One or Two Hours of Bubble Soccer for Up to 20 People at Long Island Bubble Soccer (Up to 62% Off)
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Players face off on the soccer field wearing large bubbles, bouncing off one another as they dribble and pass the ball
After purchasing this deal, you will need to visit the website listed on your Groupon voucher to complete redemption.
Choose Between Two Options
- $129 for one hour of bubble soccer for up to 20 with field rental and referee ($300 value)
- $229 for two hours of bubble soccer for up to 20 with field rental and referee ($600 value)
Bubble soccer is similar in nature to regular soccer, except that players wear giant inflated spheres, allowing them to bump, roll, and flip while trying to score. When worn properly, only a player’s legs are exposed.
Ages 18 and up
Bending the Ball: A New Spin on Soccer Shots
Whenever a soccer ball curves, seemingly changing its orbit in midair, NASA scientists may rush to classify it as a planet. But in fact, the movement is due to yet another physics concept pioneered by Isaac Newton: the Magnus effect, a phenomenon first described in regard to tennis. Newton noted that topspin made the ball dip, whereas backspin made for a straighter trajectory. In other words, the way a ball spins affects its path in the air.
Usually, a ball curves in the same direction in which it’s spinning; air moves with the ball on the side that spins forward, pushing it in the other direction. A ball spinning counter-clockwise, for example, tends to bend to the left. But a ball’s movement may not always be so easy to predict. Its trajectory is also affected by the smoothness of the ball’s surface. In fact, a perfectly smooth (or laminar) ball would likely curve in the opposite direction of a rough-surfaced (or turbulent) ball when kicked in exactly the same manner.
Of course, nobody plays soccer with a perfectly smooth ball, despite the substantial benefit it would have on blooper-reel ratings. Even so, different stitching patterns do alter the roughness of a ball’s surface. This is why there seems to be a controversy every four years over a new ball design—even the coolest new look can have a drastic effect on a ball’s in-flight physics.