Apologies if you've seen it before ....

PRIMARY SCHOOL FOOTBALL - THE RULES OF THE GAME

Matches shall be played over three unequal periods: two playtimes and
lunchtime. Each of these periods shall begin shortly after the ringing of
a bell, and although a bell is also rung towards the end of these periods,
play may continue for up to ten minutes afterwards, depending on the
"bottle" of the participants.
There is a sliding scale from those who hasten to stand in line as soon as
the bell rings, known as "poofs", through those who will hang on until the
time they estimate it takes the teachers to down the last of their G & T's
and journey from the staff room, known as "chancers", and finally to those
who will hang on until a teacher actually has to physically retrieve them,
known as "nutters". It is important, in picking the sides, to achieve a
fair balance of poofs, chancers and nutters in order that the score-line
achieved over a sustained period of play is not totally nullified by a
five-minute post-bell onslaught of five nutters against one. The
score-line to be carried over from the previous period of the match is in
the trust of the last nutters to leave the field of play.

PARAMETERS
The object is to force the ball between two large, unkempt piles of
jackets, in lieu of goalposts. These piles may grow or shrink throughout
the match, depending on the number of participants and the prevailing
weather. It is important that the sleeve of one of the jackets should jut
out across the goal mouth, as it will often be claimed that the ball went
"over the post" and is thus disallowed. In the absence of a crossbar, the
upper limit of the target area is observed as being slightly above head
height, regardless of the height of the keeper. The width of the pitch is
variable. In the absence of roads, water hazards etc, the width is
determined by how far out the attacking winger has to go before the
pursuing defender gives up. At free kicks, the scale of the pitch
justifies placing a wall of players eighteen inches from the ball. It is
the formal response to "yards", which the kick-taker will incant
meaninglessly as he places the ball.

TACTICS
Playground football tactics are best explained in terms of team formation.
Whereas senior sides tend to choose - according to circumstance - from
e.g. 4-4-2, 4-3-3, 5-3-2, the playground side is usually ore rigid in
sticking to the all-purpose 1-1-17 formation.

STOPPAGES
Much stoppage time in the senior game is down to injured players requiring
treatment on the field of play. The playground game flows more freely,
with play continuing around or even on top of a participant who has fallen
- or more likely been pushed - over.
Other stoppages:

1. Ball on school roof or over school wall. The retrieval time itself is
negligible in these cases. The stoppage is most prolonged by the argument
to decide which player must risk life, limb or four of the belt to scale
the drainpipe or negotiate the barbed wire in order to return to play.
Disputes usually arise between the player who actually struck the ball and
any others he claims it may have struck before appearing into forbidden
territory.

2. Bigger boys steal the ball. The intruders will seldom actually steal
the ball, but will improvise their own kick about amongst themselves,
occasionally inviting the younger players to attempt to tackle them.
Standing around looking bored and unimpressed usually results in a quick
restart.

3. Menopausal old bag confiscates ball. More of a threat in the street or
local green kick-about than within the school walls. Sad, blue-rinsed,
ill-tempered, Tory-voting cat-owner transfers her anger about the array of
failures that has been her life to nine-year-olds who have committed the
heinous crime of letting their ball cross her privet Line of Death.
Interruption (loss of ball) is predicted to last "until you learn how to
play with it properly".

CELEBRATION
Goal-scorers are entitled to a maximum run of thirty yards with their
hands in the air. But making it 34-12 does not entitle the player to drop
to his knees and make the sign of the cross. A fabulous solo dismantling
of the defence or 25-yard rocket (actually eight yards, but calculated as
relative distance because "it's not a full-size pitch") will elicit
applause and back-pats from the entire team and the more magnanimous of
the opponents. However, a tap-in in the midst of a chaotic scramble will
be heralded with the epithet "****ing poacher" from the opposing defence.
"****ing goal-hanger" is the preferred alternative. Applying an
unnecessary final touch when a ball is already rolling into the goal will
elicit a burst nose from the original striker. Kneeling down to head the
ball over the line when defence and keeper are already beaten will elicit
a thoroughly deserved kicking.

PENALTIES
At senior level, each side often has one appointed penalty-taker, who will
defer to a team-mate in special circumstances, such as his requiring one
more for a hat trick. In the playground the best player usually takes the
penalties but he may defer to the 'best fighter' or if the side is
comfortably in front, the ball-owner may be invited to take a penalty.
Goalkeepers are often the subject of temporary substitutions at penalties.

CLOSE SEASON
This is known also as the Summer Holidays, when the players dabble briefly
in other sports: tennis for a fortnight while Wimbledon is on the telly;
pitch-and-putt for four days during the Open; and cricket for about an
hour and a half until they reckon it really is as boring playing as it is
to watch.



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