used to be fly goalie in our playground - and if you were really desperate one play time it used to be any man in the area
obv I didn't go to your school but are you sure you're remembering that right? the 2 things you mention are actually the same (called monkey rush down my way but fly is acceptable). rush was with a designated keeper
nope in our playground it was "fly goalie" to mean one person was designated goalie but could also play as an outfield player (usually used in games where teams were about 5-8 a side) and we played "any man in the area" to mean anyone who was in the area could pick up the ball if game was 5-a side or less.
We also played with a tennis ball though if that went on the shed roof or over the shed into the canal anything remotely round would do
With us it was knock-out wembley for singles and wembley doubles when in teams of two
we also had "headers and volleys" which does exactly as it says on the tin - you could only score with a header or a volley. If you missed 3 attempts without scoring a goal whoever missed the third attempt would have to go in goal. If you were in goal with the 5th goal went in you got soft beats (one soft punch of every outfield player), if you were in goal when the 10th goal went in it was medium beats, 15th goal meant hard beats and if you were the goalie when the 20th goal went in then it was the tunnel of death where all the outfield players lined up with their hands against the wall of the canteen and the goalie had to run thru the "tunnel" while everyone kicked lumps out of him. It got interesting when upto 18 goals because then everyone wandered further and further away from the goal trying to set up others rather than risk the shot in case they missed
how we got away with the tunnel of death with the dinner ladies i'll never know
