PATTERING FEET, CHILDREN'S VOICES
ABBY: Do you fancy playing a sport that will test the power of both your brains and your muscles?
You do! Perfect.
Because today, we鈥檙e going to be getting to grips with some of the skills that we need, to play boccia.
UPLIFTING MUSIC
Time to meet our wonderful boccia coaches:
Rafael Young and Natasha Critchley.
NATASHA: Hello, everyone.
RAFAEL: Boccia is a target ball sport.
You win by getting more of your balls closer to the jack (the target ball), than your opponent or the other side can get theirs.
And you do make it seem pretty simple, but I know from playing boccia, it takes a lot of skill and concentration.
So, I think we鈥檙e going to have a good practice.
Are you all ready to give it a go?
CHILDREN: Yes! Yeah!
Abbey: For boccia, everyone plays sitting down and you鈥檙e allowed to throw or roll the boccia balls any way you can.
You can use your hands, feet, even a ramp.
So Rafael, what is the first thing that we鈥檙e going to try today?
RAFAEL: We鈥檙e going to do 鈥楥ontrol the Roll.鈥
We鈥檙e going to work on controlling the speed of the ball.
You鈥檙e going to roll it between each other.
The spot in front of your partner is your target.
UPBEAT MUSIC
CHILD 1: I got to practise my strategy and my accuracy, while having fun trying to get the ball on the spots.
ABBY: To make this activity more of a challenge, try moving further away from your partner.
And to really step up your skills, see if you can make the speed of your roll faster or slower, but still stop your ball on the spot.
What do we have next, Rafael?
RAFAEL: We鈥檙e going to take it up a step.
We鈥檙e adding in control of direction as well as speed.
We鈥檙e calling this 鈥楥one Zone.鈥
The kind of ball that you鈥檙e using is important for this, whether you鈥檙e playing with a beanbag or boccia balls of different hardnesses.
Three zones, three cones.
UPBEAT MUSIC
Yeah!
ABBY: If you鈥檇 like to challenge yourself in this activity, you could use targets that are smaller and more difficult to land your ball in, increase the distance between the cones and players, or both!
Evie, how did you find Cone Zone?
EVIE: It鈥檚 really fun. There鈥檚 like different ways of doing it.
ABBY: It is really fun, and you almost get quite competitive with yourself because you want to beat what you did the last time. Yeah.
CHEERING
ABBY: What鈥檚 the next step that we need to upgrade our boccia skills?
RAFAEL: We鈥檙e going to pull together everything we鈥檝e done so far, and do 鈥楽core More.鈥
So, you are in two teams; you鈥檝e got a red team and a blue team.
You get loads of points if you get the tiny red zone target.
Four points for the yellow zone bigger, medium sized target.
And just two points for the biggest, 鈥榚asiest to stop a ball in target鈥 at the back.
ABBY: So, this is where the tactics and strategy really come into play?
RAFAEL: It really is, yeah, that鈥檚 right.
Okay, so as always with boccia, red goes first in the match, so Natasha, that鈥檚 you. Take it away.
NATASHA: Shall we go for the red?
RAFAEL: Go on鈥 Oh, nearly.
CHILD 2: I think I may go for yellow.
When we played Score More, it was pretty competitive.
RAFAEL: Oh, nearly! Oh, very nearly!
CHILD 2: But what I liked about it was when you could see your partners and tell them what you think you should go for.
CHILD 1: Right, hit it on the edge and put a spin on it to go in, like that.
RAFAEL: Oh, well done.
Good job.
And so, with the last ball thrown, that is a resounding win for the reds with ten whole points.
Brilliant job, reds.
But you know what, that鈥檚 been brilliant all round.
CHEERING
ABBY: I鈥檝e had a great time, brushing up on some of my boccia skills.
But why don鈥檛 you give it a try?
CAMERA CLICKS
PATTERING FEET, CHILDREN'S VOICES