Stalls
In freestyle footbag, a stall (officially classified as a delay within competitive regulatory frameworks) is a core category of contact where a player arrests the kinetic momentum of the footbag, bringing it to a complete rest on a surface of the body rather than kicking it back into the air 1). Delays form the fundamental bedrock of modern technical choreography, serving as the required framework for executing advanced dexterity elements and complex combinations.
Mechanically, a successful delay relies on synchronized deceleration. The receiving surface must actively track the falling velocity of the footbag and drop dynamically upon impact to absorb the shock, neutralizing the elasticity of the bag.
| Delay / Stall Trick Class | |
|---|---|
|
|
| Official Designation | Delay |
| Baseline Difficulty | 1 ADD (Additional Degree of Difficulty) |
| Core Geometries | Toe, Inside, Outside, Clipper |
| Governing Body | IFPA |
| Historical Footwear | Modified Adidas Rod Laver |
Trick Overview
Freestyle trick components are mathematically categorized using the official Additional Degrees of Difficulty (ADD) scoring matrix 2). Every competitive maneuver is broken down into underlying motion components, with basic delays establishing the baseline values.
Fundamental Delays
- Toe Delay: Catching the bag flat on the shoe's instep. It serves as a 1-ADD baseline element and is universally the entry point for novice players.
- Inside Delay: Catching the bag on the inside wall of the foot near the arch, requiring a vertical knee lift to keep the surface strictly horizontal.
- Outside Delay: Balancing the bag on the outside lateral edge of the shoe, requiring the player to rotate the hip joint outward while maintaining equilibrium.
Training Tips
Pocket Modification
Standard consumer footwear is anatomically ill-suited for balancing a fluid-filled, paneled footbag. High-tier players alter their shoes (frequently choosing the Adidas Rod Laver or specialized canvas equivalents) by carefully cutting out inner tongue mesh and stripping away internal canvas reinforcing layers. This creates a wide, pliable “pocket” that cradles the bag on the toe, inside, and outside surfaces.
Cushioning the Catch
A rigid foot acts as a springboard, causing the bag to ricochet off the shoe. To execute a proper catch, the ankle and knee must yield immediately upon contact, extending the impact window over a downward trajectory of roughly three to six inches.
