Just like Avengers Assemble, some epic sports assemble to form some badass hybrid sports! Toccer is on of them... how many more do you know?
Found this from a blog earlier this year on a random search.

seen from Malaysia
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seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea

seen from Italy
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from Poland
Just like Avengers Assemble, some epic sports assemble to form some badass hybrid sports! Toccer is on of them... how many more do you know?
Found this from a blog earlier this year on a random search.
Tennis Polo Lessons
Last January, a gym teacher in England wrote me and asked for some lessons to introduce his students to toccer. Here’s the email I sent him:
Whenever I introduce toccer to a new group, we almost always start from the position of explaining the game very briefly. Which involves someone serving as goalkeeper, explaining the premise of the game which is to get the ball into the goal by passing it until you score or playing defense.
The intro itself never lasts more than a few minutes and then we start playing. The kids almost always figure it out on their own and we've done this both indoors and outdoors without incident. It's been played at elite summer camps and at schools for delinquents and the kids liked it the same in each case because the sport was designed to be 1) easy to understand 2) portable and 3) not requiring a lot of materials to pull off.
What I did below was to try to break down the various elements of the sport into lessons. I'll keep thinking on it, but my suggestion would be to do things like introduce them and let them play games. You can start an intra-class league where they are on teams, there's a table of standings for wins and losses and the kids can change teams or players if you want. We even did a World Cup style tournament at once place, where over the course of an evening we'd play several mini-games of toccer to determine a World Champion with the teams being that country. -------------------
Here are some lessons you can perform to introduce kids to tennis polo (you can also call it toccer, that's the original name)
Lesson 1: Dribbling try running and throwing the ball in the air and catching it. do that repeatedly while running towards a teammate.
Lesson 2. Goalkeeping & defense Everyone wants to score goals, but whats cooler than scoring goals? Stopping goals. Defense is the way we stop people from scoring goals. In toccer, offensive players are not allowed in the goal box but defenders are. Always make sure your team has a few defenders outside the box, the tennis ball is small and it's hard to defend it with your hands(like a basketball) and only the keeper has a racket. You cannot make contact with a defender by touching them, without incurring a penalty.
Lesson 3. Passing Passing the ball to your teammates is important. The 3-second rule means that you cannot run with the ball in your hand for more than 3 seconds before passing it another teammate.
Lesson 4. Penalties We tried to keep toccer simple so there aren't a lot of rules ten years on. But when penalties are committed the referee has final authority to issue a 1) verbal warning (yellow card) or a 2) timed penalty which can be 5 seconds, 10 seconds or 20 seconds. During a timed penalty, the offending player has to freeze for the duration of that time in the spot of the foul. The referee then alerts them at the end of the penalty phase.
Lesson 5. Jumpball All games start with a jump ball. All halves do the same. After a goal is scored, the goaltender hits the ball to the opposing team (called sendoff) and the sending team can't cross the middle line until after the receiving team has caught the ball. Lesson 6. Tiebreakers Tie games result in overtime periods that last 2 minutes. If after overtime, the game is still tied, we do penalty shootout like soccer, starting from the halffield line and players have 10 seconds to take a shot. The 3-second rule is not in effect.
A field diagram of a tennis polo field