An afternoon with pelotaris

Ben Gingone serves the pelota during practice sessions at a local cancha
It was a fun afternoon as I spent time with pelotaris at the local cancha in Quezon City. Jai alai, the Basque game, have fascinated me ever since I saw an amateur player motoring with his cesta behind his back in Cebu. Gotten curious, I followed him to the run down cancha or fronton where he and the rest of amateur players were practicing.
I’m not new to this sport but, like most Cebuanos, I grew up associating it with the illegal game of masiao. The first time I saw this being played in March this year I was instantly hooked. The pelota or rubber ball zooming at speeds of more than 200 miles an hour while a pelotari tries to catch it and spring it back to the frontis is really spectacular! No wonder, they call this the game of a thousand thrills.
The sport, once a very popular game and now relegated in the background because of it’s checkered history in the country, is being kept alive by former professionals and amateurs who have been playing for the love of it. This, and my fascination prompted me to propose this as one of my final projects in ACFJ.

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