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Jai alai (/ ˈ h aɪ. ə l aɪ / HYE-ə-lye: [ˈxai aˈlai]) is a Basque sport involving bouncing a ball off a walled-in space by accelerating it to high speeds with a hand-held wicker, commonly referred to as a cesta.
The establishment also had a jai alai team when in season. [2] The facility was 60,000 square feet and on a 50-acre property. [5] The institution was first established in 1973 as Ocala Jai-alai, which was a branch office of the Miami fronton. [6] [7] At one time, the jai alai performances could attract about 2,000 people. [8]
Players and fans of jai alai hope the closing of the last fronton or court in Florida doesn't mean the end of the sport.
The article states that jai alai is the facility where the sport is played (as opposed to the sport itself). According to my Webster's dictionary (and the usage I have heard my entire life), jai alai refers to the sport, not the facility where the sport is played.
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The Miami Dolphins naturally dominated the South Florida sports scene in 1972 as they marched toward their Perfect Season with legendary coach Don Shula. ... Miami Jai Alai Fronton at 3500 NW 37 ...
There is an abandoned Jai alai court [1] in the back of the Hermanos Ameijeiras Hospital, the site of the old Casa de Beneficencia, on Calles Concordia and Lucenas near Calle Belascoain, an area that had been considered in the early part of the city as a place to locate the helpless and the unwanted (Casa de Beneficencia, Hospital de San Lázaro, the Espada Cemetery, Casa de Dementes de San ...
The Manila Jai Alai Building was a building designed by American architects Welton Becket and Walter Wurdeman that functioned as a building for which jai alai games were held. [1] It was built in the Streamline Moderne style in 1940 and survived the Battle of Manila. [2] It was considered as the finest Art Deco building in Asia, until its ...