Listen Up Its Football Season Again



Further Reading: Football

Australian Football Tactics And Skills ... While Australian football has often been described as a game without rules, this is in fact far from the case and tactics have played an important role from its early days... Modern football played at professional Australian Football League level has evolved into a game that is vastly different to amateur football...

Sheffield Rules ... The first inter-club football match and competitive tournament were both played using Sheffield Rules... Background The oldest recorded football match in Sheffield occurred in 1794 when a game of mob football was played between Sheffield and Norton (at the time a Derbyshire village) that took place at Bents Green...

Laws Of Australian Rules Football ... The laws is an extensive document containing rules and interpretations and is currently managed by the Australian Football League... The first national and international body, the Australasian Football Council, was formed in 1890 to govern Australasian Rules... Since 1990, the rules for the game known as Australian football have been governed by the AFL and the organisation's Laws of the Game committee...

History Of Sport ... polo, numerous martial arts forms, and various, now assimilated football varieties) and even from the Americas (e.g... European colonialism certainly helped spread particular games around the world, especially cricket (related to baseball), football of various sorts, bowling in a number of forms, cue sports (like snooker, carom billiards and pool), hockey and its derivatives, equestrian (originally of Middle Eastern origin), and tennis (and related games deriving from jeu de paume), and many winter sports, while the originally Europe-dominated modern Olympic Games generally also ensured standardization in particularly European directions when rules for similar games around the world were merged...

List Of Association Football Competitions ... National teams FIFA World Cup FIFA Women's World Cup FIFA Confederations Cup Military World Cup Military World Games Rous Cup (defunct) National youth teams FIFA U-20 World Cup (under-20 men) FIFA U-17 World Cup (under-17 men) FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup (under-20 women) FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup (under-17 women) Malta International Tournament (each 2 years) Clubs FIFA Club World Cup Intercontinental Cup (defunct) Afro-European UEFA-CAF Meridian Cup Arab National teams Arab Cup of Nations Pan Arab Games Gulf Cup of Nations Clubs Arabian Champions' League Arab Cup Winners' Cup (1989–2001) Arab Super Cup Gulf Club Cup Afro-Asian Afro-Asian Cup of Nations (1985–1999) Afro-Asian Club Competition (1985–1997) Asian-European Commonwealth of Independent States Cup AFC (Asian competitions) This section lists the competitions ruled by the, Asian Football Confederation, or by federations member...

Dribbling ... Dribbling is often invaluable especially in the third part of a pitch or at the wings, where most attacks take place. Dribbling creates space in tight situations where the dribbler is marked (closely guarded by a defender), and the dribbler can either score or create scoring chances after a successful dribble...

Cambridge Rules ... Thring, who had both attended Shrewsbury School, succeeded in making some old Etonians join them to form a football club at Cambridge University... In the following year an attempt was made to get up some football in preference to the hockey that was then in vogue...

History Of Baseball Outside The United States ... In 1973, struggles in the FIBA led to a dissident organisation, the Federacion Mundial de Beisbol Amateur (FEMBA), which organised its own World Championships. The two organisations were reconciled in 1976, forming the International Baseball Association (AINBA)...

Canadian Football ... Rugby football in Canada had its origins in the early 1860s, and over time, the unique game known as Canadian football developed... Both the Canadian Football League (CFL), the sport's top professional league, and Football Canada, the governing body for amateur play, trace their roots to 1884 and the founding of the Canadian Rugby Football Union... Canadian football is also played at the high school, junior, collegiate, and semi-professional levels: the Canadian Junior Football League and Quebec Junior Football League are leagues for players aged 18–22, many post-secondary institutions compete in Canadian Interuniversity Sport for the Vanier Cup, and senior leagues such as the Alberta Football League have grown in popularity in recent years...

Association Football ... The Laws of the Game were originally codified in England by the Football Association in 1863 and have evolved since then... Association football is governed internationally by FIFA, which organises the FIFA World Cup every four years... Etymology and names The rules of football were codified in England by the Football Association in 1863 and the name association football was coined to distinguish the game from the other forms of football played at the time, specifically rugby football...

Oldest Football Competitions ... Many early football fixtures before the 1850s did not have set rules, clubs or trophies and are poorly documented... Years Date Competition Type First trophy awarded, years Original code Current code Location Notes 1858– 7 August Melbourne Grammar School-Scotch College schools fixture Cordner-Eggleston Cup, 1989– experimental Australian rules football Melbourne, Australia 1860– 26 December - interclub fixture - Sheffield Rules defunct Sheffield, England 1861–1876 December Caledonian Challenge Cup club trophy Caledonian Challenge Cup, 1861–1864 Melbourne Rules defunct Melbourne, Australia 1867 only Youdan Cup club trophy Youdan Cup, 1867 Sheffield Rules defunct Sheffield, England 1868 only Cromwell Cup club trophy Cromwell Cup, 1868 Sheffield Rules defunct Sheffield, England 1871– FA Cup club trophy FA Cup, 1871– Association Football Association...

Passing (association Football) ... The skill of dribbling the ball is seen much less in modern football matches than in the first half of the twentieth century... History of Ball Passing in Football Early History of Ball Passing in Football Main article: Medieval football In 1581 Richard Mulcaster is the first describe "foteball" teams consisting of players using different positions ("standings"), although passing is not stated explicitly... Similarly, in 1650 English puritan Richard Baxter in his book Everlasting Rest: "like a Football in the midst of a crowd of Boys, tost about in contention from one to another"...

Oldest Football Clubs ... Other early clubs include the Great Leicestershire Cricket and Football Club present in 1840 In 1841 two clubs are documented in a contemporary challenge to play "foot-ball" in Lancashire: "The Body-Guard club" (Rochdale) and the "Fear-noughts Club" A club for playing "cricket, quoits and football" was established in Newcastle on Tyne in or before 1848... The Surrey Football Club was established in 1849 and published the first non-school football list of rules (which were probably based upon the eighteenth century Gymnastic Society cited above) Continuous clubs It is claimed that the Barnes Club (later Barnes Rugby Football Club), from Barnes in London, was formed in 1839 and is the oldest club to have played football for its entire history... It is also argued, and supported by the Guinness Book of Records, that Guy's Hospital Football Club, founded by staff at Guy's Hospital in London in 1843, is the oldest club...

Basketball ... A regulation basketball ring consists of a rim 18 inches in diameter and 10 feet high mounted to a backboard. A team can score a field goal by shooting the ball through the basket during regular play...

Attempts To Ban Football Games ... Between 1314 and 1667, football was officially banned in England alone by more than 30 royal and local laws... King Edward II was so troubled by the unruliness of football in London that on April 13, 1314 he issued a proclamation banning it: Forasmuch as there is great noise in the city caused by hustling over large balls (grosses pelotes de pee) from which many evils may arise which God forbid; we command and forbid, on behalf of the King, on pain of imprisonment, such game to be used in the city in the future... The reasons for the ban by Edward III, on June 12, 1349, were explicit: football and other recreations distracted the populace from practicing archery, which was necessary for war, and after the great loss of life that had occurred during the Black Death, England needed as many archers as possible...

Association Football Pitch ... Note that due to the original formulation of the Laws in England and the early supremacy of the four British football associations within IFAB, the standard dimensions of a football pitch were originally expressed in imperial units...

Laws Of The Game (association Football) ... History and development See also: History of association football Pre-1863 Games which could be described in the most general sense as 'football' had been a popular in Britain since the Medieval period... 1863 rules The Laws were first drawn up by Ebenezer Cobb Morley and approved at a meeting of the newly-founded Football Association (FA) on 8 December 1863... Association football can be considered to begin at this point, as the game played by clubs which didn't adopt the rules evolved into rugby football...

Women's Association Football ... The growth in women's football has seen major competitions being launched at both national and international level... (For more information, see Women's association football around the world and International competitions in women's association football respectively.) Women's football has faced many struggles throughout its fight for right... Although women's football had its first golden age in the UK in the early 1920s, when some matches achieved over 50,000 spectators, this was stopped on 5 December 1921 when England's Football Association voted to ban the game from grounds used by its member clubs...

History Of Association Football ... During the early 1860s, there were increasing attempts in England to unify and reconcile the various football games that were played in the public schools as well in the industrial north under the Sheffield Rules... Ebenezer Cobb Morley, a solicitor from Hull, wrote to Bell's Life newspaper in 1863, proposing a governing body for football... For this, he is considered not just the father of the Football Association, but of Association Football itself...

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