Williams first competitive Wall Ball tournament at his Kay Carl Elementary school. He wins his first game with a score of 8-2 and moves to the next round. Game took place on 3-5-11
That's not how I remember Wall Ball back in the day. We used to play with a tennis ball and throw it on the wall, but don't let someone catch the ball because whoever the last person threw the ball have to hurry up to tag the wall before they've get pegged. It's the same scenario if the ball went out of bound, and whoever gets the ball out of bound have to say the magic word, which is "relay" and then throw it, but don't let someone throw the ball on the wall and it accidently peg an innocent person, because that means that whoever threw it, that person have to go to the wall and the innocent bystander has the right to peg that person back. That's the Wall Ball I remember of!
To Sofie Martinez: The Wall Ball I'm referring to is the one where you throw the ball at the wall and when someone catches it, then whoever's the last person has to hurry up and run to and touch the wall before you get pegged. If you get the ball out of bounds, then you also have run to a d touch the wall before you also get pegged. But to get it out of bounds, you have to say "relay". That's the Wall Ball I remember .
my buddy michael was a tappy expert. Since he was a fat kid and didnt move as fast or was agile he used to launch the ball and we run after it only to meet our demise when he hit the ball so softly and there was no way we could run back to hit it again. our court was alot bigger (like 30-40 ft on the side of our school, well seemed that way we were kids) with no official distinguish lines for play set up, so you run into basketball games or four square games to get the ball. Every recess you honed your game and skill and learned the player. Michael couldnt catch those sharp side hits and even one game he tried to get one and the mother fucker dove to get the ball and landed into a mud puddle. Shit. we all and him erupted into laughter. We still respected him for the effort, and recognized and feared his game