The Murky History of Foosball
How did the tabletop game get from parlor halls in 19th-century Europe to the basements of American homes?
- By Derek Workman
- Smithsonian.com, January 04, 2013, Subscribe
In the best tradition of skulduggery, claim and counterclaim, foosball (or table football), that simple game of bouncing little wooden soccer players back and forth on springy metal bars across something that looks like a mini pool table, has the roots of its conception mired in confusion.
Some say that in a sort of spontaneous combustion of ideas, the game erupted in various parts of Europe simultaneously sometime during the 1880s or ’90s as a parlor game. Others say that it was the brainchild of Lucien Rosengart, a dabbler in the inventive and engineering arts who had various patents, including ones for railway parts, bicycle parts, the seat belt and a rocket that allowed artillery shells to be exploded while airborne. Rosengart claimed to have come up with the game toward the end of the 1930s to keep his grandchildren entertained during the winter. Eventually his children’s pastime appeared in cafés throughout France, where the miniature players wore red, white and blue to remind everyone that this was the result of the inventiveness of the superior French mind.
There again, though, Alexandre de Finesterre has many followers, who claim that he came up with the idea , being bored in a hospital in the Basque region of Spain with injuries sustained from a bombing raid during the Spanish Civil War. He talked a local carpenter, Francisco Javier Altuna, into building the first table, inspired by the concept of table tennis. Alexandre patented his design for fútbolin in 1937, the story goes, but the paperwork was lost during a storm when he had to do a runner to France after the fascist coup d'état of General Franco. (Finesterre would also become a notable footnote in history as one of the first airplane hijackers ever.)
While it’s debatable whether Señor Finisterre actually did invent table football, the indisputable fact is the first-ever patent for a game using little men on poles was granted in Britain, to Harold Searles Thornton, an indefatigable Tottenham Hotspur supporter, on November 1, 1923. His uncle, Louis P. Thornton, a resident of Portland, Oregon, visited Harold and brought the idea back to the United States and patented it in 1927. But Louis had little success with table football; the patent expired and the game descended into obscurity, no one ever realising the dizzying heights it would scale decades later.
The world would have been a much quieter place if the game had stayed as just a children’s plaything, but it spread like a prairie fire. The first league was established in 1950 by the Belgians, and in 1976, the European Table Soccer Union was formed. Although how they called it a ‘union’ when the tables were different sizes, the figures had different shapes, none of the handles were the same design and even the balls were made of different compositions is a valid question. Not a unified item amongst them.
The game still doesn’t even have a single set of rules – or one name. You’ve got langirt in Turkey, jouer au baby-foot in France, csocso in Hungary, cadureguel-schulchan in Israel, plain old table football in the UK, and a world encyclopedia of ridiculous names elsewhere around the globe. The American “foosball” (where a player is called a “fooser”) borrowed its name from the German version, “fußball”, from whence it arrived in the United States. (And, really, you can’t not love a game where they have a table with two teams made up only of Barbie dolls, or that is played in tournaments with such wonderful names as the 10th Annual $12,000 Bart O’Hearn Celebration Foosball Tournament, held in Austin, Texas, in 2009.)
Foosball re-arrived on American shores thanks to Lawrence Patterson, who was stationed in West Germany with the U.S. military in the early 1960s. Seeing that table football was very popular in Europe, Patterson seized the opportunity and contracted a manufacturer in Bavaria to construct a machine to his specification to export to the US. The first table landed on American soil in 1962, and Patterson immediately trademarked the name “Foosball” in America and Canada, giving the name “Foosball Match” to his table.
Patterson originally marketed his machines through the “coin” industry, where they would be used mainly as arcade games. Foosball became outrageously popular, and by the late ’80s, Patterson was selling franchises, which allowed partners to buy the machines and pay a monthly fee to be guaranteed a specific geographical area where only they could place them in bars and other locations. Patterson sold his Foosball Match table through full-page ads in such prestigious national publications as Life, Esquire and the Wall Street Journal, where they would appear alongside other booming franchise-based businesses such as Kentucky Fried Chicken. But it wasn’t until 1970 that the U.S. had its own home-grown table, when two Bobs, Hayes and Furr, got together to design and build the first all-American-made foosball table.
From the perspective of the second decade of the third millennium, with ever more sophisticated video games, digital technology and plasma televisions, it’s difficult to imagine the impact that foosball had on the American psyche. During the 1970s, the game became a national phenomenon.
Sports Illustrated and “60 Minutes” covered tournaments where avid and addicted players, both amateur and professional, traveled the length and breadth of America following big bucks prizes, with the occasional Porsche or Corvette thrown in as an added incentive. One of the biggest was the Quarter-Million Dollar Professional Foosball Tour, created by bar owner and foosball enthusiast E. Lee Peppard of Missoula, Montana. Peppard promoted his own brand of table, the Tournament Soccer Table, and hosted events in 32 cities nationwide with prizes of up to $20,000. The International Tournament Soccer Championships (ITSC), with a final held on Labor Day weekend in Denver, reached the peak of prize money in 1978, with $1 million as the glimmering star for America’s top professionals to reach out for.
The crash of American foosball was even more rapid than its rise. Pac-man, that snappy little cartoon character, along with other early arcade games, were instrumental in the demise of the foosball phenomenon. The estimated 1000 tables a month that were selling around the end of the ’70s crashed to 100, and in 1981, the ITSC filed for bankruptcy. But the game didn’t die altogether; in 2003, the U.S. became part of the International Table Soccer Federation, which hosts the Multi-Table World Championships each January in Nantes, France.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (13)
Hi Ali, thanks for pointing out the error. We've made the change.
Posted by Marina Koren on January 24,2013 | 12:56 PM
Great article. One point of correction to the editor - in Turkey, the game is called "langirt" not "lagirt".
Posted by Ali on January 12,2013 | 07:53 PM
Derek, Sorry no one responded that you contacted. Might I suggest watching foosmovie.com. I am not promoting this or spam just that it's pretty much is a very well done video on the early days of US Foosball. Also, visit my forum foosballboard.com for what I affectionately kid 'Your one stop shop for Foosball” Again I very much enjoyed your article.
Posted by Phil Kennedy on January 10,2013 | 02:43 PM
Oh dear, I certainly seem to have set the cat among the pigeons! (I'm not sure if you use that phrase in the USA.) There's no need to apologise, Phil. We can all get a bit riled if something we care about is insulted, even if the insult was never intended. And I can promise you, Nathan, my research went way beyond Wikipedia, and covered many US sites as well as international ones. I repeat, though, this was not meant to be an in depth reportage about Foosball, and while many people do take it seriously, there are probably equally as many who just see it as a bit of fun, just as the university students do. And yes, I did know about the World Cup tournament was on, but the fact didn't bear a great deal of relevance to the article, so I didn't mention it. Like Phil earlier, I'm sorry if you were offended, which was not my intention, and you are entitled to your thoughts about my level of journalism. However, I do think it is a shame that the article can't be simply enjoyed in it's own right. As a final point, I did try to contact a number of people involved in Foosball in the USA at a high level to get their point of view, but sadly, none of them replied. And thank you Gary and Nicole G. for your kind comments.
Posted by Derek on January 9,2013 | 12:43 PM
Derek, You wrote an excellent article and spot on. I apologize for being a bit thin skinned. It seems every since the ITSF(International Table Soccer Federation) came into existence in 2003 the USA gets lumped into their history and connection with Foosball and Europe. As I mentioned USA Foosball was/is almost totally home grown. Certainly the returning GI's from Europe brought back the game to our shores but the real credit goes to Lawrence Patterson and his import of German Fussball tables to America. Not to be thin skinned and at the risk of repeating myself the USA has had rich and defined history with Foosball for some forty years now. Again, an excellent and well thought out article and I very much enjoyed the read.
Posted by Phil Kennedy on January 9,2013 | 10:22 AM
"It was meant to be a light-hearted piece based on many hours of research, interviews and hundreds of pages read, many of which contradicted each other..." Can you post your source list for this? I really don't see the result of "many hours of research, interviews and hundreds of pages read" in your piece. I do see many minutes of Wikipedia invested. If you did this much research, how could you not have seen the World Cup tournament is coinciding, to the day, with the release of this? Your tone novelizes the sport fairly quickly in the article like it's the Connect Four or Candyland pro tour. You may not have intended that, but it doesn't seem like you were able to delve into the mindset of serious players and understand it before you started writing. As far as your "interviews", polling local university players is like interviewing the best local AM golfer about their thoughts about life on the PGA tour - they haven't lived it, and they simply don't know. Light-hearted approaches to writing about foosball have been the biggest contributor to its struggle for validation. Statements like " It's probably stretching the imagination just that bit too far to think that table football will every become an Olympic sport" are exactly the problem. Many other outlets have given coverage prior to this, and yours ranks beneath the seminal lad-mag FHM in terms of completeness and accuracy. I guess I'd expect more from the Smithsonian in the way of actual journalism when you chose this topic.
Posted by Nathan Thomas on January 8,2013 | 03:11 PM
Derek, Let me say it was a fine article and point on and one of the better articles I have read of late on Foosball. I apologize if I sounded a bit thin skinned but for some reason with the birth of the ITSF (International Table Soccer Federation) USA Foosball gets lumped into their Foosball history which could not be more different from our home grown sport of Foosball. That is not to say that Europe and specifically Germany as the birth of modern Foosball. That said, Foosball was brought back to the US by returning GI's from Europe and propagated mostly in college dorms as you pointed out imported by Lawrence Patterson Fussball tables from which the Tornado table borrowed its measurements and the birth of USA Foosball which was centered around vending and bars and quickly left college dorms behind. Again, I apologize for my thin skin.
Posted by Phil Kennedy on January 8,2013 | 02:34 PM
Hi I like the history behind the sport of foosball. While in the 60's I was station in Germany. There was a foosball table at every rathskeller (pub, bar) in mostly Franfurt. Some guest house as well. The Germans played with shut vigor and skill, just watching was excitement of the competition by the players. I did handle playing a few games only to learn skills to bring back to the United States. I really enjoyed your article, and thank you in bring back some fun memories, while I was in Germany in 1967. Keep up the great historical articles as well.
Posted by Gary Travis on January 7,2013 | 04:22 PM
"The game still doesn’t even have a single set of rules – or one name." Foosball does have a unified set of rules under the International Table Soccer Federation (ITSF) now - it was established for the basis of inter-table competition. The World Cup tournament just finished, it takes place on several table types with dozens of participating countries. You mention it; the event in Nantes. (It just finished this past weeked and you didn't mention it.) A good place to start for more info about international foosball is: www.insidefoos.com It wasn't Pac-Man that destroyed foosball, it was Space Invaders. Arcade games at-large were the problem, but it is acknowledged that it started with Space Invaders. "...still has no absolutely fixed idea of what really does constitute the core of the game." This simply isn't correct. There are definitely core fundementals that apply across all table types. "The American/Texas Style is called “Hard Court”...." I have never heard of these terms of "hard court" or "clay" or "grass" - I'm curious where they're saying this? "It's probably stretching the imagination just that bit too far to think that table football will every become..." Maybe to you it's a stretch, but you're not even a foosball tourist. The details here are a bit sloppy in your article. There are thousands of worldwide players in approximately 30 countries that would whole-heartedly disagree with you that it's a stretch to think of it as an Olympic competition.
Posted by Nathan Thomas on January 7,2013 | 03:00 PM
Thanks for your comment, Phil, but I promise you there was no insult intended at all in the title of the article, which wasn't directed a Foosball in the USA. I apologise if it offended you. You are absolutely right, I didn't play Foosball in the USA during the 70's because I'm English and have only set foot on your shores twice, neither of which was to play Foosball. This wasn't meant to be a diatribe against the American version of the game, which I suspect is as clean as that of any other country. It was meant to be a light-hearted piece based on many hours of research, interviews and hundreds of pages read, many of which contradicted each other, but all of which confirm that 1962 was indeed the year that both the game and name of Foosball came to the USA from Germany, at least on a commercial basis. However as Doug points out, many servicemen had seen the fun in the game and brought them back prior to this when they returned from their tour of duty.
Posted by Derek on January 7,2013 | 11:09 AM
The only think murky about this article is your perception which is absolutely typical of an outsider looking in. Let me say I have been playing this game for 35 years + which admittedly puts me in some rare air but qualified to say your article while informative doesn't begin to describe Foosball in the USA. I would guess you weren't old enough to play Foosball in the 70's in the USA because if you were under the age of thirty in the 70's you played Foosball. Speaking Smithsonian American here there is nothing murky about Foosball in the USA. The rest of the world you betcha but not here. The simplest way to describe USA Foosball is the game is like NASCAR is to the rest of the world, unique and home grown. USA Foosball borrwed nothing from Europe other than sometable measurements and certainaly not antique patents. Foosball came rumbling out of the bowels of Dallas, Texas when in 1972 the Tornado or 'Texas Style' table was invented. Hot on the heels was the birth of the professional Foosball Tour which gave away Millions in the 70's right up until today hundreds of thousands of dollars given away at 'Pro' tournaments in an unbroken chain since the 70's. In contrast the rest of the world plays Foosball as an amateur sport playing out of Gym's with little or no definition until lately(2003) when the ITSF was thougt up in France as a Euro based promotion. Where am I going with all this? Nowhere other than to say nothing is murky about USA Foosball. It has a rich and defined history.
Posted by Phil Kennedy on January 6,2013 | 01:21 AM
Fußball is German for football or soccer, not table football. The German word for Foosball is der Tischfußball, translating to table football. Otherwise, this was a lovely article
Posted by Nicole G. on January 6,2013 | 12:25 AM
Well, since my family brought back a full-size portable Fussball game from a year abroad in Germany 1960-1961 I guess the year 1962 doesn't stand up. However, we were inspired to bring one back because friends and neighbors returning from sabbatical years in Germany in the late 50's had already done so. That was in Davis, California. Likely in other university towns the same thing was happening around the country, likely also in towns and cities with returning war/occupation vets too. D. Spurr
Posted by Doug Spurr on January 6,2013 | 02:21 PM