The Around The World Delay is much like the Around the World. The only difference is that you finish off the move with a Toe Delay. Keeping your body above the bag, drop it about waist high into a Toe Delay. Then bring the bag back into the air and circle it with your foot. Do this quick enough so that you can bring your toe back under the bag and catch it in a toe delay. The quick movement of the foot takes a lot of effort, so practice it a lot.Around the World Delay
The Leg Over Delay is somewhat like the Around the World except that when you delay the bag, it is with the inside of your foot, thus not completing the whole circle needed for the Around the World Delay. As in the Around the World, Set the bag with a Toe Delay. Then bring the bag up into the air. With and Inside-to-out motion, bring your leg over the bag, and catch the falling bag in an Inside Delay. Remember, this move can also be set from an inside delay.
The Mirage is tricky, but useful. To start, delay the bag on either toe. Then bring the bag back into the air. Here's the hard part. Bring your support leg (the one that you started with as support) under and then over the top of the bag while it is in the air. Land on the leg that was the original support leg, and catch the bag again in a toe delay.Mirage Pictures
The Clipper Delay is a combination of the Clipper Kick and the Inside Delay.
It uses the motion of the delay, but the position of the kick. Start with the bag in a simple Toe Delay. Bring
the bag into the air and shift your body into the Cross-Body position. Keeping the inside surface of your foot up and as flat as possible,
slowly bring the bag down to rest on your foot.
5. Hop Over
The Hop Over is odd and difficult. It uses another move, and to execute it correctly, you have to have a great deal of balance. Drop the bag into an Inside Delay to start. Then, while holding your foot off of the ground, hop over it with your other leg. That's where the balance comes in. The trick is to keep the bag on your foot so that it continues into another move. This move takes a good amount of practice because it is unlike any other move in footbag (except a Walk Over). When you have hopped over your leg, you can finish the move with a Butterfly Kick or anything else.
The Double Spin is very much like the Spin, except instead of spinning around once, you spin twice. See the Spin for more information.
The Flying Clipper is based on the Clipper Kick. To start, make sure you know which leg you are kicking with. Your other leg becomes the support leg. The position that your leg will be in when you kick is a Cross-Body position. This means that your kicking leg is under your support leg and bent so that the inside of your kicking foot is towards the sky. To start the Flying Clipper, toss the bag relatively high in the air so that you have time to jump and meet the bag with your foot. Then, jump off of your support leg (remember that you aren't in the cross body position yet). Once you are in the air, bring your kicking foot up to meet the bag, which is headed to meet the ground. Now that the bag has been put back up again, you can land any way you see fit.
The Bent Knee Clipper is pretty much the same as a Flying Clipper except that instead of having your leg out extended from the body, the jumping leg is bent at the knee under the kicking leg.
The Toe Clipper is pretty much the same as the Clipper except that it uses the toe of the foot rather than the inside surface of the foot. The trick of the foot is not to try and Toe pick the bag, but instead to hit the bag with your foot sideways but towards the toe. This counts as an unusual surface so that makes it a different move than a clipper.
The Flapper is a verison of the Sole Slap. The difference between it and the sole slap is that the Flapper is a cross-body hit, while the sole slap is not. Bring your leg into a cross-body position to start. The odd part about this cross body position is that you have to contort your foot so that the bottom of it can hit the bag back up into the air. The trick is to practice the position before you try and do the move with the bag. remember not to get discouraged though. Flapper Kick pictures
To execute the Dragonfly kick Bruce Lee style, you use the dexterity principle, and the Inside Kick. Set the bag to the right side of your body, and while it is in the air, bring your right leg up and over the bag. Once you've done this, bring your right leg down. But before it hits the ground, do a left foot inside kick.
The sole delay is a version of the Sole Slap. The difference is that when you do the Sole Delay, you delay the bag on the sole of your foot. For a right foot Sole Delay, set with a right foot Toe Delay. Then bring the bag up to about chest height, but having the bag going towards your rear. The trick then is to turn your body to the Sole Slap position, but then use the delay principle to stop the bag on your foot. The Sole Slap position is weird balance, so you'll have to get used to it.
The Squeeze has somewhat of the same idea as an Outside Kick, but the bag si a bit higher and the leg motion is a little different. Set the bag to the right of the body as you would if you were to do an Outside Kick, but have the bag a little higher. Squeeze Pictures
The Pendulum is unlike any other footbag move in how it works. The Pendulum is really a big circle, but it is not as hard as it looks. Many people think that the trick to bringing the bag around the body is to have a lot of momentum and speed to bring the bag around. The Pendulum is all skill. To start, catch the bag in a toe delay, but not by bringing down your foot. Lock your knee and catch the bag with your leg in a swinging motion. This also starts the motion of the Pendulum. GO SLOWLY! The trick is somewhat speed, but more knowing the move. Swing your leg at the hip until it is at it's furthest back. Then with the bag still on your foot, start to bend at the knee until that also is bent to it's fullest. Once you get here, release your ankle forward so the bag can fall in front of you, or to another person. There you go, that's all there is to it.Pendulum Pictures
The Rake is one of the hardest two point moves. The rake is a reverse 1/2 Pendulum (Tee-Hee). Sound like fun? Here's what you do. Start with the same lock-knee toe delay as in the Pendulum, but once you've brought the bag behind you, circle around the bag and catch it on your toe again. Then reverse the motion of the Pendulum (that means bring the bag forward) and release it up as you would a toe delay. Hmmm, maybe there is a move like the Pendulum... Rake Pictures
The Probe is and interesting move. It uses two moves all wrapped up like a burrito into one. The Neck Catch
is first in the sequence, then comes the Clipper Delay. To start, do the Neck Catch. Then straighten your back and drop the bag into a
Clipper Delay. Probe Pictures
NOTE: The move is three points if the drop and catch of the bag are blind.
The wrap is also a difficult two point move. To do the Wrap, bring the bag into an inside delay. Before the motion of the bag has stopped, bring the bag on your foot behind your support leg. Then release the bag on the opposite side of the support leg from where it started.Wrap Pictures