From:
Ollie Rupp, USFA President
To:
U.S. Floorball Players
Re:
Challenge
I am writing
to you about something which is very important to me - the development
of floorball in the USA. In the Spring of 1995, I learned about this
fantastic sport at a Physical Education conference. I have been hooked
ever since, playing with a nice group of people 1-3 times per week for
the past seven years. During these years the game evolved for us tremendously;
we went from playing on small goals with no goalies to playing with
goalies and regulation size goals, following IFF rules. However, we
play in almost total obscurity, struggle to get court times and have
difficulties maintaining our numbers.
I believe that other floorball groups in the USA have similar problems.
I have asked myself why it is that this fun and exciting sport has not
yet caught on even though it seems ideal for girls, boys, men and women?
It certainly has the potential to fill a niche for people who love hockey.
It is inexpensive, does not require the skill of skating and prohibits
hitting and checking.
There may be several answer to my question:
Many floorball groups are made up of adults. They got into the game
through co-workers or friends from Scandinavia who have played the game
there. The adults play to have fun but for the most part they do not
concern themselves with making the sport of floorball more popular,
attracting more players and developing youth players to keep the sport
alive.
There is a lack of uniformity in how the game is played amongst the
different U.S. groups. Some play on inline hockey rinks, some in gymnasiums,
others on astro turf or tennis courts. The size of the goals differs
from group to group and some do not even play with goalies. The rules
that are being played by may be heavily adapted from the official IFF
rules.
This lack of uniformity contributes to the difficulty of attracting
new players to the sport. To someone watching the game it may appear
to be more of a "kind of fun, helter skelter" game that emulates
hockey, played with plastic sticks and on feet; a watered down version
of street hockey rather than the sport that it is. Someone who watches
a game in California may not even recognize it as the same game when
seeing it in North Carolina.
In order to grow floorball in the U.S. I have set a few simple goals:
*The development
of youth teams through volunteers from already existing floorball groups
to introduce the sport to recreational centers, churches, schools and
YMCA/YWCA facilities.
*Forming connections between the existing groups and urging them to
play by IFF rules and whenever possible, play on standard courts.
*Get the existing groups to play against each other in tournaments if
possible to develop a floorball history and culture in the USA.
*Urging existing groups to go beyond just playing pick-up and dedicate
some time each week to practice and skill development.
* Using the usafloorball website as a source of help and information
as well as a means to communicate and share experiences with other floorball
players in the USA and around the world.
* Becoming involved in floorball by making people aware of the existence
of this and similar sites and perhaps advocating floorball by contacting
local news media to make them aware of the existence of the sport.
I predict that there will be similarities in the way floorball will
develop in the USA to the way soccer has already developed here over
the past 25 years. Soccer used to be looked upon as an alternative sport
for girls and for people who wanted to be play a team sport. It did
not require special skills (or so it was thought), people of any body
type could play and it did not cost much money to get into, unlike (American)
football, basketball or baseball.
Floorball can emerge as the alternative to inline hockey, ice hockey,
street hockey and even soccer, all sports that either require special
skills or body types, are very expensive or have become so crowded with
players that kids are subjected to tryouts for teams, often with the
result that they are cut, causing feelings of failure and rejection.
I hope that there are those of you who love the sport as much as I do,
who will make a personal sacrifice and give of their time and energy
to help develop floorball in the USA.
Please feel free to give me your input or feedback by contacting me
via e-mail at president@usafloorball.org.
Ollie Rupp, President of the U.S. Floorball Association