Jugger
Jugger is a sport inspired by the 1989 movie The Salute of the Jugger (released as The Blood of Heroes in the US), in which a game of the same name is played. The film version was invented by the film's writer/director, David Webb Peoples, especially for the movie. The transformation into a real sport happened independently in Germany and in Australia.
Jugger as sport is gaining popularity in Germany, especially with university and college teams, with its own league. There are teams in Australia, Ireland, England, Poland, Denmark, Spain, Sweden, Colombia, Costa Rica and The Netherlands. A couple of variations of the sport are played in the USA. Some follow the International version (e.g. Germany, Ireland etc.) while others use a model that more closely resembles The Game that is played in the movie.
The first ever Jugger international tournament took place in Hamburg, Germany on 20 May 2007 between the Irish team Setanta and a number of the Northern German teams. In 2008, Australia and Ireland came to Germany to take part in the 1. German Open, the first two-continent tournament in Jugger.
Equipment
- The skull (German: jugg in "Berlin tradition", or, Schädel in "Hamburg/Dilettanten tradition"[1]): a "ball" made to resemble a dog skull, usually made of foam and tape (not an actual dog skull as in The Blood of Heroes). In Germany and Ireland, a dog skull made of cellfoam, covered with latex, is used.
- The stakes (German: mal): in Australia, an upright foam stake at each end; a loop attached to the skull is looped over the stake to score. In most countries, a frustum (a pyramid with the top cut off) with a centre hollow is used.
- Weapons: the 'weapons' used in jugger are very similar to LARPing weapons. There are strict regulations to the length of a weapon and the amount of padding used. The weapons in jugger vary in type for different countries:
- Australian-style weapons ("Spars")[2] each enforcer may have any of the following combinations, with at most one double-up and one chain:
- A staff, 180 cm in length, with a striking zone at one and another in the middle, creating two distinct hand grips. Thrusting is not allowed
- A Q-Tip, 200 cm in length, double-ended, thrusting is allowed
- A longsword, 140 cm in length, thrusting is allowed
- A short sword and shield, short sword 85 cm in length, thrusting is allowed; padded shield, 60 cm in diameter
- Two short swords, each 85 cm in length
- A chain, 320 cm in length with optional 50 cm club attached to the handle end (replacing 50 cm of chain).
- The Goal. Both the European style Mal and traditional Australian style Stake may be used interchangeably
- In 2015 the following Spars were removed from Australian Tournament Rules, though they are occasionally still used in casual games:
- Polearm/Spear, 180 cm in length, thrusting is allowed. Unlike the Staff it does not require a middle section and separate hand grips.
- Flail: A Chain class Spar, consisting of a stave up to 180 cm in length with a striking zone at one end and a ball and chain chain extending out from the other end. A maximum overall length of 320 cm
- German-style weapons ("Pompfen"):
- A staff, 180 cm in length, thrusting is not allowed
- A Q-Tip, 200 cm in length, double-ended, thrusting is allowed
- A longsword, 140 cm in length, thrusting is allowed
- A short sword and shield, short sword 85 cm in length, thrusting is allowed; padded shield, 60 cm in diameter
- A chain, 320 cm in length
- The mal is not a stake but a frustum with a centre hole to place the skull in
- American-style weapons (Jugger Ohio and The Red Dirt Jugger Club):
- A polearm 6 feet, 6 inches in length, with one striking end, thrusting is allowed (only weapon that thrusting is allowed with)
- A Q-Tip, 6 feet, 6 inches in length, double ended, thrusting is not allowed
- A Two-Handed Sword, 5 feet in length
- Paired Short Swords, 2 feet, 6 inches in length each
- Short Sword and Shield, 2 feet, 6 inches in length for the sword, 2 feet, 6 inches in diameter maximum for the shield
- Chain 10 feet maximum length from end to end
- Goal, is similar to the German mal, is a wide based, short cone with a deep well in the center for placing the skull
- Australian-style weapons ("Spars")[2] each enforcer may have any of the following combinations, with at most one double-up and one chain:
Traditional timekeeping is done with a gong and 100 stones: The stones are thrown against the gong to keep time. 100 stones per third, 3 thirds per game. Alternatively a drum or similar is used, with the drummer keeping count of each beat (known as a stone). 100 stones per third, 3 thirds per game. In conjunction with official equipment, smartphone applications such as Jugger Stones or Jugger Match. are sometimes used for score keeping and/or drum beats.
Roles
A team is composed of the 8 following persons, 5 of which are allowed to be on the field:
- One qwik (sometimes spelled "quick"[3]): An unarmed player, and the only one allowed to touch the skull
- Maximum one chain: A player armed with a chain
- Three respectively four enforcers (German: Fighter,[4] German term: Pompfer): Armed with their choice of weapons (except chain). May handle the skull with their weapons
- Up to three substitutes, who may replace any player
Roles (in the film)
In the film The Salute of the Jugger (or 'The Blood of Heroes'), each role is heard at least once in the dialogue:
- Qwik - Kidda (portrayed by Joan Chen) and other characters in the movie refer to this role a few times throughout the movie.
- Slash - Sallow (portrayed by Rutger Hauer) is described as one (and refers to others) this role. Both Sallow and Gonzo are described as "Slashes" in the movie.
- Drive - Cim (or Big Cimber, portrayed by Anna Katarina) or Mbulu (portrayed by Delroy Lindo) are described as such, and only once, by Sallow when he, Cim, and Mbulu are debating mid-way through the movie.
- Back Charge - Mbulu (portrayed by Delroy Lindo) or Cim (or Big Cimber, portrayed by Anna Katarina) are described as such, and only once, by Sallow when he, Cim, and Mbulu are debating mid-way through the movie.
- Griffer - When Sallow speaks to Gonzo the first time in the movie, this term is used by Sallow's character once, and may refer to the chain-using player in the game (portrayed on Sallow's team by Vincent D'Onofrio, as 'Young Gar').
Rules
Australia
The objective of the game is for the team's Qwik to get the foam dog skull, or jugg, on the opposing teams stake on mal to score goals while minimising the number of goals the opposing team scores within the time limit. The enforcer's role is to defend their Qwik from the opposing players.
Positions
Australian Rules Jugger is played with two teams of five juggers. Three enforcers with weapons, one chain and one qwik.
Qwiks
The Qwik is unarmed and the only player who can carry the skull. The two Qwiks start outside the centre circle and when the game begins wrestle for the skull. The enforcers may not enter the circle until the skull or the whole body of one of the Qwiks leave the circle. A Qwik's hands and forearms are not considered a hit zone and may be used to block.
Enforcers
The enforcers wield various classes of padded weapons (listed above)
There can be a maximum of two of the same class of weapon among the other enforcers. An enforcer can pin another player by resting their weapon on the hit player within the first stone of their penalty. Paired shorts can pin two opponents. The qwik cannot be pinned.
Chain The position of chain wields a ball-and-chain of plastic and foam up to 320 cm long. The chain can have a 50 cm handle (replacing 50 cm of chain) with a striking surface which can be used to tag opponents for a regular Spar penalty count.
Timekeeping
Games consist of three thirds. The thirds last 100 stones. Traditionally kept by throwing stones against a gong, though other methods such as drums are often used. Stone beats are 2.5 seconds apart.
Hits
Stone penalties for hits vary between countries from three to five for the Spar/Pompfen and five and eight for the chain. Australia plays three and five.
- When a player is hit by the other team they take a knee and are inactive for the count of three stones.
- If hit with the ball of the chain they take a knee for a count of five stones.
- Head hits incur a penalty on the hitter of five stones for safety.
Strike locations are from the neck down (excluding hands on weapons or the entire forearm from the elbow down for qwiks). All strikes in jugger are touch, so there is no need to hit heavily or try to cause injury.
Ireland
As with German and Australian Jugger, the goal is to score more points than your opponents within a time limit. These time limits are counted by a regular beat or "stones" on a drum amounting to about two seconds to every stone. A tournament game is played for two sides of one hundred stones each but during normal training sessions there are no spare players to beat the drum so the game is usually played as the first to 10 points or similar.
The game itself is played with two teams of five, with substitutes waiting behind the starting line. A full team consists of a runner, a chain, two staffmen and a chainblocker. Although weapons other than staffs can be used, staffs are by far the most common in Ireland. There can only ever be one chain per team at one time.
The pitch itself is rectangular with two "mal" (German, goals) at either end in the form of a foam square with a depression to receive the skull. The "Skull", a rubber dogskull serving as the ball, is placed in the middle of the pitch and at the end of a count by the referee or one of the captains both teams run towards the centre of the pitch and try to score.
When both lines reach the centre of the pitch the players try to "tap" each other out. This is done by lightly tapping the opponent with a legal surface of your weapon on a legal body part. In Ireland this means anywhere below the neck and above the wrists. Headshots are avoided and if a pompfe hits the head before a legal target the tap is discounted and the player must withdraw their weapon before hitting again. While a hit on the head after a hit on a legal target is still counted it is frowned upon and avoided. If both players tap each other at the same time, or indiscernibly closely, both players are considered hit and go down. This is unlike in German rules where hits within half a count of each other are allowed, or Australia where both players play on in case of a double.
When a player is tapped out they drop to the ground with one knee touching the ground. If they have been hit by a staff or other pompfe, they stay down for five stones. If they have been hit by a chain, they are down for eight stones. The count begins when the knee hits the ground and while the player may move to retrieve a weapon they must return to where they were hit before they start playing. A kneeling player may also pivot around on their knee provided they don't lift it.
While they are down another player may "pin" them by holding their staff on them. A chain player may not do this. As soon as their count is up any player except a runner must attempt to stand again. As soon as their knee leaves the ground they are considered standing and can be hit although they must be "fully standing," before they can hit others. As a result of these rules it is possible to abuse them by holding a pompf just above a person waiting to rise. They must rise as soon as they can and they are tapped out for another five stones as soon as they do. As a result, a rule was instituted that a pompf must be either pinning a kneeling player or three feet away, an exception is where there are two players kneeling in close proximity and it is impossible to pin one without having your pompf close to another.
The purpose of all this is to break a hole in the opposite line and allow the runner a chance to score. Once a runner scores both teams reset to either end of the pitch, the skull is placed in the centre by the schiri, referee, and the victorious team is awarded the point. The game is quite comparable to Hamburg rules jugger, from which it originates, and is least similar to Australian jugger. Most of the following comes from IADT (Institute of Art, Design and Technology), in Dublin with plans to expand into UCD (University College Dublin) and DCU (Dublin City University), and is also played in the Institute of Technology, Tralee.
United States
A game based on the same movie developed within the game Amtgard and is referred to there as "Jugging". Being based on the movie, there are similarities but there is no other direct relationship. It is basically a game within a foam larp, but very popular.
The Competitive Underground Jugger League or C.U.J.L. (pronounced "cudgel") is a group based originally out of the American Midwest that began in 2009. In their league the "weapons" are made of rattan with impact surfaces padded with strips of mountain bike tire. Helmets, knee guards, and hand protection are required gear as outlined in their Codex. Teams in the league compete each season for the "Bucket of Blood" trophy.
The Carolina Aggressive Jugger Association (C.A.J.A./CAJA) is another American jugger league that aims to hold truer to the movie than its European counterparts. Formed September 2010, they are still refining their rules and regulations. Drawing from C.U.J.L., European leagues, as well as the movie itself; they allow use of much denser cores, hardwoods specifically, (with metal being allowed only on chain weaponry and shields) and require only one layer of closed cell padding at least 1/2 inch thick. This of course insists the implementation of armor covering vital areas; the head, a majority of the ribcage, forearms, shins, and the entire spine, may be eventually required to be protected. Also their field is considerably smaller than most at 75 ft by 40 ft; this is also subject to change. The smaller field was chosen to compensate for the additional fatigue caused by armor usage as well as to place players closer to one another, which CAJA felt was more accurate than the usual playing field. Currently playing skirmishes in Longs, South Carolina (just out of North Myrtle Beach) players ages 14 and up are welcome to come watch or participate as either players or support crew.
The USJL (United States Jugger League) is organized with the intention of building Jugger teams that play by similar rules to those found internationally so that the US will have an opportunity to take part in the international tournaments. The USJL rulebook and other information can be found on the USJL website.
Jugger Ohio is a group formed in October 2010 that is based in the historic town of Marietta, Ohio. Using very similar rules, field size and equipment as its international counterparts, Jugger Ohio has also embraced social media as a viable way of communicating. It continues to organize weekly and bi-weekly matches via Facebook to great effect. They are organizing the first ever American Jugger tournament, dubbed "The Dogskull Classic", planned in the style of the German Open. This event is slated for August 13, 2011 in Marietta Ohio.
The Red Dirt Jugger Club is based in Oklahoma City and was formed in June 2010. Oklahoma plays with German style rules, and has grown to over 50 members. A league is being formed in the fall of 2012 and 7 teams of 6 have been formed and are preparing for league play. Oklahoma City and its outlying suburbs play every weekend.
Hits and strike zones
- USA (Jugger Ohio & Red Dirt Jugger Club)
- When a player is hit by the other team's enforcers they take a knee and are inactive for the count of five stones.
- When a player is hit by the ball or the connecting chain, they take a knee and are inactive for a count of eight stones.
- Hits to the hands, head and groin do not count as a hit and the groin and head shots incur an eight stone penalty to the offending player. All else is a legal hit, including feet, shins, legs and arms.
A variant of Jugger is played within the UK’s Lorien Trust LARP system, the world championship being held at the system's sporting event the Great Edrejan Fayre.
Versions of the game are also occasionally played by SCA armoured combat fighters[5]
Further reading
Wickenhäuser, Ruben Philipp: Jugger. A post-apocalyptic sport for all occasions, Morrisville 2008, ISBN 978-1-4092-2920-9 Website
See also
Community sites
- Jugger Salute is a community site built to help Juggers and fans from all over the world connect, share information and further enjoy the community that is Jugger! – Currently offline. Will be back up at a later date.
- Australian Jugger League is a site dedicated to the Australian Jugger League with rules, photos and links to social media sites used to organise games.
References
- ↑ On the two traditions see also: Jugger. A post-apocalyptic sport for all occasions, Morrisville 2008, pp. 18–20
- ↑ "Australian Rules", http://www.jugger.org.au/
- ↑ For the correct spelling 'qwik' , see credits of the movie and the director's note in the book 'Jugger. A post-apocalyptic sport for all occasions', p. 7
- ↑ Taken from an English translation of a German document: http://garcianet.homeip.net/Jugging/juggerrules.doc
- ↑ "Blood of Heroes" event video, from the Kingdom of Calontir
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jugger. |
There are a number of international sites:
- Jugger Salute
- The international Jugger Blog
- Jugger | Tournaments | Rankings
- Jugger training locations world map (Google)
In addition, many regional Jugger groups have their own sites:
Australian
Costa Rican
English
German
Irish
Spanish
- Aragon Community Forum
- Spanish Jugger rules (Microsoft Word)
- "Asociación Galega de Jugger -AGJ-" Galician Association of Jugger
- Galician Jugger Rules (PDF)