This article needs additional citations for verification .(July 2016) |
Years active | 1973 to present |
---|---|
Genres | Electro-mechanical, arcade, table sport, bar sport |
Players | 2 |
Skills | Dexterity, agility, hand-eye coordination, reaction time |
Air hockey is a tabletop sport where two opposing players try to score goals against each other on a low-friction table [1] using two hand-held discs (mallets/pushers) and a lightweight plastic puck.
The air hockey table has raised edges that allow the puck to reflect off horizontally, and a very smooth, slippery surface that further reduces friction by suspending the puck on a thin cushion of air ejected from tiny vent holes built inside the surface. This causes the puck to hover and move easily across the table with little loss of velocity, which simulates the lubricated sliding of an ice hockey puck across a well polished rink, hence the name of the game.
A typical air hockey table consists of a large smooth playing surface designed to minimize friction, a surrounding rail to prevent the puck and mallets from leaving the table, and slots in the rail at either end of the table that serve as goals. On the ends of the table behind and below the goals, there is usually a puck return. Additionally, tables will typically have some sort of machinery that produces a cushion of air on the playing surface through tiny holes, with the purpose of reducing friction and increasing play speed. In some tables, the machinery is eschewed in favor of a slick table surface, usually plastic, in the interest of saving money in both manufacturing and maintenance costs. These tables are technically not air hockey tables, since no air is involved; however, they are still generally understood to be as such due to the basic similarity of gameplay. There also exist pucks that use a battery and fan to generate their own air cushion, but as they are prone to breakage, they are commonly marketed only as toys.
The only tables that are approved for play and sanctioned by the USAA (United States Air Hockey Association) and the AHPA (Air Hockey Players Association) for tournament play are 8-foot tables. Approved tables include all Gold Standard Games 8-foot tables; some 8-foot tables from Dynamo; and the original 8-foot commercial Brunswick tables. Other full-size novelty-type tables with flashing lights on the field of play, painted rails, and/or smaller pucks are not approved for tournament play. There are also smaller air hockey tables having a size of 1.5, 2, or 2.5 feet, called mini air hockey tables.
A mallet (sometimes called a goalie, striker or paddle) consists of a simple handle attached to a flat surface that will usually lie flush with the surface of the table. The most common mallets, called "high-tops", resemble small plastic sombreros, but other mallets, "flat-tops", are used with a shorter nub.
Air hockey pucks are discs made of Lexan polycarbonate resin. Standard USAA and AHPA-approved pucks are yellow, red, and green. In competitive play, a layer of thin white tape is placed on the face-up side. Air hockey pucks come in circles and other shapes (triangle, hexagon, octagon, or square).
Four-player tables also exist, but they are not sanctioned for competitive play.[ citation needed ]
The basic rules of play are listed as follows:
Fouls are issued to players who violate any of the rules. The player who receives the foul must turn possession of the puck over to the opponent. Technical fouls are issued for more severe violations, such as goal tending. When a technical foul is called, the opposing player is given a free shot on the offender's goal. The offender is not allowed to defend the shot, but can resume play if the shot misses and bounces off their end of the table. [2] [3]
Competitive (tournament) play is usually distinguished by the following:
This section needs additional citations for verification .(November 2017) |
Air hockey is a game resting on an older technology, the air table. Air tables began as a conveyor technology allowing heavy objects like cardboard boxes to easily slide over a table surface. The original air tables of the 1940s had rather large holes that were plugged by ball bearings. An object sitting on the table would depress the balls, allowing air to escape and lift the object slightly off the table. [4]
By 1967, this had been refined and repurposed as a tool for teaching elementary physics. The table top was a sandwich of fiberboard or plexiglass sheets separated by a honeycomb structure. The top surface was drilled with a grid of small holes, and the space between the boards was supplied with low-pressure compressed air, just enough to allow "air pucks" to float over the surface. [5] [6]
In 1968, Sega released an arcade electro-mechanical game similar to air hockey, MotoPolo. Based on polo, two players moved miniature motorbikes around inside a cabinet, with each player attempting to knock the balls into the opponent's goal. [7] [8]
Air hockey was created by a group of Brunswick Billiards employees from 1969 to 1972. [9] In 1969, a trio of Brunswick engineers – Phil Crossman, Bob Kenrick and Brad Baldwin – began work on creating a game using a low-friction surface. The project stagnated for several years until it was revived by Bob Lemieux, who then focused on implementing an abstracted version of ice hockey, with a thin disc, two strikers and slit-like goals equipped with photodetectors. It was then decided that the game might appeal to a larger market and air hockey was marketed and sold to the general public. The original patents reference Crossman, Kendrick and Lemieux, [10] [11] as well as earlier work on air tables.
The game was an immediate financial success and by the mid-1970s there was interest in tournament play. As early as 1973, players in Houston had formed the Houston Air Hockey Association, and soon thereafter, the Texas Air-Hockey Players Association, codifying rules and promoting the sport through local tournaments at Houston pubs Carnabys and Damians, and the University of Houston.
The United States Air-Table Hockey Association (USAA) was formed in 1975 by J. Phillip "Phil" Arnold, largely as an official sanctioning body. [12] Since its inception, the USAA has sanctioned at least one national-level or World championship each year, crowning 12 different champions over 30 years. In March 2015, the Air Hockey Players Association (AHPA) was announced and is providing air hockey players with an additional organization also overseeing the sport of air hockey. [13] The two organizations run independently but abide by a similar set of rules and share many of the same players. In July 2015, the AHPA crowned its first world champion and also the youngest in the history of the sport in Colin Cummings of Beaumont, Texas.
Today, professional air hockey is played by a close-knit community of serious players around the world, with extensive player bases near Houston, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, North Carolina, San Diego, Denver, Chicago, New York City, Boise, and Boston in the United States; Barcelona in Spain; Saint Petersburg, Moscow, and Novgorod in Russia; and Most and Brno in the Czech Republic. In the late 1980s, Caracas, Venezuela served as a hotbed of activity; three-time World Champion Jose Mora and other finalists originated from there. By 1999 most of the Venezuelan activity had disappeared.
USAA Air Hockey World Championships by Houston-based United States Air Hockey Association (USAA):
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Third Place |
---|---|---|---|
1978 | Jesse Douty | Phil Arnold | Rolf Moore |
1979 | Jesse Douty | Phil Arnold | Joe Campbell |
1980 | Jesse Douty | Phil Arnold | Joe Campbell |
1980 | Jesse Douty | Robert Hernandez | Mark Robbins |
1981 | Bob Dubuisson | Paul Burger | Jesse Douty |
1981 | Jesse Douty | Bob Dubuisson | Paul Marshall |
1982 | Jesse Douty | Mark Robbins | Bob Dubuisson |
1983 | Bob Dubuisson | Jesse Douty | Phil Arnold |
1984 | Mark Robbins | Robert Hernandez | Bob Dubuisson |
1985 | Bob Dubuisson | Robert Hernandez | Vince Schappell |
1985 | Bob Dubuisson | Robert Hernandez | Mark Robbins |
1986 | Robert Hernandez | Bob Dubuisson | Mark Robbins |
1986 | Mark Robbins | Bob Dubuisson | Robert Hernandez |
1987 | Robert Hernandez | Jesse Douty | Phil Arnold |
1987 | Jesse Douty | Mark Robbins | Robert Hernandez |
1988 | Jesse Douty | Bob Dubuisson | Robert Hernandez |
1988 | Jesse Douty | Bob Dubuisson | Joe Campbell |
1989 | Tim Weissman | Bob Dubuisson | Jesse Douty |
1989 | Tim Weissman | Jesse Douty | Robert Hernandez |
1990 | Tim Weissman | Jesse Douty | Robert Hernandez |
1990 | Tim Weissman | Phil Arnold | Mark Robbins |
1991 | Tim Weissman | Mark Robbins | Robert Hernandez |
1991 | Tim Weissman | Jesse Douty | Albert Ortiz |
1992 | Tim Weissman | Robert Hernandez | Mark Robbins |
1992 | Tim Weissman | Keith Fletcher | Vince Schappell |
1993 | Tim Weissman | Andy Yevish | Keith Fletcher |
1994 | John (Owen) Giraldo | Mark Robbins | Tim Weissman |
1995 | Billy Stubbs | Wil Upchurch | Don James |
1996 | Tim Weissman | Wil Upchurch | Andy Yevish |
1997 | Wil Upchurch | Tim Weissman | Jesse Douty |
1999 | Jose Mora | Pedro Otero | Jimmy Heilander |
2000 | Jose Mora | Pedro Otero | Tim Weissman |
2001 | Danny Hynes | Tim Weissman | José Mora |
2002 | Danny Hynes | Ehab Shoukry | Billy Stubbs |
2003 | Ehab Shoukry | José Mora | Andy Yevish |
2004 | Danny Hynes | Andy Yevish | Anthony Marino |
2005 | Danny Hynes | Billy Stubbs | Anthony Marino |
2006 | Danny Hynes | Wil Upchurch | Davis Lee |
2007 | Davis Lee | Keith Fletcher | Ehab Shoukry |
2008 | Danny Hynes | Ehab Shoukry | Jose Mora |
2009 | Ehab Shoukry | Davis Lee | Keith Fletcher |
2010 | Davis Lee | Billy Stubbs | Anthony Marino |
2011 | Danny Hynes | Ehab Shoukry | Billy Stubbs |
2011 | Danny Hynes | Ehab Shoukry | Billy Stubbs |
2012 | Billy Stubbs | Danny Hynes | Ehab Shoukry |
2012 | Billy Stubbs | Ehab Shoukry | Tim Weissman |
2013 | Danny Hynes | Davis Lee | Pedro Otero |
2014 | Billy Stubbs | Davis Lee | Danny Hynes |
2015 | Colin Cummings | Pedro Otero | Danny Hynes |
2016 | Colin Cummings | Danny Hynes | Brian Accrocco |
2017 | Jacob Weissman | Vadim Chizhevskiy | Colin Cummings |
2019 | Colin Cummings | Vincent Sauceda | Jacob Weissman |
2021 | Colin Cummings | Jacob Weissman | Jacob Munoz |
2022 | Colin Cummings | Jacob Weissman | Marcelo García |
2023 | Colin Cummings | Jacob Weissman | Pete Lippincott |
2024 | Colin Cummings | Jacob Munoz | Jacob Weissman |
Source: [13]
Air Hockey Players Association (AHPA) - Air Hockey World Championship
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Third place |
---|---|---|---|
2015 | Colin Cummings | Billy Stubbs | Brian Accrocco |
2016 | Colin Cummings | Brian Accrocco | Doug Howard |
2017 | Colin Cummings | Vincent Sauceda | Brian Accrocco |
2018 | Colin Cummings | Vincent Sauceda | Danny Hynes |
2019 | Colin Cummings | Vincent Sauceda | Keith Fletcher |
Year | Champion | Finalist | Third place |
---|---|---|---|
2006 (Singles) | Goran Mitic | Michael L. Rosen | José Luis Camacho [NB 1] |
2007 (Singles) | José Luis Camacho | Sergey Antonov | Sergio López |
2006 (Teams) | Spain | Czech Republic | |
2007 (Teams) | Russia | Spain | |
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Third place |
---|---|---|---|
2003 | Pedro Otero | Emilio Araujo | Marc García [NB 2] |
2004 | Marc García | Sergio López | José Luis Camacho |
2005 | José Luis Camacho | Sergio López | Marc García |
2006 | José Luis Camacho | Marc García | Javi Navarro |
2007 | Marc García | Mauro Sturlese | Javi Navarro |
2008 | Sergio López | José Luis Camacho | Mauro Sturlese |
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Third place |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Mauro Sturlese | Igor Masloboev [NB 3] | Sergey Grishin |
2007 | Pedro Beles | Sergey Grishin | Nikita Vaganov |
2008 | Cláudio Barimbetche | Vadim Chizhevskiy | German Vargin |
Cue sports are a wide variety of games of skill played with a cue, which is used to strike billiard balls and thereby cause them to move around a cloth-covered table bounded by elastic bumpers known as cushions. Cue sports are also collectively referred to as billiards, though this term has more specific connotations in some varieties of English.
Eight-ball is a discipline of pool played on a billiard table with six pockets, cue sticks, and sixteen billiard balls. The object balls include seven solid-colored balls numbered 1 through 7, seven striped balls numbered 9 through 15, and the black 8 ball. After the balls are scattered with a break shot, a player is assigned either the group of solid or striped balls once they have legally pocketed a ball from that group. The object of the game is to legally pocket the 8-ball in a "called" pocket, which can only be done after all of the balls from a player's assigned group have been cleared from the table.
English billiards, called simply billiards in the United Kingdom and in many former British colonies, is a cue sport that combines the aspects of carom billiards and pool. Two cue balls and a red object ball are used. Each player or team uses a different cue ball. It is played on a billiards table with the same dimensions as one used for snooker and points are scored for cannons and pocketing the balls.
Roque is an American variant of croquet played on a hard, smooth surface. Popular in the first quarter of the 20th century and billed "the Game of the Century" by its enthusiasts, it was an Olympic sport in the 1904 Summer Games, replacing croquet from the previous games.
Golf billiards is a pocket billiards game usually played for money. Unlike the majority of such games, it allows more than two people to play without compromises or rule changes. The game borrows from the outdoor game of golf, which is historically related to the cue sports. It is usually played on 10-foot or 12-foot snooker tables as their size and structure are more appropriate. In 2006 the Billiard Congress of America commented it was more popular than snooker in the United States.
Underwater hockey (UWH), also known as Octopush in the United Kingdom, is a globally played limited-contact sport in which two teams compete to manoeuvre a puck across the bottom of a swimming pool into the opposing team's goal by propelling it with a hockey stick.
Carom billiards, also called French billiards and sometimes carambole billiards, is the overarching title of a family of cue sports generally played on cloth-covered, pocketless billiard tables. In its simplest form, the object of the game is to score points or "counts" by caroming one's own cue ball off both the opponent's cue ball and the object ball on a single shot. The invention as well as the exact date of origin of carom billiards is somewhat obscure but is thought to be traceable to 18th-century France.
Shuffleboard is a game in which players use cues to push weighted discs, sending them gliding down a narrow court, with the purpose of having them come to rest within a marked scoring area. As a more generic term, it refers to the family of shuffleboard-variant games as a whole.
ITHF table hockey is a sport played on table hockey games. International Table Hockey Federation (ITHF) is an organization that oversees these competitions. The origin of the sport was the Swedish Championship 1982 in Upplands Väsby. Organized table hockey is played in northern, central and eastern Europe, in North America, but table hockey is also played in South America, Africa, Australia, and Asia.
A billiard table or billiards table is a bounded table on which cue sports are played. In the modern era, all billiards tables provide a flat surface usually made of quarried slate, that is covered with cloth, and surrounded by vulcanized rubber cushions, with the whole thing elevated above the floor. More specific terms are used for specific sports, such as snooker table and pool table, and different-sized billiard balls are used on these table types. An obsolete term is billiard board, used in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Inline hockey or roller hockey is a variant of hockey played on a hard, smooth surface, with players using inline skates to move and ice hockey sticks to shoot a hard, plastic puck into their opponent's goal to score points. The sport is a very fast-paced and free-flowing game and is considered a contact sport, but body checking is prohibited. There are five players including the goalkeeper from each team on the rink at a time, while teams normally consist of 16 players. There are professional leagues, one of which is the National Roller Hockey League (NRHL). While it is not a contact sport, there are exceptions, i.e. the NRHL involves fighting.
Table shuffleboard is a game in which players push metal-and-plastic weighted pucks down a long and smooth wooden table into a scoring area at the opposite end of the table. Shooting is performed with the hand directly, as opposed to deck shuffleboard's use of cue sticks.
Four-ball billiards or four-ball carom is a carom billiards game, played on a pocketless table with four billiard balls, usually two red and two white, one of the latter with a spot to distinguish it. Each player is assigned one of the white balls as a cue ball. A point is scored when a shooter's cue ball caroms on any two other balls in the same shot. Two points are scored when the shooter caroms on each of the three object balls in a single shot. A carom on only one ball results in no points, and ends the shooter's inning.
The following is a glossary of traditional English-language terms used in the three overarching cue sports disciplines: carom billiards referring to the various carom games played on a billiard table without pockets; pool, which denotes a host of games played on a table with six pockets; and snooker, played on a large pocket table, and which has a sport culture unto itself distinct from pool. There are also games such as English billiards that include aspects of multiple disciplines.
Three-cushion billiards, also called three-cushion carom, is a form of carom billiards. The object of the game is to carom the cue ball off both object balls while contacting the railcushions at least three times before contacting the second object ball. A point is scored for each successful carom. In most shots the cue ball hits the object balls one time each, although hitting them any number of times is allowed as long as both are hit. The cue ball may contact the cushions before or after hitting the first object ball. It does not have to contact three different cushions as long as it has been in contact with any cushion at least three times in total.
Five-pin billiards or simply five-pins or 5-pins, is today usually a carom billiards form of cue sport, though sometimes still played on a pocket table. In addition to the customary three balls of most carom games, it makes use of a set of five upright pins (skittles) arranged in a "+" pattern at the center of the table. The game is popular especially in Italy and Argentina, but also in some other parts of Latin America and Europe, with international, televised professional tournaments. It is sometimes referred to as Italian five-pins or Italian billiards, or as simply italiana. A variant of the game, goriziana or nine-pins, adds additional skittles to the formation. A related pocket game, with larger pins, is played in Scandinavia and is referred to in English as Danish pin billiards, with a Swedish variant that has some rules more similar to the Italian game.
The English-originating version of eight-ball pool, also known as English pool, English eight-ball, blackball, or simply reds and yellows, is a pool game played with sixteen balls on a small pool table with six pockets. It originated in the United Kingdom and is played in the Commonwealth countries such as Australia and South Africa. In the UK and Ireland it is usually called simply "pool".
Carom billiards and pool are two types of cue sports or billiards-family games, which as a general class are played with a stick called a cue which is used to strike billiard balls, moving them around a cloth-covered billiard table bounded by rubber cushions attached to the confining rails of the table.
Danish billiards or keglebillard, sometimes called Danish five-pin billiards, is the traditional cue sport of Denmark, and the game remains predominantly played in that country. It makes use of a 5 × 10 ft six-pocket table, three billiard balls, and five pins, which are considerably larger than those used in the similar and internationally standardized game of five-pin billiards.
Fifteen-ball pool, also known as sixty-one pool, is a pocket billiards game developed in America in the nineteenth century from pyramid pool. Created by members of the Bassford's Billiard & Chess Rooms in Manhattan during the late 1830s or 1840s, it is the ancestor to many American pool games.