Abstract
Red Rover (Queensland name) and British Bulldog (Victorian name) are conceptually the same game as both require a player to travel across their opponents’ space without being ‘caught’. The call inviting an individual player to leave their starting safety zone in attempt to run to the end safety zone, in Queensland was “Red Rover, I call over”, followed by the chosen person’s name. If the runner (attacking) was caught, the player in the middle (defending their playing space) would say “Red Rover – one, two three, Red Rover – you are he/she”. Victoria had a similar invite and saying when caught, replacing the term ‘Red Rover’ with ‘British Bulldog’. When “Bull Rush” was called everyone not in the middle would attempt to get through the playing zone without being captured. Many would be familiar with either version or a game very similar. Red Rover/ British Bulldog fit within the invasion game category and will be examined as this edition’s quality game.
Publication Date
2013-11-06
Publication Title
Active and Healthy Magazine
Volume
20
Issue
45385
Publisher
Australian Council for Health, Physical Education and Recreation (ACHPER)
ISSN
1837-7378
Embargo Period
2024-11-19
Additional Links
http://media.wix.com/ugd/842c5e_ba513ba6537748eba507917bab0c5a7a.pdf
Keywords
invasion games, quality games, Primary education, elementary school
First Page
27
Last Page
29
Recommended Citation
Lynch, T. (2013) 'Quality invasion games: red rover or British bulldog?', Active and Healthy Magazine, 20(45385), pp. 27-29. Australian Council for Health, Physical Education and Recreation (ACHPER): Retrieved from https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/pioe-research/350