• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Crafts
  • About The Journal
  • Drop us a tip
The Ballston Journal

The Ballston Journal

Ballston Spa PE Teacher Takes His Dodgeball Skills to Manchester

April 1, 2016 by Ballston Journal

BALLSTON SPA — When you speak to Rob Immel about dodgeball, his intensity is palpable. There’s no irony in his voice; he isn’t being coy. He doesn’t see dodgeball as a playground game or the passive-aggressive grudge match it’s famous for in movies about grade school.

He loves dodgeball. He sees it as a sport that combines the most difficult parts of any other sport, and he’s dead serious about it. And now, Immel and three of his New York Empire teammates will be representing the United States in the seventh Dodgeball World Cup in Manchester.

Immel, or “Coach” Immel, as he’s known to ninth- through 12-graders at Ballston Spa High School, has been playing amateur dodgeball for the past 10 years, and he was playing the game recreationally for years before that.

“Dodgeball caters to the true athlete,” he said, putting away arguments for pretty much every other sport. “In baseball, you have to be able to hit or catch, but not really run. Football is mostly strategy. Soccer is all running. Dodgeball takes all the hardest elements and combines everything. Jumping, running, sliding, strategy, communication, teamwork. You have to have it all.”

The game varies in different countries, and Immel says the U.S. team will have to work to match the European style of play, which is much faster with more forward and back movement. But Immel says they have an advantage in the way their team communicates. He hasn’t played with everyone on Team USA, since some of the team members live in other parts of the country, but three of his New York Empire teammates are going, and that’s the advantage. They’ve been playing together for six years.

“We communicate what we are doing and where we are going without even talking,” he said. “We just know each other that well, and that’s the advantage — our connection. If you just have one fast person throwing a ball, that’s not going to do much. But when you have people communicating and working together seamlessly, you can capitalize on whatever weakness the other team has — you win.”

There’s a reason it’s such an intense game. First played in Africa over 200 years ago, dodgeball wasn’t a game at all. It was a life-and-death preparation for battle played with rocks, during which tribesmen would actively try to injure each other in order to bond and weed out the weakest tribesmen. If a teammate went down, the others would surround him and try to fend off the attackers.

An English missionary by the name of Dr. James Carlisle watched this game for some time during his interactions with the tribe, and when he went back to England, he developed a chess-like version played with a leather ball on an open field at the college where he taught, at St. Mary’s College in Norfolk. In 1884, the St. Mary’s players introduced the game to a group from Yale. In that group was Phillip Ferguson, the individual credited with changing the rules to the way we play today. The rules were finally written down in 1905, and popularity grew as colleges all over America played each other. Eventually, American rules became the preferred way to play worldwide.

Immel teaches a dodgeball unit to all of his classes every year, and it’s understandably a favorite.

“They just can’t get enough. They’re begging to play all year,” he said.

Immel’s brand of dodgeball is not a free-for-all. He teaches the kids strategy and keeps everyone in the game and engaged.

“I have a group of 40 11th- and 12-grade girls, and they ask for [dodgeball],” he said. “It’s a favorite activity regardless of athleticism, experience or ability.”

His love for the game is infectious, spreading outside of class to an annual tournament students participate in each March to raise money for charity. The high school tournament had 200 kids in 27 teams playing over two days. This year, the middle school hosted one with 10 teams of eighth graders. “The gym was packed with friends and parents and spectators.”

His team, the New York Empire, is a bunch of 10 players hand-picked by Immel over the years. He met everyone on the team playing the game, many times recruiting them from opposing teams. And with 12 tournaments a year, he has the chance to meet a lot of good players. But how do you get your opponents to come play for you?

It’s easy to see, based on the comments other players leave around the Internet about Empire. It’s not just that they are a good team — and they are. They have been undefeated for the past year and a half, and they play 12 tournaments a year against anywhere from 15 to 35 teams per tournament. They even set a world record for dodgeball, playing 31 hours straight. And when a group from Castleton college broke their record, they came back even harder, setting a new record for the longest marathon playing dodgeball: over 500 games in 43 hours.

But more than how much they win or how long they play, it’s about how they play the game. Their Facebook page is full of good luck wishes to other teams and congrats to the teams that came up with a win.

One commenter posted, “Empire is one of the biggest teams I look up to. If you guys lose you lose, if you win you win, no matter what you always leave happy to be a part of what we have.”

Another player says, “The most inspirational part of Empire is that they are positive on and off the court. They are all smiles and fun win or lose. They aren’t flipping out on refs.”

How other teams play the game is what Coach Immel says he’ll be watching closely in Manchester. As a coach and father of three, Coach Immel knows all too well that he’s being watched, too. By his kids — his 8-year-old daughter thinks he’s famous — by his students, by members of the community. It’s no wonder the community has rallied around the Empire. From Logo Wearhaus in Ballston Spa providing gear, to their training facility in Halfmoon providing them with a place to train and work out, to random people pressing $20 bills into his hand and wishing him good luck around town, Immel says the community support is inspiring.

“People have recognized our past success and are eager to support us on our journey for a gold,” he said.

Join Immel and the rest of his team 7 p.m. Saturday, April 2, 2016, at King’s Tavern in Saratoga Springs to help raise money for their trip to the Dodgeball World Cup in Manchester, April 16-17. There will be trivia, arm speed contests, and asking patrons to wear red, white and blue and bring a $15 donation for the team. Just don’t ask him if he can dodge a wrench.

If you want to watch the Empire play, Planet Dodgeball will be streaming the competition live. Team USA’s first game is against Malaysia at 6 a.m. EST Saturday, April 16.

BSpa Cemetery Restoration: A Puzzle From The Past

March 28, 2015 by Ballston Journal

The Ballston Spa Cemetery Association (BSCA) is working on a huge puzzle, and needs your help to put all the pieces together.

BSCA is a not-for-profit organization that was incorporated in 1898 and is charged with the upkeep, ongoing sales (yes, they still have room!) and management of the historic Ballston Spa Village Cemetery.

BSCA President Mr. Bill Curtiss and the BSCA Board of Directors have laid out a multi-tiered vision to improve the cemetery’s current condition, including a Garrett Road facelift, new signs, historical markers and hopefully, a lot of community involvement.

I’ve always had a bit of a fascination with historic cemeteries. When I lived in Boston I could often be found walking through the Granary Burial Ground on my way to class, or studying under the tree near Paul Revere’s headstone. The Granary is often a busy stop along the city’s Freedom Trail because of the important Bostonian’s interred there, including Samuel Adams and John Hancock. When I passed through The Granary I’d imagine how life was at the time that those guys lived and wondered what they would think of our world today. When Angela emailed me to tell me the story was all mine I literally jumped. I couldn’t wait to find out, with help from Mr. Curtiss, all about the history that is literally buried in my own backyard.

The Ballston Spa Village Cemetery started in 1803 when Elias Lee, the Pastor of the Baptist Church in Ballston Spa, donated a plot of land to Ballston Spa Baptists on which to build what was to be the first house of worship in The Village. As a result, burials were also performed there. In 1840 land south of the Baptist burial ground was purchased as a burial site for Village Catholics. When, in 1865, St. Mary’s Church purchased the current Church Avenue site for Catholic interments, the care of the old Catholic burial grounds was assumed by the BSCA in exchange for the unused remaining lots. Since then various expansions to the south and southwest have increased the acreage of the Ballston Spa Village Cemetery, although it has been difficult for Curtiss to trace the transactions that resulted in these expansions.

The first step in the BSCA’s plan is to replace the chain link fence on the Garrett Road entrance with wrought iron gates to match the original Ballston Avenue entrance, as well as to beautify the entrance with shrubs, ornamental plantings and landscape architecture. These plans have been approved and the BSCA is looking forward to a groundbreaking this summer.

The puzzle solving will continue with the hopeful formation of a “Friends of the Cemetery” group. The “Friends” group would help restore and document the cemetery’s rich history.

Ballston Spa Village Cemetery is the final resting place of many prominent Villagers, including US Congressman John W. Taylor, Beriah Palmer, Anson Brown and more. Taylor was born in Charlton in 1784. A Union graduate, he established his Ballston Spa law practice in 1807. Mr. Taylor served as Speaker of the House for four years, and later became a NYS Senator. He died of a stroke in 1854. Beriah Palmer surveyed the Kayaderosseras Patent, fought in the Revolutionary War and, among other things, became a delegate to the 1801 Constitutional Convention. He was a NYS Assemblyman, a judge and also served as a US Congressman from 1803-1805.

Anson Brown, one of the founding members of Ballston Spa State Bank (now known as the Ballston Spa National Bank), as well as a Congressman, is also buried here. The Village Cemetery is also the final resting place of many Union Soldiers and the G.A.R (Grand Army of the Republic, Ballston Spa Post) Circle memorializes them.

The BSCA aspires to replace all of the cemetery’s tin signs with more attractive posts to guide visitors more easily, fix headstones, plant perennials, place historical markers, collect historical documents and possibly publish a collection of stories to tell the story of the cemetery.

The Annual Meeting of the BSCA is to be held on Saturday, May 2 at 10 a.m. the Village Library, and the board hopes that all members (lot owners) will come hear about all of the improvements that are set to take place this Spring.

Do you like to garden? Are you a student or do you know a student who needs service hours? Are you a teacher that can work this Ballston Spa history into an assignment? If you have any interest in helping to restore this piece of history, help with the beautification process, or get involved in any way please email Mr. Bill Curtiss at [email protected]

Do you know about any other famous Villagers buried at the Ballston Spa Village Cemetery? Do you or your relatives have any interesting cemetery stories to share? Log on and tell me all about it!

The views and opinions expressed by Ariana in her Before There Was Facebook blog are not necessarily those of the Ballston Journal Online. To contact her, email [email protected]

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

E-mail Newsletter

  • Facebook
  • GitHub
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

More to See

Cricut and Silhouette Maker Spaces

October 24, 2020 By Ballston Journal

Ballston Spa PE Teacher Takes His Dodgeball Skills to Manchester

April 1, 2016 By Ballston Journal

Footer

Our History

Founded as a printed newspaper in 1798 the weekly Ballston Journal is now an online-only enterprise.

Over the next months we will be publishing online our previously published articles as they are digitized along with new, online-only reviews and guides intended to expand our readership.

Recent

  • Getting started with a manual die cutting machine
  • Cricut and Silhouette Maker Spaces
  • Agree to Disagree: Shenendehowa, Ballston, Malta and Trump
  • Technology Takes a Front Seat at BSCSD Schools
  • Ballston Spa PE Teacher Takes His Dodgeball Skills to Manchester

Search

Copyright 2020 - The Ballston Journal, a weekly publication