![]() 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. He talked a local carpenter, Francisco Javier Altuna, into building the first table, inspired by the concept of table tennis. 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. 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. Rosengart claimed to have come up with the game toward the end of the 1930s to keep his grandchildren entertained during the winter. 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. 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. ![]() 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. ![]()
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