Did any of you ever play the game called "Capture the Flag"? This was a playground game that I played sometime in the mid 1950's. It was my favorite game back then. It wasn't a game with referees, and there was no adult supervision. Kids in the neighborhood just got together and played it in the summer, when there was no school, and we had the vacated school grounds to ourselves. I mention this because I don't believe kids play this game anymore, with the organized control kids have in the sports (games) they play today. It was a wonderful game, and I will tell you how we played it.
This is how:
We set up crude boundries marked by whatever junk we could find to deliniate the playing field, which was usually somewhere close to 20 yards wide and 50 yards long.
We drew a line in the dirt with a stick, dividing the playing field roughly in half. This separated the teams' attack and defend areas.
Each team would then position their flag (any piece of cloth that was handy) in the middle backside of their side of the field. (It was not allowed to be placed close to the out of bounds line.)
Once the game began players could run across the dividing line, and go after the opposing team's flag. However, once you crossed over the line to the opponents' side of the field, you were in jeopardy of being tagged by the other team.
If you got tagged by a defender after you crossed the line, you had to stay at the spot where you got tagged, and could not move again unless a teammate touched you to set you free to run again. (When the bad guys crossed the line to after your flag, you could tag them. You could not be tagged on the side of the field, where your flag was.)
If you were able to grab the opponents flag, you took off with it, dodging defenders, and sprinting to get it across the line to your side of the field. If you got across the line with the flag, your team won. (You were not allowed to throw the flag across the line, you had to have it in your possession and run it across.)
If you got tagged by a defender on your way with the flag, before you crossed the line, that was the new position of the opponents' flag, and you and it had to stay there, waiting for a teammate to touch you, and set you free to run again. (You could hand the flag off to a teammate when they touched you, if you thought they had a better chance of getting the flag across the line than you did.) (The defenders were never allowed to move their own flag.)
Actually, once you had possession of the opponent's flag, you could hand it off to any of your teammates whenever you wanted.
In gameplay, both teams had to be careful not to send everybody rushing for the opponent's flag, because that would leave them with no one to defend their own flag.
Almost always, (if not always) both teams would leave one of their players back standing next to their flag to defend it, which meant attackers had to be fast, and try to fake the person guarding the flag away from it, while a teammate snatched it up.
This was a great game for kids to play. It gave them lots of exercise. It tought them team play. It tought them how to think quickly on their own, and how to strategize on the run. Perhaps the best thing about it though was that there were no referees, and no grownups there to tell us what to do. We made our own calls, and when there was a disagreement, we worked it out, and the game went on...
p.s. I do not mean to suggest that organized sports with referees and adult supervision are wrong. Of course they aren't, but I think the days when kids got together on their own, and played games like "Capture the Flag", perhaps provided a better learning experience for young people for the life that was ahead of them.

p.p.s. I would love to hear if any of you other guys or gals ever played "Capture the Flag", or any other sandlot type games that seem to have faded into the past.
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.................................................................................Good MORNING I'm going to bed.