Juggling can be considered a sport, though it's often debated. Like traditional sports, juggling requires physical skill, coordination, and practice to master, so we consider it a sport.
Juggling Sports
There are competitive juggling events, such as those organized by the World Juggling Federation (WJF). There are other juggling competitions too.
- Joggling — Juggling and jogging combined.
- Juggling Triathlon — as it says, the sport is a combination of juggling and triathlon. (from the Ususual Sports List)
- Jolleyball — a combination of volleyball and juggling.
Latest Pages
- Juggling History [Sep '24]
- How to Juggle [Sep '24]
- Juggling Equipment [Sep '24]
- Juggling Tricks [Sep '24]
- Types of Juggling [Sep '24]
Similar Sports
- Freestyle Football — athletes compete to perform various juggling tricks using a football.
- Kemari — Japanese traditional sport with the aim to keep one ball in the air.
- Freestyle Footbag — performing various tricks with a footbag.
- Jianzi — a traditional Chinese national sport, where players aim to keep a shuttlecock-type object (called a Jianzi) in the air by striking it predominantly with the legs.
- Club Swinging — an old sport that involves the competitor standing with a bowling pin shaped club in each hand then whirling or swinging the clubs very quickly around the body and head in a variety of patterns in a complicated routine.
- Balloon Ball — keep a balloon in the air.
More Juggling Information
Related Pages
- Videos of joggling
- Competition Juggling in a nutshell
- Juggling - A Test of Coordination
- Club Swinging at the Olympics
- List of All Sports