The World Hammer Ball (WHB) is the global governing body for Hammer Ball, and the Hammer Ball Association of India (HBAI) operates under WHB as its national affiliate. We are committed to developing and nurturing Hammer Ball as a recognized sport nationwide. We aim to build a strong sporting culture by organizing district, state, national, and international tournaments, providing training programs, and ensuring fair opportunities for all players.
A triangular zone where throwers deliver precise, strategic balls to hitters for scoring powerful runs.
Special corner boxes inside the pitch where skilled hitters position to strike and control the ball effectively.
Marked running paths between hitter zones where players quickly sprint to complete scoring runs after striking.
Fielders positioned smartly in home, inner, and outer fields to stop runs and create dismissals efficiently.
A specially crafted wooden bat designed to strike power shots with control, speed, and long-distance precision.
A double-layered, injury-safe ball (80–120g) built for grip, bounce, durability, and smooth controlled throwing action.
A standard-sized field with well-marked zones, visible boundaries, and structured sections to ensure fair gameplay.
A specialized area near home field where keepers protect, defend goals, and coordinate the team’s defensive strategy.
"The Art of Doing Everything at Once"
Try to define the "average" Indian lifestyle, and you will fail. A farmer in Punjab uses WhatsApp to check wheat prices. A teenager in a Delhi cafe eats a cheeseburger while dipping it in green mint chutney. A grandmother in Kolkata has a Facebook account solely to send "Good Morning" sunrise images.
At its core, Indian culture is deeply collectivist. Privacy is rare; community is oxygen. If you are sad, you don't book a therapist (though that is changing); you sit on the chabutara (courtyard) and your aunt force-feeds you kheer (rice pudding) until you talk.
Lifestyle is dictated by the calendar. There is a festival for everything: the start of spring (Holi), the victory of light over dark (Diwali), the end of the rains (Onam), and even the birthday of Ganesh (Ganesh Chaturthi). For ten days a year, the streets flood with Garba dancers; for forty days, the markets change menus for Ramadan.
The modern Indian juggles this with brutal efficiency. They live in "Smart Cities" but keep a small clay lamp burning at the door. They speak fluent English but dream in their mother tongue. To live the Indian lifestyle is to master the art of the paradox: being loud yet spiritual, chaotic yet ancient, poor in resources but rich in connection.
Everything in an Indian's day—from waking up at Brahma Muhurta (the hour of creation, around 4:30 AM) to respecting elders—is dictated by a sense of duty. Lifestyle content here isn't just about "self-care"; it is about kartavya (responsibility). For example, an Indian wedding isn't just a party; it is a societal and religious duty involving complex rituals that last days.
Generations ago, depression didn't "exist" in villages—it was just tension. Now, Gen Z Indians are breaking the stigma. Yoga is being reclaimed as mental therapy, not just exercise. Content is shifting from "how to be productive" to "how to say no to family pressure."
Luxury Indian content gets the views, but the middle-class lifestyle drives the culture. Write about:
"The Art of Doing Everything at Once"
Try to define the "average" Indian lifestyle, and you will fail. A farmer in Punjab uses WhatsApp to check wheat prices. A teenager in a Delhi cafe eats a cheeseburger while dipping it in green mint chutney. A grandmother in Kolkata has a Facebook account solely to send "Good Morning" sunrise images.
At its core, Indian culture is deeply collectivist. Privacy is rare; community is oxygen. If you are sad, you don't book a therapist (though that is changing); you sit on the chabutara (courtyard) and your aunt force-feeds you kheer (rice pudding) until you talk.
Lifestyle is dictated by the calendar. There is a festival for everything: the start of spring (Holi), the victory of light over dark (Diwali), the end of the rains (Onam), and even the birthday of Ganesh (Ganesh Chaturthi). For ten days a year, the streets flood with Garba dancers; for forty days, the markets change menus for Ramadan.
The modern Indian juggles this with brutal efficiency. They live in "Smart Cities" but keep a small clay lamp burning at the door. They speak fluent English but dream in their mother tongue. To live the Indian lifestyle is to master the art of the paradox: being loud yet spiritual, chaotic yet ancient, poor in resources but rich in connection.
Everything in an Indian's day—from waking up at Brahma Muhurta (the hour of creation, around 4:30 AM) to respecting elders—is dictated by a sense of duty. Lifestyle content here isn't just about "self-care"; it is about kartavya (responsibility). For example, an Indian wedding isn't just a party; it is a societal and religious duty involving complex rituals that last days.
Generations ago, depression didn't "exist" in villages—it was just tension. Now, Gen Z Indians are breaking the stigma. Yoga is being reclaimed as mental therapy, not just exercise. Content is shifting from "how to be productive" to "how to say no to family pressure."
Luxury Indian content gets the views, but the middle-class lifestyle drives the culture. Write about:
Delhi |
National Championships
VSMarch 15, 2024
|
Mumbai |
Bangalore |
State Championships
VSApril 20, 2024
|
Chennai |
Delhi |
State Finals
3 : 1Feb 28, 2024
|
Mumbai |
Bangalore |
District Finals
2 : 0Feb 20, 2024
|
Chennai |
HAMMER BALL ASSOCIATION OF INDIA IS GOING TO BE ADD A NEW CHAPTER IN November 2025. THAT IS 2ND JUNIOR NATIONAL (U-19) CHAMPIONSHIP 2025 TO BE HELD SO...
| Pos | State | P | W | L | PTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |