Throwing sports
Throwing sports, or throwing games, are physical, human competitions where the outcome is measured by a player's ability to throw an object.
The two primary forms are throwing for distance and throwing at a given target or range. The four most prominent throwing for distance sports are in track and field: shot put, discus, javelin, and the hammer throw. Target-based sports have two main genres: bowling and darts, each of which have a great number of variations.
History
Throwing sports have a long history. Modern track and field comes from a lineage of activities that dates to the Ancient Olympic Games. Artwork from Ancient Greece, in the form of friezes, pottery and statues, attests to the prominence of such sports in the society's physical culture.Antiphon describes phaininda as an ancient Greek ball game in which the players deliberately tried to throw the ball to someone who was not expecting it.
Bowling games have similarly ancient roots. Games based on throwing stone balls in Ancient Egypt date to 5000 BCE, and a form of bocce is documented in Ancient Rome. The game of catch is among the most basic of all games and is a key component of many modern, complex sports and games. Its dodgeball variant is a basic throwing game where the opponent is the target.
Projectiles used in such sports are highly varied. Common projectile types include balls, darts, sticks, discs and rings. Formalised throwing sports often have strictly defined criteria for projectiles, such as a pre-determined size and weight. Less formalised games are usually not as strict and some games incorporate everyday objects into the game, reflecting the simplistic roots of the pastimes.
Most throwing sports use a defined field of play and a specific throwing method. Common one-armed throwing methods include overhand throwing and underarm throwing. With both arms, overhead throwing and chest-passing are common actions. The type of throw used is highly influenced by the properties of the projectile: small, heavy objects are held and pushed away from the body ; handled objects are swung and released with one or two hands ; smaller, lighter objects such as balls and darts tend to use an extended overarm technique where distance or speed is required, and an underarm technique where greater precision is required. In these sports, most throws are taken from a static position or limited area. However, some sports do include a short run-up to the throw line, for example javelin throw and tenpin bowling.
Standardised throwing sports typically have high-level competitions across regions and a sports governing body, with the most common and international varieties having a world championship and a professional circuit. Those that are less standardised in format tend not to have highly organised competition and instead are played in a more casual or social setting. Throwing games with prizes are common funfair and carnival games, with varieties including ring toss and coconut shy games.
The act of throwing is an element of many sports, particularly ball games – such as handball, basketball and codes of football – and bat-and-ball games, such as cricket and baseball. The throwing of an opponent is also a key feature of some martial arts and grappling sports. In these sports, the throwing aspect is just one part of a more complex system of rules. As throwing ability does not in itself determine the outcome, these are not strictly defined as throwing sports.
List of throwing sports
Throwing for distance
- Track and field
- *Discus throw
- *Hammer throw
- *Javelin throw
- *Shot put
- *Club throw
- *Weight throw
- *Softball throw
- *Throws pentathlon – a combined track and field event comprising the above five events
- Frisbee
- Boomerang
- Dwarf-tossing
- Keg-tossing
- Mobile phone throwing
- Sheaf toss
- Stone put
- Steinstossen
- Golf Long drive competitions
Two-handed throwing
Target sports
- Board targets
- *Axe throwing
- *Darts
- *Knife throwing
- *Disc golf
- Bowling
- *Alley bowling
- **Tenpin
- **Nine-pin
- **Five-pin
- **Candlepin bowling
- **Duckpin bowling
- **Kegel
- **Trick bowling
- **Turkey bowling
- *Boules
- **Basque bowls
- **Bocce
- **Bocce volo
- **Boccia
- **Bolas criollas
- **Bolo palma
- **Jeu provençal a.k.a. boule lyonnaise
- **Bowls a.k.a. lawn bowls
- **Pétanque
- **Taistelupetankki
- Skittles
- *Bunnock
- *Finnish skittles
- *Fowling
- *Gorodki
- *Kubb
- *Mölkky
- Aunt Sally
- Bean bag throwing
- Cherokee marbles
- Chunkey
- Coconut shy
- Cornhole
- Horseshoes
- Irish road bowling
- Ladder toss
- Lawn darts
- Milk bottle pyramid
- Pitching pennies
- Ring toss
- Quoits
- Svaika
- Tin can alley
- Washer pitching
Other varieties
- Caber toss – a competitor throws a large pole, which must fall pointing away from the thrower
- Catch – a basic throwing game, where players throw and catch an object between one another
- Dodgeball – players try to strike opponents with a ball to eliminate them
- Keep away – catch game where players must keep the object away from another player
- Flying disc games – a genre of throwing sports based on flying discs, and containing a large number of games and rule-sets
- Stone skipping – competitors skip stones on water for both distance and number of skips
- Net and wall sports
- * Hooverball
- * Jollyball
- * Loofball
- * Throwball