World Juggling Federation

The World Juggling Federation (WJF) is the world's only organization devoted to the promotion and advancement of juggling as a sport (competitive juggling).[1]

History

In 2003, the WJF was created by long-time International Jugglers' Association member, Jason Garfield. Garfield attracted interest and membership by framing the skills of juggling as a sport.[2] The federation became more widely known in 2005 when Jason bought airtime on ESPN, televising his WJF II juggling competition.

Competition

The WJF's most well-known event is the WJF convention, which has been broadcast on ESPN2. The organization encourages jugglers to compete against each other in order to get better. In WJF-sponsored events, the participants use juggling props, which include:

WJF competition events sometimes include (pending enough competitors attending):

There are "junior"-, "beginner"-, "intermediate"- and "advanced"-level competitors in each of the three main WJF disciplines.

Conventions and championships

Annual WJF conventions are held; and juggling competitions produce annual winners who are named "overall champions". At WJF 5, the top competition event ran alongside the Battle for the WJF Presidency, with Thomas Dietz as the inaugural winner, beating Jason Garfield. However, Dietz resigned from presidency soon after, saying he didn't have time to fulfill his duties as president. At WJF 7 in 2011, Doug Sayers was initially named overall champion, but due to a miscount of the scores this was proved not to be the case, as Vova had scored more points overall.

WJF Competitions
YearEventLocationCompetition
2004 WJF ConventionLas Vegas, Nevada
2005 WJF2Las VegasThomas Dietz, Overall champion[3]
2006 WJF3Las VegasThomas Dietz, Overall champion[4]
2007 WJF4Hartford, ConnecticutThomas Dietz, Overall champion[5]
2008 WJF5Las VegasThomas Dietz, Overall champion.[6]
2010 WJF6Las VegasDoug Sayers, Overall champion.[7]
2011 WJF7Springfield, IllinoisVova Galchenko, Overall champion[8]
2012 WJF8Sioux Falls, South DakotaDoug Sayers, Overall champion

Notes

  1. Christel, Matthias. (2009). Bewegungskünste: motorisches Lernen in der Zirkuspädagogik, p. 30., p. 30, at Google Books
  2. Grossman, Lev. "Up In the Air," Time (US). July 16, 2006.
  3. Thomas Dietz, Overall champion
  4. WJF3, Dietz, Overall champion
  5. WJF4, Dietz, Overall champion
  6. WJF5, Dietz, Overall champion
  7. WJF6, Sayers, Overall champion
  8. WJF7, Galchenko, Overall champion (Doug Sayers had originally been announced the winner due to a math error, but Vova Galchenko ended up winning.)

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, August 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.