Occasionally, women's teams will take the field in exhibition
matches.
The resurgence of interest in stickball has kept several Choctaw
craftsmen busy. The kabocca and towa used by the players
have to be handmade. The kabocca are carved from hickory
and bent at one end to shape the cup of the stick. then leather
or deer hide thongs are tied to make the pocket in which the players
catch and carry the ball. The towa is made from cloth tightly
wrapped around a small stone or piece of wood. Once it is wrapped
to the desired size, the maker weaves a leather thong over the cloth.
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