Goalball is a team sport designed specifically for athletes with a vision impairment. Participants compete in teams of three, and try to throw a ball with bells embedded inside it into the opponents' goal. The ball is thrown by hand and never kicked. Using ear–hand coordination, originating as a rehabilitation exercise, the sport has no able-bodied equivalent. Sighted athletes are also blindfolded when playing this sport.
Played indoors, usually on a volleyball court, games consist of twelve-minute halves (formerly ten-minute halves) with a five-minute half-time. and Sepp Reindle, an Austrian, as a means of assisting the rehabilitation of visually impaired World War II veterans.
Goalball gradually evolved into a competitive game during the 1950s and 1960s. It was eventually nominated as a demonstration sport at the 1972 Summer Paralympics in Heidelberg, West Germany, and became a Paralympic Games sport at the 1976 Summer Paralympics in Toronto. and 220 international referees.
Essentials
thumb|Goalball field
Court and ball
thumb|A game of goalball in progress (2012).
Goalball rules require the field of play to be long by wide. Goals span the width of the pitch. The court is divided into six even sections, . At either end, just in front of the goal, is the team area. Beyond that is each team's landing zone. The middle two sections are collectively referred to as the neutral zone.
The lines of the court are made by placing tape over lengths of twine. This makes the line both visual (for officials) and tactile (for players). The team area and landing zone, including the boundary, goal lines and high-ball lines, are always marked in this way. Furthermore, the team area has six hash marks (three at the front, one on either side, and one on the goal line) to assist with player orientation.
The ball weighs and has eight holes and contains several noise bells. The ball's diameter is around .
Gameplay and etiquette
The game relies heavily on the sense of hearing instead of sight, so all outside noise, including cheering, clapping, chanting or ringtones from cellphones, is prohibited. The crowd is therefore repeatedly reminded to remain silent, and referees preface their call "Play!" with "Quiet, please!". Coaches cannot speak whilst the ball is in play, and so cannot influence the game.
Players, regardless of the degree of vision, wear blackened-out eyeshades which allow no light in, to ensure fairness. Fully-sighted individuals may play the sport while wearing eyeshades.
Beginning of play
The team winning the coin toss usually starts with the ball.
Offence
To score, a player must roll or bounce the ball down the length of the court, past the opposing defenders, and into the opponents' goal. Typically, the player with the ball will stand, orient themselves using the tactile lines, sounds from teammates, and/or the crossbar of their own goal. The player will then stride forward, lean low, and roll or side arm the ball down the court.
The ball must hit in the player's own landing zone, and anywhere in the neutral zone. So long as it hits each zone, the style of throw is entirely up to that player. Many players will take several strides and release the ball as close to their own high ball line as possible, leaning low to ensure a legal throw. Some players will throw after spinning, transferring the momentum of the spin into additional velocity. Others are able to throw the ball so that it will bounce just once in each of the required zones. Most elite players are effective when using multiple types of throws.
Defence
The defending players stay within the team area, generally in somewhat staggered positions to avoid collisions. When they hear the other team throw the ball, they 'lay out', that is slide on their hips and stretch their arms above their heads and extend their legs in order to cover as much distance as possible. The objective is simply to keep the ball from getting past with whatever part of the body the player can get in front of it.
Some players prefer to block the ball with their chests and absorb the impact. Others like to block with their legs so the ball will roll up their bodies into their hands. Regardless of method, the players will always try to make themselves as long as possible to block the greatest area.
Rules
Infractions
Infractions are generally punished by the loss of possession to the other team.
- Premature throw – Throwing the ball before the official has called 'play'.
- Ball over – The ball rebounds off a defending player, the crossbar or goalposts, and crosses back over half-court.
Penalties
A penalty throw may be awarded for:
- Ten second penalty – A team takes more than ten seconds to throw the ball back over the centre line.
- Delay of game – Can be caused by many different things (coach reporting the wrong numbers for substitutions, a team not arriving in time for the coin toss that precedes the game, too many or too few players taking the court).
- Illegal defence – Called if a defender makes contact with the ball while no part of the body is touching the team area.
- Short ball – The ball fails to reach the opponent's team area when thrown.
- High ball – The ball does not touch the thrower's landing zone when thrown.
- Long ball – The ball does not touch the neutral zone when thrown.
- Eyeshades – Touching eyeshades without permission.
- Unsporting conduct – This can be a variety of things, from arguing with an official to pounding the floor and swearing
- Noise – Unnecessary noise by the offensive team that prevents the defence from tracking the ball.
- Illegal coaching – Coaching from the bench during play or after an official has said 'Quiet please' with intentions of continuing or starting play. From 2006, rules allowed coaching from the bench during an official time-out.
In a penalty situation, a single player is required to defend the entire goal for one throw. The player chosen is determined by the penalty. For instance, a high ball or illegal defence penalty is defended by the player who committed the penalty. On the other hand, an illegal coaching penalty is defended by a player chosen by the coach of the throwing team.
The official rules for the sport are provided on the IBSA website.
Referees may be internationally certified under a structured scheme, from IBSA Goalball Level 1 to Level 3. Goalball world championships and Paralympic tournaments are called by Level 3 referees.
Changes over time have seen regulation period halves increase from seven, to ten, to the present twelve minutes. Team staff were limited to when coaching could occur, but now it is after any whistled stoppage in play. Rules such as step-over and third-time throw have been removed. The ball must be thrown back towards the opposition goals within ten seconds from contact. In 2014, this was extended to reaching the centre line to ensure a quicker delivery. Eye patching was introduced under the eye shades to reduce cheating. In 2025, half-time was changed from three to five minutes, and overtime went from three-minutes halves to a six-minute period.
Competitions and events
Goalball is played at the Paralympic Games. The number of participating teams has changed over the decades, but for the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, this was reduced from ten to eight teams per division by the International Paralympic Committee. For the IBSA-sanctioned tournaments, athletes must have a visual impairment classification of B1, B2, or B3. Championships are held within the regions of Africa, America, Asia-Pacific, and Europe.
Diving as part of defensive skills has been used as a training activity. Professional teams trying goalball have included Boston Bruins, Queensland Fire, and Seattle Sounders FC.
In popular culture
In 2006, the animated series Bernard produced a three-minute clip, featuring Eva the penguin introducing the titular polar bear to goalball.
In 2018 and 2024, the sport was featured in the anime Ani x Para: Anata no Hero wa Dare desu ka. Characters played a match of goalball: KochiKame in the fourth, and Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-kun in the eighteenth. Goalball was featured in episodes 10–12 of the 2020 Japanese anime Breakers, to promote the 2020 Summer Paralympics.
Gallery
<gallery class="center">
File:02 ACPS Atlanta 1996 Goalball general action.jpg|alt=Two goalball players stretch to the left to stop the ball.|Goalballer Sarah Kennedy (Qld) makes a save for Australia
File:Atlanta 1996 Goalball Raelene Bock.jpg|alt=A goalballer throws the ball forward.|Goalballer Raelene Bock (NSW) competes for Australia
File:Goalball-2015 IBSA World EGY-CZE M throw.jpg|Egypt men's goalball team throwing towards Czech Republic
File:Goalball-2015 IBSA World UKR-GRE F defend.jpg|Ukraine women's goalball team preparing to defend against Greece
File:Goalball-2015 IBSA World CAN-ALG F throw.jpg|Canada women's goalball team throwing to Algeria
File:Goalball-2019 Asia-Pac Regional IRI-CHN M line-up.jpg|China and Iran men's teams lined-up for the introductions before the start of the game
File:Goalball-2019 Asia-Pac Regional KOR-AUS M line-up.jpg|South Korea men's team at line-up
File:Goalball-2019 Asia-Pac Regional JPN-AUS F throw.jpg|Japan women's team throwing
File:Goalball-2019 Asia-Pac Regional JPN-AUS F defend.jpg|Japan women's team defending
File:Goalball-2019 Asia-Pac Regional JPN-THA M defend.jpg|Japan defending a throw from Thailand
</gallery>
See also
References
External links
- International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA)
- International Paralympic Committee
- 2008 Paralympic Goalball
- BBC Sport
