Freestyle footbag

Contacts are usually on the inside of the foot behind the opposite support leg (clipper stall) or on the toe, however many inventive possibilities remain and are used to create a near-endless list of tricks.

Competitors have to execute as many unique, difficult tricks in a 30 second period as possible.

Their score is calculated with a mathematical formula, which takes into account the average difficulty of the run, and penalizes the players for repeated moves.

The objective of this event is for players to link three hard tricks together in the most impressive way possible.

Players are usually given between 5-7 attempts to land a combo, within a maximum time frame of 2 minutes.

In this competition, the most difficult assortment of components is put into one move and judged subjectively by difficulty, form, and cleanliness.

In Circle Comp, the total pool of competitors are divided into smaller pools (or Circles, giving the event its name, and also representing how freestyle footbag is typically played), usually of no more than 4 players.

A "clipper" is a cross body inside delay CLIP [XBD][DEL] and is worth 2-ADDs.

World freestyle footbag champion 2011, 2012 & 2013 in Singles routines, circle and request Jan Weber
Multiple world and European Doubles routines champions and innovators of the discipline Martin Sladek and Tomas Tucek
Types of stall