Hi Ryan,

I don't know that we need a new sport, but we need to involve more
sighted players in the sports we do have. What I mean by that is
beeper baseball is very much like regular baseball accept we have
beepers for the baseball and bases. There is no reason we couldn't
have sighted players playing beeper baseball with us as I think we
would be even as far as accessibility goes.

Same might be said for socker. I've actually played beeper socker with
sighted people before and its not really any different for them. The
only effective difference is that the ball rolls around beeping like
crazywhere a regular ball doesn't. Again, I think both blind and
sighted players would be pretty much even as far as accessibility
goes.

The real problem is not that there aren't sports blind and sighted
people can play together, but nobody  tends to bring the two groups
together. If a parent takes a blind child to a little league baseball
game the coach is likely to suggest that the parents of the child take
him/her to a beeper ball league instead. Which is quite sad, because
as long as the parents provide the little league team with a beeper
baseball there isn't any reason their child can't play with the
sighted kids. However, attitudes being what they are parents of blind
children tend to form their own leagues for beeper baseball while
parents of sighted children run little leagues for sighted kids
without much interaction between the two.

There are other sports such as bowling that don't require sight
either. As long as someone lines the blind player up correctly and
he/she has a decent aim they can bowl with the rest of the sighted
people and be competitive. I've personally found I don't need the
guide rails and all the other stuff that is suppose to make bowling
more accessible for the blind. I just line up and bowl the best I can.
Which means if a blind player wants to he or she could compete against
sighted players more or less equally.

Cheers!


On 6/7/12, Ryan Strunk <[email protected]> wrote:
> After reading the article and seeing your feedback, I can't help but nod my
> head in agreement. It got me to thinking about a perennial problem with
> so-called "blind sports," and I wonder what the solution is.
> If this strays too far from the realm of accessible gaming, please feel
> free
> to steer the topic back in a more suitable direction.
> In all blind sports I have seen--goal ball, beep baseball, accessible
> cricket, power showdown, and now this--the common trend seems to be that
> blind players are forced to play only with other blind players. In some of
> these sports totally blind people even get a different set of rules than
> those with partial sight. Nuts to that, and I have some residual vision.
> The article talks about how tennis teaches blind people that they can do
> the
> same things as their sighted peers, but I'm having trouble seeing how
> modified tennis makes that case. Certainly I believe that blindness can be
> relegated to the level of an inconvenience, and I believe that given the
> proper training and opportunity, blind people can compete on an equal
> playing field with the sighted--no pun intended--but I don't know if that's
> often the case when it comes to sports.
> I know that certain forms of martial arts lend themselves to equal
> competition between blind and sighted people; one of my co-workers this
> Summer takes part in UFC fights. I myself wrestled for 8 years while going
> to school. But when it comes to other sports, especially team sports, I
> wonder how we could go about participating on an equal level. Is the answer
> to create a new sport that blind and sighted people can play together? Do
> we
> develop a new set of techniques so that we, too, can play pickup
> basketball?
> I don't know, but I'd sure like to find out. My days of training to be a
> star athlete are certainly behind me, but it's not too late for the younger
> guys.
> All the best,
> Ryan

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