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Beer pong

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Beer Pong (Beirut)
PlayersTypically two teams of two
Setup time2 minutes
Playing time10-20 minutes or less
ChanceEasy
Age rangeAdult
SkillsAiming, taunting, and alcohol tolerance

Beer Pong (also known as Beirut) is a drinking game in which players throw a ping-pong ball across a table with the intent of landing the ball in a cup of beer on the other end. The game typically consists of two two-player teams and multiple cups set up on each side set up in triangle formation.[1] There are no official rules, so rules may vary widely, though usually there are six or ten plastic cups arranged in a triangle on each side.

The goal of the game is to eliminate the other teams' cups before one's own cups are eliminated. When a ball lands in a cup, which are generally 1/4 to 1/3 full,[2] that cup is eliminated and the defending team must consume all of the beer inside that cup.

The losing team must consume all the beer remaining in the winning team's cups.[1] The order of play varies – both players on one team shoot followed by both players on the other team, or players on opposite teams can alternate back and forth.[3]

Venues

Today, beer pong is played at parties, North American colleges and universities[4][5] and elsewhere, such as tailgating or other sporting events.[6][7] The game is also played by high school students, despite the fact that supplying alcohol to persons under the age of 21 in the United States, or the age of 18 (Quebec, Alberta and Manitoba) and 19 (Ontario, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland) in Canadian provinces, is illegal.[8][9]

Although the preceding guidelines are common, the rules may be subject to a wide variety of modifications and additions that often vary based on the area of the country, the state, or even the house in which a particular game of beer pong is played.

Origin

Beirut evolved from the original beer pong played with paddles [10] which is generally regarded to have had its origins within the drinking culture of the Dartmouth College fraternities in the 1950s and '60s and where it has become part of the social culture of the campus. The original version resembled an actual ping pong game with one or more cups of beer on each side of the table.[11] Eventually, a version without paddles was created, and later the name "Beer Pong" was adopted in some areas of the USA sometime in the 1980s.[12][13] If "beer pong" was invented on the east coast and people on the east coast call it Beirut... why are people still calling it Beer pong!

Name

The meaning of the terms Beirut and Beer Pong may vary depending on where the game is played. According to a CollegeHumor survey, beer pong is a more common term than Beirut for the paddle-less game.[14] The origin of the name "Beirut" is disputed. A 2004 op-ed article in the Daily Princetonian, the student newspaper at Princeton University, suggested that the name was coined at Bucknell University or Lehigh University around the time of the Lebanese Civil War, Beirut being the capital of Lebanon and scene of much fighting.[15] Others attribute the origin of Beirut to Lehigh, where fraternities allegedly started playing after all beer pong paddles were broken.[16] Some students at Lafayette College, rivals of Lehigh, insist modern, paddle-less beer pong was invented at their school, but The Lafayette, the college's student newspaper, says there is no proof to back up the assertion.[17]

Setup

This diagram illustrates a standard set up for a game of beirut, with either 6 or 10 cups being used.

Teams

Beer pong is usually played with two teams of two players each, though it can be played with two teams of one person each, or other numbers of players. Each team begins the game standing at either end of the table behind their rack of cups.[1]

Playing field

Although the game is typically played on either a ping pong table or a folding banquet table, enthusiasts may create a personalized table for use by friends and visitors. In general, this will be a plywood board cut to proper size, sometimes painted with sports, school, or fraternity symbols and given a liquid-proof coating.[18][19][20] Some companies sell tables as well.[21]

Equipment

The most common cups used are 16 ounce disposable plastic cups with ridge-lines which can be used precisely to measure the amount of beer to be poured into the cup.[22] On each side of the table, teams assemble equilateral triangles, with a convergence point focusing on the other team.[1] Games typically use either six, ten, or fifteen cups.[1] Each team usually has a separate cup of water as well, used to rinse the ball off.

38 mm or 40 mm table tennis (ping pong) balls are typically used for game play.[23]

Alcohol

An inexpensive pale lager or light beer of 3.2-5% ABV is sometimes preferred because of the large quantities of beer which may be consumed during the course of several games.[5] The game may be played without beer, as is done at Utah State University, where alcohol is banned -- root beer is used instead.[24]

The game may also be played with water instead of beer. This version may include a "money cup" (one cup filled with an alcoholic or non-alcoholic drink). This game has been banned at some freshman Dartmouth dorms due to a possibility of water intoxication.[25]

Game play

Teams have many possibilities for reracks.

There are very few universal or "official" rules. Typically, players abide by a uniform set of "house rules", which are often consistent within one university or region of the country (e.g., "Ivy League rules" or "West Coast rules"), or may vary on a "house-by-house" basis.[26] Number of cups, bouncing, amount of alcohol, the distance shots must be taken from, etcetera, may all vary.

In some house rules, players must immediately drink any cup that has been hit. Failure to do so incurs a penalty, such as drinking more beer or losing the game.[27] Some rule sets allow for "re-racking" (also known as "rearranging", "consolidation", and other names), which is a rearrangement of a team's remaining cups after some have been removed. The formations, number of cups, when to rearrange and so on depend on the rule set. For example, a team with three remaining cups may ask the other team to "re-rack" their multiple targets into a single triangle formation.[28]

Some other house rules allow swatting the ball away if it bounces and if the ball spins around the cup. Other rules state that if a team makes both shots in a round, they may shoot again, sometimes called a "rollback."[29]

After shooting, teams may dunk the ping pong balls into cups of water in order to wash the balls off. However, research showed that the wash cups still hold bacteria, such as E. coli.[30][31]

Shot techniques

The typical path for the different kinds of shots.

There are three key ways to shoot in beer pong: the arc, the fastball (or "laser"), and the bounce shot. The most common throwing technique is the "arc" shot, where one grasps the ping pong ball with the tips of the thumb and forefinger, holds the arm at an angle with the ball upwards, then throw by using gentle elbow motion, holding the upper arm parallel with the table. [26]

Some players throw "fastball" style, which uses more of a hard chopping motion to send the ball in a more direct line to the intended target cup.[26] Also, a fastball shot may be favorable if house rules dictate a cup that is knocked over is taken off the table, in which case a fastball can eliminate multiple cups if thrown hard enough.

A "bounce" shot is performed by bouncing the ball toward the cups. Since (depending on house rules) the other team may have the opportunity to swat away a bounced ball, a bounce may be worth more than one cup.[26] In some rule sets, bouncing is not allowed.

Winning the game

If the opposing team makes the last cup, the other loses unless they can make either all remaining cups or simply one cup, depending on "house rules" - this is called a rebuttal or redemption.[32] In some rule sets, if the opposing team hits the last cup with both of their balls, no redemption is given to the losing team. [26][28]

A shutout rule is a house rule usually stated before a game or during the game in the midst of a shutout. If the shutout does occur the losing team must do whatever the two teams decided on, such as going streaking or drinking a large quantity of beer.[28]

Health effects

This game may have several health issues associated with it. Beer pong, as with any activity involving alcohol, may cause players to become intoxicated or even drunk enough to get alcohol poisoning. Also, the supposed cleaning effects of the water "dunk" cup may be offset by bacteria in the cups.[30][31]

Some writers have mentioned beer pong as contributing to "out of control" college drinking.[33][34]

In early 2009, news sources claimed a recent study by the U.S. Center of Disease Control (CDC) stated that beer pong was contributing to the spread of Herpes, Mono, and other diseases through shared cups. The CDC quickly responded as the CDC had not done such research,[35][36] however the U.S. National Institute of Health (NIH) does suggest avoiding the sharing of eating utensils to prevent the transmission of certain contagious viruses such as herpes.[37]

Former Steeler and 2006 candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania Lynn Swann plays beer pong with and courts voters before a football game.[38]

Some municipalities and states have attempted to ban beer pong, either from bars or in general. In Oxford, Ohio, where Miami University is located, the city council tried to ban the game from being played outdoors,[39] and in Arlington, Virginia[1] and Champaign-Urbana, Illinois[40] bar owners were told to stop allowing the game to be played in their establishments. In the fall of 2007, Georgetown University officially banned all beer pong paraphernalia, such as custom-built tables and the possession of many ping-pong balls.[41]

Time magazine ran an article on July 31, 2008 called "The War Against Beer Pong," noting legal restrictions and bans on the game in college and elsewhere.[25]

Tournaments and leagues

Beer pong tournaments are held in the United States at both the local, regional, and national levels.

The World Series of Beer Pong (WSOBP), hosted by bpong.com, is the largest beer pong tournament in the world. WSOBP IV, held in January 2009 at the Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, had a $50,000 grand prize and attracted over 800 participants from the US and Canada. [42] The World Beer Pong Tour has stops in various cities and cash prizes as well.[43]

A more common organization of beer pong games are leagues which operate on a local or regional level. Ordinarily, a group of pong enthusiasts will create teams (partnerships) and play weekly against each other. Sometimes, the leagues have websites, rankings and statistics[44], while others have been started by college students with the goal of intramural competition such as at University of California, Santa Barbara with the "Isla Vista Beer Pong League",[45] and at New York University.[46]

Beer pong in the media

The Wall Street Journal, Time and other media outlets have reported on the increase in businesses selling beer pong paraphernalia, such as tables, mats, cups, or clothes.[2][21] Last Cup: Road to the World Series of Beer Pong[47] is a documentary which follows some competitive players as they prepare for the WSOBP II and ultimately compete against one another for the $20,000 grand prize. This documentary, directed by Dan Lindsay, recently premiered at the CineVegas film festival on June 13, 2008.

The AP cited the game and other drinking games as a factor in deaths of college students.[48]

Time magazine recently had an article on the popularity of beer pong[2] and posted a video on their website.[49] In both, players claimed beer pong was a sport, rather than a game — similar to billiards and darts.

Rick Reilly wrote an entire column about The World Series of Beer Pong IV for ESPN the Magazine.[50]

The game has been featured on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, with host Fallon playing against Betty White, Serena Williams, and Anna Kournikova.[51]

The Colbert Report featured a segment on the CDC study hoax. [52][53]

In Road Trip: Beer Pong, a sequel to 2000 comedy Road Trip, featured the game prominently. Agnes Scott College, where most of the movie was filmed, did not want to be listed in the credits after complaints from students.[54]

The Book of Beer Pong was published by Chronicle Books on August 29th 2009.

Bud pong

Bud pong was the branded version of beer pong that brewer Anheuser-Busch said involved the drinking of water, not Budweiser or any other beer. In the summer of 2005, the company began marketing "bud pong" kits to its distributors. Francine I. Katz, vice president for communications and consumer affairs, was reported in The New York Times as saying that bud pong was not intended for underage drinkers because promotions were held in bars, not on campuses. And it did not promote binge drinking, she said, because official rules call for water to be used, not beer.[55]

The New York Times quoted a bartender at a club near Clemson University as saying she had worked at several bud pong events and had "never seen anyone playing with water. It's always beer. It's just like any other beer pong."[55]

Some expressed incredulity at Anheuser-Busch's public statements. Henry Wechsler, director of the College Alcohol Study at the Harvard School of Public Health, said: "Why would alcohol companies promote games that involve drinking water? It's preposterous,"[55] while advertising news site Adjab opined that "someone playing bud pong with water is about as likely as a teenage kid using the rolling paper he bought at the convenience store to smoke tobacco."[56]

Video games

In July 2008, JV Games Inc. released a downloadable video game for the Wii console called Frat Party Games: Beer Pong. After much outrage by parent and university groups, the game was renamed Frat Party Games: Pong Toss and all references to alcohol were removed.[25][57]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Shott, Chris (October 7, 2005). "The Pong Arm of the Law". The Washington City Paper. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Haire, Meghan. "Beer Pong's Big Splash", Time, August 7, 2008
  3. ^ Bpong.com
  4. ^ Rolph, Amy (2007). "Harried students walk a tightrope". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
  5. ^ a b Corbett, Jill (2005). "Beer Pong!". UWeekly. Retrieved 2007-07-27. Cite error: The named reference "Corbett" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ Peter Fimrite, Hordes run, walk or stumble at Bay to Breakers, San Francisco Chronicle
  7. ^ Eisenberg, Jeff. "Festive, friendly atmosphere at Coliseum", Press-Enterprise, Sept. 13, 2008.
  8. ^ Flynn, Courtney (2007-07-22). "Parents guilty of permitting underage drinking". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ Larkin, Daphne (2007-12-14). "Facebook party photos result in sanctions, discussions at U-32 High School". Montpelier Barre Times-Argus. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  10. ^ http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0D12FB3455127B93C1AB178FD85F468785F9
  11. ^ Berner, Laura (2004). "On language, Princeton style: The history of 'Beirut'". Daily Princetonian. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  12. ^ http://www.wesleyan.edu/argus/archives/feb212003/dateyear/w5.html
  13. ^ http://www.bcheights.com/media/paper144/news/2002/09/17/Features/Bc.Reveres.8220ancient8221.Tradition.Of.Beirut-274681.shtml
  14. ^ "Beer Pong vs. Beirut: What is the game called?". CollegeHumor. 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-25.
  15. ^ Berner, Laura (2004). "On language, Princeton style: The history of 'Beirut'". Daily Princetonian. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  16. ^ http://beirut-guide.com/faqs.php
  17. ^ Shoemaker, Jeff (2006). "Lafayette: The Birthplace of Beer Pong". The Lafayette. Retrieved 2007-12-21.
  18. ^ "Advice on building Beirut Tables". Terrapin Tables. 2005. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  19. ^ "Table of dreams", April 18, 2008, The Daily Athenaeum
  20. ^ "The ultimate beer pong table", Maxim magazine
  21. ^ a b Shelly Banjo, Wall Street Journal, "Thwock, Gulp, Kaching! Beer Pong Inspires Inventors"
  22. ^ Non-alcoholic beer-pong game system - Patent 20040188942
  23. ^ Portable cooler and table - Patent 20060065665
  24. ^ "Students At Utah State Play 'Drinking Game' With Root Beer Instead", KUTV-TV
  25. ^ a b c Haire, Meghan. "The War Against Beer Pong", Time, July 31, 2008
  26. ^ a b c d e Beer pong rules, Beerpong.com
  27. ^ "Official OSU Rules: Beer Pong". Ohio State OTR. 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-12.
  28. ^ a b c Rules without paddles - National Beer Pong League
  29. ^ World Series of Beer Pong rules
  30. ^ a b Clay Travis, "The essence of beer pong bacteria" CBS Sportsline
  31. ^ a b Nour Hammour, "Beer pong bacteria", The GW Hatchet
  32. ^ Salmon, Matt "Road to Glory", UWM Leader, Jan. 25, 2006
  33. ^ Granwehr, Meredith Austin (December 1, 2007). "College Drinking: Out of Control". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 2007-12-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  34. ^ Minnesota Public Radio
  35. ^ http://www.radosh.net/archive/002627.html
  36. ^ http://www.cdc.gov/media/pressrel/2009/s090226.htm
  37. ^ http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/tutorials/coldsores/id449101.pdf
  38. ^ Castellano, John (2006-08). "Ex-Steeler looks to sway support of Eagles' fans". Philadelphia Inquirer. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  39. ^ Strader, Sean (February 23, 2007). "Council vote freezes beer pong ban". The Oxford Press. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  40. ^ "Several campus bars punished for infractions", The News-Gazette
  41. ^ News | The Hoya
  42. ^ Solnik, Ben (January 5,2009). "Vegas beer pong competition gets (somewhat) serious". USATODAY.COM. Retrieved 2009-01-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  43. ^ "Beer pong for money, not just getting drunk", June 10, 2009, NJ.com
  44. ^ Michaelson, Elex (November 11, 2008). "Big Industry Flows From Beer Pong". San Diego Channel 6 News. Retrieved 2008-12-12. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  45. ^ Smith, Ashley Nikole (April 24, 2007). "Students Create I.V. Beer Pong League". Daily Nexus (University of California). Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  46. ^ Kfoury, Branden (November 15, 2005). "Even at chic NYU, beer pong prevails". Washington Square News (NYU). Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  47. ^ CineVegas description
  48. ^ " Drinking games pose serious threat", Associated Press
  49. ^ VIDEO, Time
  50. ^ "Beer Pong: The next great american pastime"
  51. ^ "Betty White Takes on Fallon's Beer Pong Challenge", MTV News
  52. ^ "Herpes through Beer Pong"
  53. ^ "Fox & Friends Spreads Herpes-Beer Pong Hoax", Columbia Journalism Review
  54. ^ "Lowbrow Comedy Meets Higher Education", National Public Radio
  55. ^ a b c Gettleman, Jeffrey (October 16, 2005). "As Young Adults Drink to Win, Marketers Join In". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  56. ^ Finley, Adam (October 18, 2005). "Beer Pong promotions not so good". Ad-Jab. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  57. ^ FOXNews.com- 'Beer Pong' Video Game Has Controversy Brewing

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