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  2. Japanese-style baseball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese-style_baseball

    In a narrow sense, Japanese-style baseball is a game that uses a hollow rubber ball, and in a broad sense, it includes a semi-hard baseball where a hard ball's outer coating is replaced with rubber. In contrast, the ball used in softball is most often leather but is larger than a regular baseball. Other than the use of a different ball, the ...

  3. Half-rubber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half-rubber

    Half-rubber, also known as halfball or halfies, [1] is a bat-and-ball game similar to stick ball or baseball.The game was developed in the American South around the beginning of the 20th century, moving north with the Great Migration in New York City and Philadelphia where it was widely played by the 1950s in addition to stick ball.

  4. Pinners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinners

    The ball [4] used was a two and a half-inch hollow pink soft rubber ball called a "Pinky," that bounced well off the edges of steps. [5] Baseball gloves were not allowed. The scoring rules [2] is similar to baseball, but with runs being virtual determined by where the ball lands.

  5. Baseball (ball) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseball_(ball)

    In 1910, the cork-core ball was introduced. They outlasted rubber core baseballs; and for the first few years they were used, balls were hit further and faster than rubber core balls. [3] Pitchers adapted with the use of the spitball, which is now illegal, and an emphasis on changing the ball. [3] [failed verification]

  6. Bouncy ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_balls

    A superball or power ball is a bouncy ball composed of a type of synthetic rubber (originally a hard elastomer polybutadiene alloy named Zectron) invented in 1964, which has a higher coefficient of restitution (0.92) than older balls such as the Spaldeen so that when dropped from a moderate height onto a level hard surface, it will bounce nearly all the way back up.

  7. Hockey puck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_puck

    At first, pucks (of either material) were made in the shape of a square. Rubber pucks were first made by slicing a rubber ball, then trimming the disk square. The original puck used first in the first organized games in Kingston on March 10, 1886 (on display at the Original Hockey Hall of Fame), was made from a cut-down lacrosse ball. It looks ...