Skip navigation
sponsored by 

NYC adds double dutch as school sport

Aerobic, urban pastime will be added to spring schedule

Image: Double dutch
Elementary school girls participate in a double dutch jump rope practice session at the St. Peter Claver Gym in the Brooklyn borough of New York in June. Long popular on New York City sidewalks, Double Dutch will become an officially sanctioned varsity sport in city public schools in the spring of 2009.
Ed Ou / AP
Video: Education  
Beating the cost of college books
Aug. 27: Costly textbooks are making college students look into other options for their coursework such as rentals, Ebooks and online books. KNSD's Bob Hansen reports.

  Stand and be counted
Gut Check America

What keeps you up at night? Gut Check America wants you to tell us what really matters to our country. Click here to learn more and get involved.

  Photo features  
  More
Image: Four Chinese boys practise handstand
Imaginechina
  The Week in Pictures
From natural disasters around the world to political maneuverings in the U.S.
Delegates are reflected in and distorted by a decorative mirror on the floor of the 2008  Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota
Reuters
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
updated 12:51 a.m. ET July 27, 2008

NEW YORK - The popular urban street pastime called double dutch, in which competitors jump between two ropes twirled eggbeater-style, is getting more recognition, becoming an officially sanctioned sport in New York City high schools.

School officials say adding double dutch to the calendar should get hundreds of students participating in an enjoyable aerobic activity.

"We're always thinking, what do we need to do to get more kids playing?" said Eric Goldstein, chief executive of the Public School Athletic League.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

Double dutch will be a spring sport this coming school year after basketball season is over and there is space in the gyms.

According to the National Double Dutch League, Dutch settlers brought the game to New York in colonial times — hence the name.

Spreading beyond its base
It has been a competitive sport in New York since the 1970s when police Detective David Walker worked with physical education instructors to develop rules and a scoring system.

The sport has spread beyond its base in inner-city black neighborhoods and is especially popular in Japan, whose teams have won a number of recent tournaments. Teams from around the globe compete in tournaments like the Double Dutch Holiday Classic at Harlem's Apollo Theater.

However, it isn't an official sport in any other school district in the United States, Goldstein said.

"We're the first, and we like being first," he said.

The last sport the athletic league added was cricket, which was brought to New York by immigrants from the Caribbean and South Asia. Fourteen teams competed in the spring 2008 inaugural cricket season.

Ruth Payne, a retired drug-prevention counselor who coaches double dutch, was a major force behind persuading the athletic league to add the sport to its roster.

"It's a great thing," she said. "Thousands of girls jump rope, but they do it as a recreational sport, just for fun. For it to be in the schools, that means it's getting good recognition as a sport."

Complex scoring
Double dutch is scored on a point system, with compulsory, speed and freestyle components.

The compulsory section has several requirements.

"You have to do an aerial, which is like a flip," Payne said. "You have to do a rapid dance with some fancy footwork, you have to do a rope trick and you have to do a cheer, an ending that your whole team takes part in."


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Save Money On Car Insurance

Find a business to start

Movies delivered - Try free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car