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Hardcourt Bike Polo

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Two players battling for control of the ball

Hardcourt Bike Polo is a variation of traditional Bicycle Polo in which teams of players ride bicycles and use mallets to strike a small ball into a goal.

The game

File:Bike polo charge.jpg
Bike Polo team charging the ball

Two teams of three players play in an enclosed rectangular area (ex. parking lot, tennis courts, or roller hockey rink). Cones or small goals are placed at each long end of the rectangle and serve as goalposts/goals.

At the beginning of the game, the ball is placed in the middle of the court the players wait behind their own goals. Following a countdown, both teams charge the ball which is called the "joust".

A player may hit the ball in two ways: a "shot" or a "shuffle". A shot is made with either end of the mallet head whereas a shuffle is made with the side. In order to score a goal, a player must hit the ball into the opposing team's goal with a shot; if the player uses a shuffle, the goal does not count and play continues.

Following a goal, the scoring team returns to their own half of the court. After the scoring team returns to their half, the scored-on team may cross the half line and resume play.

The game continues until a team reaches a pre-defined limit of three to five goals. Some cities also impose a time limit, which is informally invoked by spectators as play draws on.

A player who "dabs", (touches a horizontal surface with their foot), must undertake some form of remedial penalty before making contact with the ball again. This usually involves either riding in a circle or "tapping out" (riding to a designated point on the court and touching it with the mallet). It is also common to have to say "foot down" to let other players know you are out of play. You should avoid affecting play of the game at all cost after a foot down occurs.

The amount of contact in a particular game may vary but is generally restricted to "mallet to mallet, bike to bike, or player to player"

As a decentralized and organically growing game, the rules and styles of Hardcourt Bike Polo may vary substantially from city to city.

Equipment and courts

A well-used Street Hockey ball

Rather than use traditional polo mallets, Hardcourt Bike Polo players make handmade mallets in the spirit of the DIY ethic. Typical mallets are constructed using high density gas pipe or ABS piping for the head and a ski pole for the shaft.

The most commonly used ball is a plastic Street Hockey ball.

Players commonly play on courts such as a tennis courts or street hockey rinks. These are often customized using boards to keep the ball from rolling out of the court or getting stuck in the corners.

Freshly painted wheel cover

Player will make wheel covers out of corrugated plastic to protect spokes and create solid blocking surfaces. Many of these covers are painted with elaborate designs to help identify riders or their city's club. Wheel covers can't be found in stores and are another example of the sport's DIY roots.

Low gear ratio fixed-gear or single-speed freewheel bikes are advantages for quick acceleration and control on bike polo's small court. Many of the fixed-gear bikes are brakeless. Although any bike is acceptable for the game, eventually most players customized their bike especially for bike polo and their playing needs. Most riders use tall riser bars to give their bike a more upright position. They frequently shorten their handle bars to make clearance for swinging their mallets.

Popularity

Modern Hardcourt Bike Polo has roots in early 2000s Seattle. Since 2004, cities across North America have thrown inter-city tournaments such as the East-, West-, and Northside Polo Invites. The First Annual North American and European Hardcourt Bicycle Polo Championships were both held in August 2009. The European tournament drew over 40 teams from Great Britain, France, Switzerland, Spain, Italy and Germany and was won by L'Equipe, a Geneva team. The North American tournament featured 36 teams from Seattle, Vancouver BC, Milwaukee, Chicago, New York, Ottawa, Portland, Washington DC, and elsewhere and was won by team Smile of Seattle. First prize for each tournament was tickets to the World Championships in Philadelphia. The worlds as they are know featured teams from the US, Canada, England, France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. The winners were Team Smile from Seattle who defeated the team from East Vancouver in a repeat of the North American final. The first ever Australian Championships will be held in Melbourne in the near future.

Tournaments

World Championships

Year Host Winners Score Runners-up Third Place Score Fourth Place
2009 Philadelphia Team Smile (Seattle) Balls Deep (East Vancouver) Faceless Emotion (New York) Wisconsin A (Madison, Wisconsin)
2010 Berlin Beaver Boys (Milwaukee) 5-1 Machine Politics (Chicago) L’Equipe (Geneva) 5-3 Toros (Munich)
2011 Seattle

North American Championships

Year Host Winners Score Runners-up Third Place Score Fourth Place
2009 Seattle Team Smile (Seattle) Balls Deep (East Vancouver) Beaver Boys (Milwaukee) DD Booster Club (New York)
2010 Madison, Wisconsin The Odds 5-2 Team Smile (Seattle) East Van (East Vancouver) Super Polonics (Seattle)

European Championships

Year Host Winners Score Runners-up Third Place Score Fourth Place
2009 London L'Equipe (Geneva) 5-3 Malice International (London) Toros (Munich) Discordia
2010 Geneva L'Equipe (Geneva) 5-4 Cosmic (London) El Club (Barcelona) Rotten Apples (London)
2011[1] Barcelona L'Equipe (Geneva) 5-2 Polosynthese (Germany) Hooks ([Rouan]) 5-4 El Club (Barcelona)

The name

Though Hardcourt Bike Polo game play has more in common with hockey than traditional polo, the word "polo" is used because the players sit atop of a moving object and strike the ball with mallets. "Hardcourt", "Urban Bike Polo" and simply "Bike Polo" are other variations used by players and the press.

References