Barrel jumping is a discipline of speed skating, where ice skaters build up speed to jump over a length of multiple barrels lined up, usually side by side like rollers. Occasionally barrels would also be stacked pyramid-style for height. The objective is to jump over the most barrels without landing on the barrels. At the far end, the skaters need not land on their skates. Most jumpers would wear helmets and padding on their Buttocks to cushion the landing on the ice. At the end of the ice was a padded bumper.
A standard barrel is made of a fiber composition material and 16 inches in diameter.
The sport became popular when it was televised as part of ABC's Wide World of Sports starting in the 1960s. Following the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, double Olympic speed skating gold medalist Irving Jaffee took a job as Winter Sports Director at the Borscht Belt entertainment mecca Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel. One of his innovations was to hold the World Barrel Jumping Championships. When his friend Roone Arledge began producing Wide World of Sports, it became a staple, first broadcast on January 14, 1962. It turned out to be a natural made for TV event years before Evel Knievel would gain attention for distance jumping objects like trucks and busses with a motorcycle on the same show. Localized and nationalized competitions spread. Eventually the world championships would be hosted at other venues.
In the 1960s, Windmark started a barrel jumping act called the, "Barrel Busters". The Barrel Busters toured ice skating events in a form of barnstorming. For further entertainment value, hoops of fire were added to the performances. The act included Jim Campbell, who was a Chicagoan, and Chuck Burke, who was a Northbrook resident. The skating group traveled across America performing at ice shows while holding down day jobs at the same time. After about 10 years, the Barrel Busters ice show ended.
Canada's Red McCarthy, a professional ice hockey player and eventually the co-inventor of ringette, engaged in barrel jumping (pyramid style) in 1933–1934 at the Black Forest Village in Chicago for the Century of Progress, World's Fair ( Chicago World's Fair) where he was photographed for an advertisement for Chicago's Nestor Johnson ice skates.
Canada's Yvon Jolin still holds the world record for jumping distance which was set on Jan. 25, 1981.
Today, the possibility of barrel jumping becoming a Winter Olympic discipline is generally considered dead. Despite setbacks, barrel jumping still has its interested parties:
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