|
|
|
Flyball got its start in the late 1960's and early 1970's, when a group
of dog trainers in Southern California created scent discrimination hurdle
racing, then put a guy at the end to throw tennis balls to the dogs when
they finished the jump line. It didn't take long for the group to decide
to build some sort of tennis ball-launching apparatus, and the first flyball
box was born. Herbert Wagner is credited with developing the first flyball
box, and apparently he did a flyball demo on the Tonight Show with Johnny
Carson that got a lot of peoples attention. Subsequently, the new dog
sport for dog enthusiasts was introduced in the Toronto-Detroit area by
several dog training clubs. After a few small tournaments were held in
conjunction with dog shows, the first ever flyball tournament was held
in 1983.
| Mike Randall wrote the first NAFA rulebook in 1985,
and was also the first NAFA Executive Director. The first head judge
was Dave Samuels. Flyball races match two teams of four dogs each,
racing side-by-side over a 51 foot long course. Each dog must run
in relay fashion down the jumps, trigger a flyball box, releasing
the ball, retrieve the ball, and return over the jumps. The next dog
is released to run the course but can't cross the start/finish line
until the previous dog has returned over all 4 jumps and reached the
start/finish line. The first team to have all 4 dogs finish the course
without error wins the heat. Jump height is determined by the smallest
dog on the team – this dog, called the "height dog",
is measured at the withers, then that number is rounded down to the
nearest inch and another 5" is subtracted to get the jump height
(with the minimum jump height being 7"). So a 13 1/4" dog
would round down to 13", minus 5", would jump 8". Maximum
jump height is 14". |
 |
There are two governing organizations in flyball. The first is North
American Flyball Association. The second is United Flyball League
International, or U-FLI.
The sport of flyball welcomes all breeds of dogs! The dogs on a team earn
points for each run that is under a certain time. The points earned accumulate.
At certain point levels the dog earns titles. It is easy to earn your
dogs first, second and third flyball titles at your first tournament.
Common Terms | More Advanced
Flyball Terms
|
|