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    Originally posted by spagmasterswift View Post
    Can you throw a handful of sand in your opponents face to temporarily blind them?


    In ?Saipan?s Own Sport? there are more thrills to skills incorporated in play than any other variation of the Meso-American Aztec sport that gave birth to volleyball, any where else in the world. Saipan?s Own Sport is the leader of innovations and it?s called Rocball.

    In volleyball the equation of profit per play is limited to one point executions off any possible athletic skill, at any level of difficulty, from any area on court. When Rocball implemented offensive and defensive scoring and multiple point scoring techniques in this type of team net sports, one of its primary purposes was to identify the different degrees of difficulty inherent but inhibited in the competitive and athletic skills of the game and its players under the old side-out system of volleyball and further constrained under the rally point system of volleyball.

    The points of proof comes from the Rocball players ability to score two point aces, two point backcourt plays, and three point goals in addition to one point court plays. And, in Rocball, with one exception, the net value of the sport comes from the serve. A ball has to be served over the net to initiate competition and a team cannot win a set or game without the serve

    This year Ben Lisua and Myron Laniyo, good examples of Rocball?s current and past ?Master Blasters?, exemplify the artful ability of competing in the sport that preceded rally point anemic by a dozen years. Ben Lisua of team Soul Rebels is this years first and only master of scoring. Ben has scored at least once in each of the five different scoring categories of Rocball. Ben has scored aces, xunks, kees, goals, and the jam. A ?jam? has proven to be the most difficult of plays to complete. The jam is a defensive play made by a player at the net that can spike down a served ball.

    Myron Laniyo of No-Mercy is this year?s leading scorer by heavy hitting in games with a total of eleven aces, ten xunks, thirty two kees, and four goals for total of one hundred and twenty two points, averaging about twenty five points a game in aces, xunks, kees, and goals in addition to Myron?s one point court scoring.

    In Rocball games completed last week, No-Mercy came from behind in the fourth set of their game with the Projects to win and juice-out in four sets. The Projects had the lead going into the fourth set 44 to 36 and only had to win the final set to win their fifth consecutive game. But,
    No-Mercy, lead by veterans Myron Laniyo, David Tisa, and Ichnis Kapwich lead the drive to win the fourth set 16 to 6, a ten point margin, which gave No-Mercy a game point total of 52 to the Projects ending fourth quarter game point score of 50, and caused the Projects their first loss in Rocball.

    In the game between the Soul Rebels and CPC, the Soul Rebels with ?Master Blaster? Ben Lisua defeated CPC in four sets 69 to 38. The Soul Rebels won the game in a shut-out by winning all four sets 16 to 11, 18 to 6, 16 to 6 and 19 to 15. The heavy hitter of the game was John Nekaifes of the Soul Rebels with 3 aces and 6 kees for 18 points.

    No-Mercy and the Projects are tied for first place with four wins and one loss each. The Fanians are in second place with three wins and no losses but need more games to play to hold their league position , and the team One-Way is in third place with four wins and four losses with one game left to play in the season.

    Comment


      Was that a 'yes'?

      How about building sand mounds in order to get some tactical hight advantage? Or a tunnel perhaps?

      Comment


        Where are the results

        Comment




          FOOL?S FIRE
          Ignus Fatuus Volleyball


          Affliction?(1:5)
          When the Federation International de Volleyball (FIVB) disemboweled volleyball of its side-out scoring system, they eviscerated the sport of one of its most important competitive features.

          Symptom?(2:5)
          If the sports architects of the Federation International de Volleyball (FIVB) had any intuitive perceptions or rational reasoning skills when they attempted to remodel volleyball?s scoring method of play, they would have benefited far better if they would have put more mental effort into working with the intrinsic values of volleyball?s side-out scoring system. The serve is the catalyst by which this kind of team net sport best operates its balance of challenges.

          Diagnosis?(3:5)
          Under the rally point scoring system, the serve is a handicap and the receiving team is in the dilemma of having the scoring advantage for the disadvantages of the serve. The rally point scoring system is not an example of how anomalies may have to be resolved when working to develop an equitable offensive and defensive scoring system. The rally point scoring system has disported volleyball into an anemic, self inflicting sport, underwritten with anti-climatic opportunities to compete for unearned points.

          Therapy?(4:5)
          Under the side-out scoring system, a served ball is a volley, a challenge, and a threat because it can?t be systematically penalized error points to the advantage of the receiving team. However, it is the responsibility of the team with serve to provoke a competitive situation of cause and effect. When a team in service fails to fulfill the character of its role, a penalty situation would be defined and enforced.

          If a service team fails in its responsibility to successfully challenge its opponents off a serve, it should be penalized a point. From the method of penalizing the service team a point, a service team?s opponent would benefit by increasing its lead, reducing the service team?s lead, or gaining the lead if both teams are tied. But, there would be no unearned points awarded to a receiving team; non competitive action would be devalued, and each team would have to win set/game point off its earned points and competitive skills.
          And, only the first serve of the person rotating into the service position would be subject to penalty. Otherwise, all that would be created would be an inversion of the rally point scoring system, where activity off any serve could result in a non-competitive exposition of worthless play. However, in order for the serve to be valuable enough to compete for in a side-out offensive and defensive scoring system, the receiving team would be limited to two hits off a served ball, shifting the scoring advantage back to the service team. And, by reinstating game closure to the team in service, the side-out system is calibrated for offensive and defensive scoring with a balance of challenges.


          Antecedent?(5:5)
          The descriptions written up under ?Therapy? of how to develop a balance of challenges for an offensive and defensiv, side-out scoring system are not suggestions, they are instructions. The basic ideas, as they have been described, come from the creation of the first team net sport of this kind responsible for the concept and development of these methods of play.

          In the process of designing and modifying the side-out scoring system with a balance of challenges for offensive and defensive scoring, it was essential to the success of the project to experiment with new ideas. The results of those efforts included the rules of play for unrestricted hitting and kicking, multiple point scoring, penalty point plays, vertical areas of scoring, five hit plays, and a quarter/set scheduled game for the sport of Rocball, often described as volleyball/soccer.

          Comment


            I can't believe this is still going

            Comment


              Hey, don't knock the Roc.

              We're all hooked to Saipan's national sport.

              Comment


                ROCBALL

                In the two Rocball games played last week, both number one teams lost. The Ghasias Brothers out-lasted No-Mercy in a game that went into a double overtime session, and the Soul Rebels handed the Projects their second loss in a four set juice-out 59 to 47 game.

                In the game between the Ghasias Brothers, Myron Laniyo of No-Mercy, this year’s heaviest hitter in aces, xunks, kees, and goals, in what was his lowest heavy scoring game of the season, broke out of a three year slump and scored a jam. Myron reestablished himself as one of Rocball’s best. In the worst game he has played this year, Myron elevated his status from a good Rocball player to a “Master” of the game.

                And, in the game between the Soul Rebels and the best new team of the year, the Projects, veteran player John Nekaifes, joined the ranks of Rocball’s “Master Blasters” by slamming down a served ball from a Project player. The Soul Rebels now have two players on their team that have proved they are in command of Rocball’s scoring methods, Ben Lisua and John Nekaifes.

                In the game between the Ghasias Brothers and No-Mercy, No-Mercy ran out of juice in the fourth set. No-Mercy won the first set 15 to 2, the Brothers won the second set 19 to 17, No-Mercy came back in the third set 14 to 4 and lead in game points 47 to 25 going into the fourth set.

                But, a team cannot win a game in a losing set and No-Mercy didn’t have the right stuff to juice-out the Brothers. The Brothers just barely won the fourth set 15 to 12 and forced the game into overtime. Under Rocball rules, when a game is not won in four sets, the team with the most game points scored but lost the fourth set, would need to win one overtime set to win a game, and the team that won the fourth set with the lowest game points scored would need to win two overtime sets to win a game.

                A Rocball overtime set is a dangerous zone of play. An overtime set can be won by scoring ten points or a goal, whichever event happens first. And, Ben Pelisamen of the Ghasias Brothers scored a goal at a 7 to 2 lead over No-Mercy to win the first overtime set. The Ghasias Brothers continued to upset No-Mercy by winning the game in second overtime 11 to 3.

                The heavy hitters of last weeks games were Ben Pelisamen of the Ghasias Brothers with 3 aces, 4 kees, and 2 goals for 20 points and Jimmy Pua of the Soul Rebels with 4 aces and 3 goals for 17 points.

                On Saturday, December 19th all the indoor Rocball teams are scheduled to play, and game time will start at 4:00 pm. The Rocball SandBlaster’s Tourmanment will start play at 4:00 pm on Jan. 1st at the Pacific Islands club. There is no entrance for the SandBlaster’s Tournament, if their is at least one registered Rocball player on a team.
                Last edited by Feger; 17-12-2009, 10:05.

                Comment


                  What is Rocball

                  Rocball, like volleyball, is a variation of a sport with its roots of play founded in the Pre-Columbian, Meso-American sport of Tlachtli: A team sport once played by Aztec warriors.

                  The actual game of Tlachtli involved passing a ball from side to side over a low wall without it touching the ground. If the ball fell to the ground, a team would win a point and vice versa. If you struck the ball with an incorrect part of the body, you could lose points for your team.

                  After the creation of volleyball in 1895 and prior to 1980, athletes who played this kind of team net sport played under two different general restrictions. In volleyball, players were not allowed to hit the ball with any part of the body below the waist. In the Asian sport of sepak takrau players were not allowed to use their arms or hands to touch or hit a ball.

                  In the Micronesian sport of Rocball, players are allowed to hit the ball with any part of the body as long as a player doesn’t carry or hold the ball. And, as in Tlachtli, there is a situation in which a team can lose a point and both sports have scoring areas other than the court floor: The sport of Tlachtli had vertical loops 8 or 10 feet high on a wall above either side of the court, and Rocball has vertical areas for scoring with six by twelve foot goals located ten feet behind each court.

                  Fundamentals: A quarter/set game of Rocball with 25 points a set, takes a little less or a little more than one hour to complete.

                  In Rocball, when a player serves a ball over the net, the receiving team, the defensive team, has two hits to return a served ball. When a served ball is successfully returned over the net, the offensive team has the first five hit play on the ball, and each team is allowed up to five hits to score point/s.

                  *** Variation: After two hits off a served ball, subsequent plays are five hits for the offensive team and three hits for the defensive team until point/s is scored. This system of play gives the serving/offensive team more of the benefits of the side-out system of play, where the team with the serve had scoring advantage and the receiving team worked against the score for the advantages of the serve.

                  1. It makes a difference: When a team is allowed five hits, it has more than just a couple of advantages over volleyball's traditional three hit play:

                  a. It allows a team to recover from a missed played ball after the third hit.
                  b. It allows a team more opportunity to set up for a multiple point, backcourt score.
                  c.It allows a team more flexibility to move the ball from one side of the court to the other.
                  d. It allows a team more choices of when to spike off a set ball.
                  e. It allows more different types of strategic plays.
                  f. It allows a team to break the predictable bump, set, spike routine.
                  g. It defines the difference between which team is playing offense and defense.
                  h. It forces the three hit, defensive team to adjust more as a reactionary force.
                  i. It creates longer volley and rally plays.
                  j. It breaks up the mind-set and monotony of the three hit count for players and spectators.
                  2. The team with service is the offensive team and points scored by a team with the serve are defined as volley points: Volley = discharge and attack

                  3. The team receiving the serve is the defensive team and points scored by the defensive team are defined as rally points: Rally = mobilize and recover.

                  4. By identifying a team’s points as either volley or rally points, the game incorporates different perspectives and fosters more diverse innovative relationships between the sport, its players, and teams.

                  Comment


                    News release: I wrote a statement that rally point scoring scoring is for sissys and posted it for a volleyball forum on the internet. The original statement read as follows:

                    Is Volleyball’s rally point scoring for Sissys?

                    Give the serving team in volleyball closure and eliminate the two-point margin win rule. Volleyball had a balance of challenges when the serving team had set and game closure.

                    It doesn't make any sense to allow a set or game to be won if a team cannot serve a ball over a net. That kind of rule may be okay for tennis or ping-pong where rackets and paddles are used, but volleyball shouldn't have to be subjected to this kind of inactive and default system of closure.

                    Volleyball used to be a game where a team had to have the courage to serve a ball over the net and challenge their opponents for the score. In fact, volleyball used to be a game where a team couldn't score a point if a ball wasn't served over the net. And, a volleyball game couldn't be won unless the service team scored a point off a ball served over the net.

                    The existing rules of closure for rally-point scoring, has sissified the sport.

                    In response to the above statement, one or more rally point advocates posted their arguments supporting volleyball's rally point method of play and I responded.

                    Forum: Rally point scoring makes for better, more precise and consistent players.

                    Forum: If each player is accountable for their actions and plays by earning or losing a point they will become better ball players.

                    Feger: Players on the team in service, have the responsibility of securing the scoring advantages for their team. Players on the receiving team try to win service for their team for the scoring advantages of the serve and have no less an important objective. When teams understand that a set or game cannot be won without service, the importance of their individual skills and teamwork takes on more difficult and different tactical purposes.

                    Forum: Serving is a basic skill and I can understand an error if trying for placement or an advanced serves, but getting it over the net should not be an issue.

                    Feger: The serve is the catalyst of this sport. It is the one competitive feature of this team net sport that separates it from other team net sports. In table tennis, the serve involves two bounces for a game to get started and at least one bounce thereafter to maintain competition. In tennis, the serve involves one bounce for the game to get started and one or two bounces to maintain competition. Volleyball doesn’t need a bounce serve or any feature associated with a sport that has a bounce serve. The rally-point scoring system and the let serve's origins of play are imbedded in the two-bounce game.

                    Lets take out the ping-pong plays and put the courage back into volleyball. A team must serve the ball over the net and challenge their opponents for set or game point. If you are on the service team, this is when you want your best server in action. If you are on the receiving team, this is when you want your best ball handlers in position.

                    Forum: To many coaches overlook the value of the serve. Rally scoring lets the outstanding servers earn their place on the court.

                    Feger: I agree with the concept of incorporating offensive and defensive scoring, either team can score off the serve or during volley, but every serve need not be a point. With specific rules and under certain conditions, a penalty would be awarded for a bad serve.

                    I’m not a person to defend the side-out rules of play, But the side-out server had an immense responsibility to his teammates and their effort for winning a game. If a team in a game of side-out volleyball lost the serve, they give up the scoring advantage and the possibility of winning a set or game.

                    And, there is absolutely no reason why the service team of either system of play should not have set or game closure.

                    Once again, remarks that rally-point scoring makes better volleyball players, sound like a rote response. It isn’t a logical conclusion based on facts and its something that seems to have been memorized as a “learned knee jerk” reaction to avoid producing empirical evidence and clarification.

                    It is a well known fact, that the Federation International de Volleyball (FIVB), the world governing body of volleyball, did not develope or introduce offensive and defensive scoring in volleyball. In Canada, officials and coaches are arguing for service team closure under rally point scoring. And, in Arizona, a women's league is experimenting with two point backcourt scoring. It sounds and feels like Rocball is in the making to me.

                    Jim Feger

                    Comment


                      Fanians top regular season

                      Veteran team Fanians topped the regular season of the 2009-2010 World Organized Rocball Community League with a 6-1 win-loss record.

                      Rookie team Kagman Projects gave a good account of itself in its maiden year in Rocball, coming in at second place after the eliminations with a 5-2 record.

                      Third place was a two-way tie between One Way and No Mercy as they both finished with identical 4-3 cards.

                      Ghasias Brothers, Soul Rebels, and Islanders, meanwhile, crowd themselves in fourth place with their 3-4 slates.

                      Rocball creator James Feger said only Fanians and Kagman Projects have slotted themselves for the playoffs with One Way and No Mercy needing a play-in game to determine third place.

                      The loser will then take on Ghasias Brothers with the winner playing the victor of the Soul Brothers-Islanders encounter for the fourth and final playoff spot,

                      In the Final Four, Fanians will be the top seed and will duke it out with the fourth place team, while Kagman Projects is the second seed and will square off against the third place team.

                      The winner of the semifinals will then play in the best-of-five championship for the 2009-2010 World Organized Rocball Community League diadem.

                      Playoffs will start in January after the outdoor version of Rocball at the Pacific Islands Club set from Jan. 1 to 3, 2010.

                      In other Rocball news, three players earned Master Blaster status for the season-Ben Lisua and John Nekaifes of Soul Brothers and Myron Laniyo of No Mercy.

                      Feger said the trio distinguished themselves after registering all five of Rocball's heavy hitting, multiple-scoring techniques.

                      Laniyo went on to average 22 points in heavy hits per game. Ben Pelisamen of Ghasias Brothers, for his part, scored a whopping eight goals for the season, which translated to an average of a goal a game.

                      Feger said the 2009-2010 season is also memorable because of how well Kagman Projects players have adopted to Rocball rules.

                      Kagman Projects are made up of volleyball players that helped Kagman High School win the inter-scholastic volleyball championship.

                      “The first-year Rocball players have learned well the rules of Saipan's indigenous sport and in the process stunned players and teams with their amazing come-from-behind victories and overtime wins,” he said

                      The Rocball SandBlaster Tournament will usher in the sport in 2010 and Feger is inviting Rocball and volleyball players alike for the competition.

                      There will be no entrance fee in the SandBlaster Tournament for teams that have at least one registered Rocball player. But those who don't have a Rocball player need to pony up $25. (Saipan Tribune)

                      Comment


                        The Sandroc Opener

                        Rocball opened up the 2010 sporting events for the CNMI on the beach of the Pacific Islands Club. On January 1st, Rocball restarted its beach version of “Saipan’s Own Sport” on the main beach volleyball court of the Pacific Islands Club.

                        Four teams came to start off the CNMI’s sport’s year; the Fanians, No-Mercy, Ballseye, and the Projects. The rules for beach Rocball had to be modified to fit the playing conditions of a sand court. Sandroc (Rocball in the sand) rules of play have four players, and the server is also the goalie; no other player is allowed to play in the area between the goal and the court end lines except the server, and the server is allowed to play anywhere on the court.

                        The receiving team has two hits off a served ball, the goalie is the only player allowed to set off a served ball, and each team is allowed five hits after the receiving team is successful in returning a served ball back over the net in two hits: Any time a server scores on court, it is two points. Other than that, any player can score a three point goal or a volleyball court point, and the net player for the receiving team can “jam”, spike down, a served ball.

                        Sandroc is a four set game played under the quarter/set system of play. A team can “juice-out”, win a game after four sets of play, if after fours sets they outscore their opponents in game points and win the fourth set; game points are calculated by adding up the sets scores: A team cannot win a game in a losing set and when either team fails to juice-out, the game goes into overtime.

                        The team that couldn’t juice-out but had scored the most game points would need to win one overtime set, and the team that won the fourth set with the least amount of game points scored, would need to win two overtime sets: An overtime set is won by a team which scores ten points or a goal, whichever comes first. And, if no goals are scored, as in regular play, only the team in service has closure.

                        Because there were only four teams, the Sandroc games were organized under the quarter/set rules of play with 25 points per set. And, because there wasn’t a need to modify games into any timed scheduled or three set games, players were challenged with games that took from 45 minutes to an hour to complete, not counting any overtime sets.

                        The Fanians came out on top and left the court as this decade’s first Sandroc champions. The Fanians won all four of there games. No-Mercy came in second place losing to the Fanians in the championship game played late Sunday afternoon in four sets 76 to 50.

                        The heavy hitters of the Sandroc games prior to the playoff games were Myron Laniyo of No-Mercy with 9 aces, 3 xunks, 11 keys, and 2 goals for 52 points and Dior Jones of the Fanians, a former Rocball player now residing in Guam, who came to Saipan for the Rocball Sandblaster’s tournament, scored 9 aces, 2 xunks, 5 kees, and 1 goal for 35 points.

                        But, in the Championship game between the Fanians and No-Mercy, it was Dior Jones who broke away from the pack in Rocball’s heavy hitting scoring techniques. Dior, who played on Guam’s Junior National Volleyball team and now works at the Pacific Islands Club on Guam, scored 10 aces, 3 xunks, 8 kees, and 2 goals for 51 points. Dior’s former Rocball team, when he used to be a student at MHS, was the Black Magic.

                        Comment


                          The Year of the Fanians

                          In Rocball "time-ology", it is the year of the Fanians. The Fanians who started out three years ago as the Try-Outs and changed their label to the Fanians have come in second place for their first two years playing Rocball. This year, they started out in excellent form by winning a ten year hiatus of beach Rocball, and then defeated the Soul Rebels Saturday night, to become the indoor champions at the end of the first decade of the 21st century.

                          The Fanians made up of brothers Larry and Youme Sharry, and Julius and Tpyhoon Saito, and Jazz Rosokow, all from the island nation of Chuuk, are the current number one beach and indoor World Rocball Champions.

                          In the thirty year history since Rocball was first put into print, players and teams representing every major island culture and community in Micronesia have played Rocball. Rocball is as unique to the diversity of Micronesia as it is in introducing multiple-point offensive and defensive scoring, with unrestricted hitting and kicking, and vertical areas of play with goals at the end of each court in a volleyball-type sport.

                          The Fanians defeated the Soul Rebels in the first two games of the best two out of three games championship series. The Fanians juiced out in each game, defeating the Soul Rebels by outscoring them in game points and winning the fourth set of each game.

                          In the first game, the Fanians won sets one, three, and four 27 – 14, 26 – 25, 25 – 24. The Soul Rebels won the second set 27 – 24. The Soul Rebels had numerous opportunities to stop the Fanians from winning the first game in the fourth set, but shanked their chances in forcing overtime play with penalty serves that prevented them from winning the fourth set. The Fanians juiced the Soul Rebels in the first game, 102 to 84.

                          In the second and final game of the night, and after a four set hour long game, both teams took a small break to rest, get something to drink, and regroup. In the second game, it took the Fnainas another hour to complete the quarter/set rules of play for Rocball to finalize their dominance over the obstinate and unrelenting Soul Rebels.

                          The Farinas won the second game by winnings every set, 26 – 22, 27 – 18, 27 – 13, and 26 – 14. The Fanians outscored the Soul Rebels in heavy hitting with aces 28 – 17, xunks 4 – 3, kee 30 – 13, and goals 1 – 0. Ben Lisua of the Soul Rebels scored the only jam of the series.

                          The heavy hitters of the games were Jazz Rosokow of the Fanians with 4 aces, 1 xunk, 3 kees, and a goal in the first game and Larry Sharry of the Faninas who scored 2 aces, 3 xunks, and 5 kees in the second game.

                          Comment


                            US pros try Saipan’s Rocball


                            AVP professional players fed their curiosity on Saipan’s own sport—Rocball—by giving it a try with the local players over the weekend at the Marianas High School Gym.
                            During a question-and-answer session with students of MHS the day after they arrived last week, Jennifer Snyder admitted they are curious about the Rocball, which according to Jim Feger, is Saipan’s original sports.

                            The volleyball professional players, after making this year’s Marianas Cup another successful and explosive sports event in the Pacific, did not let go of the chance to try the Rocball.
                            Paul Baxter and Andrew Fuller came to the Rocball court and joined the local players for a Rocball game, Feger said.

                            Fuller was with John Nekaifes, Ben Lisua, Mariano Lisus, and Willy Aguilar of the Soul Rebels, while Baxter played with Bulls Eye’s J.R. Gechig, Jordan Mariano, Gabriel White, and Joemil Lisua.

                            According to Feger, Baxter and Fuller got the “on-the-job training in Saipan’s own sport and they couldn’t have chosen a better group of mentors to learn how to play Rocball.
                            In fact, Feger said the two U.S pros learned well enough to come in first and second in the heavy hitting category.

                            Baxter scored two aces, one xunk, and four kees to earn heavy hitter of the game.
                            On the other hand, Lisua and Fuller of the Soul Rebels tied for second place in heavy hitting. Ben scored two aces, one jam, two kees, and a goal. Fuller scored three aces, and two goals giving each player 12 heavy points apiece.

                            In all, there were nine aces, two xunks, one jam, 13 kees, and three goals scored in the game.
                            The Soul Rebels dominated the first three sets winning each set 15 to 12, 19 to 15, and 16 to 11. But, as the volleyball pros learned, this is not volleyball. Rocball games are won by the team that outscores their opponents in game points and wins the fourth set.
                            At the end of the third set, the Soul Rebels were leading 50 to 38. All the Soul Rebels had to do to win the game and juice-out was to win the fourth set.

                            The Bulls Eyes would have had to win the fourth set by 13 points to juice-out and win. They won the fourth set 15 to 6. They won the set but lacked the game points to win the game. At the end of the fourth set, it was the Soul Rebels 56 and the Bulls Eyes 53.

                            A team can’t win a Rocball game in a losing set regardless of whether they outscored their opponents in game points. However, by winning the fourth set, the Bull Eyes forced the game into overtime: Overtime sets are won with ten points or a goal, whichever comes first.
                            The Soul Rebels outscore the Bull Eyes in four sets but lost the fourth set. The Bull Eyes won the fourth set but scored less game points than the Soul Rebels.

                            In order to win the game in overtime, the Soul Rebels only needed to win one set. The Bulleyes needed to win two overtime sets to win the game.

                            And, the Bulls Eyes were at set point in the first set, but lost the serve, got xunked, which dropped their score to 8 points, and lost the game in first overtime set 10 to 8. In the post game conversations, Paul Baxter threw down the gauntlet, he wants to come back to Saipan for a shot at the title. And, the world’s best Rocball players, will be here waiting for him.
                            Last edited by Feger; 04-03-2010, 09:37.

                            Comment


                              Volleyball is ace I loved Beach Spikers on the Cube and have played it at Manhatten Beach in California State

                              Comment


                                WTF is with this thread? Seriously, is the forum under attack?

                                Comment

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