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  2. Shell game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_game

    An illegal shell game performed with bottle caps on Fulton Street in New York City. The shell game (also known as thimblerig, three shells and a pea, the old army game) is a public gambling game that challenges players to follow the movement of a marker hidden under one of several covers (shells).

  3. Take Me Out to the Ball Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Take_Me_Out_to_the_Ball_Game

    "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" is a 1908 Tin Pan Alley song by Jack Norworth and Albert Von Tilzer which has become the unofficial anthem of North American baseball, although neither of its authors had attended a game before writing the song. [1] The song's chorus is traditionally sung as part of the seventh-inning stretch of a baseball game ...

  4. Cups and balls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cups_and_balls

    Christian Farla performs Cups and Balls on stage.. The most widely performed version of the effect uses three cups and three small balls. [11] The magician makes the balls appear to pass through the solid bottoms of the cups, jump from cup to cup, disappear from the cup and appear in other places, or vanish from various places and reappear under the cups (sometimes under the same cup), often ...

  5. Seventh-inning stretch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventh-inning_stretch

    Since Anheuser-Busch's sale of the Cardinals in 1996, "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" has been played in the middle of the 7th inning, with "Here Comes The King" at the top of the 8th. Often, "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" is followed by an instrumental rendition of "Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis". The Clydesdales still appear on Opening Day and ...

  6. Mesoamerican ballgame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesoamerican_ballgame

    The ball used in the ancient handball or stick-ball game was probably slightly larger and heavier than a modern-day baseball. [41] [42] Some Maya depictions, such as this relief, show balls 1 m (3 ft 3 in) or more in diameter. Academic consensus is that these depictions are exaggerations or symbolic, as are, for example, the impossibly unwieldy ...

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    www.aol.com/games/play/exoot-sdn-bhd/bouncing-balls

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  8. Medieval football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_football

    Banning of ball games began in France in 1331 by Philip VI, presumably the ball game known as La soule. Youths playing ball, carved on a misericord c. 1350 at Gloucester Cathedral. In the mid-fourteenth century a misericord (a carved wooden seat-rest) at Gloucester cathedral, England shows two young men playing a ball game. It looks as though ...

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