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The
contemporary history of football spans more than 100 years. It
all began in 1863 in England, when rugby football and
association football branched off on their different courses and
the world's first football association was founded - The
Football Association in England. Both forms of football stemmed
from a common root and both have a long and intricately branched
ancestral tree. Their early history reveals at least half a
dozen different games, varying to different degrees and to which
the historical development of football is related and has
actually been traced back. Whether this can be justified in some
instances is disputable. Nevertheless, the fact remains that
playing a ball with the feet has been going on for thousands of
years and there is absolutely no reason to believe that it is an
aberration of the more "natural" form of playing a ball with the
hands.
On
the contrary, apart from the absolute necessity to employ the
legs and feet in such a tough bodily tussle for the ball, often
without any laws for protection, it was no doubt recognized
right at the outset that the art of controlling the ball with
the feet was extremely difficult and, as such, it required
special technique and talent. The very earliest form of the game
for which there is scientific evidence was an exercise of
precisely this skilful technique dating back to the 2nd and 3rd
centuries B.C. in China. A military manual dating from the
period of the Han Dynasty includes among the physical education
exercises, the "Tsu'Chu". This consisted of kicking a leather
ball filled with feathers and hair through an opening, measuring
only 30 - 40 cm in width, into a small net fixed onto long
bamboo canes - a feat which obviously demanded great skill and
excellent technique. A variation of this exercise also existed,
whereby the player was not permitted to aim at his target
unimpeded, but had to use his feet, chest, back and shoulders
whilst trying to withstand the attacks of his opponents. Use of
the hands was not permitted. The ball artistry of today's top
players is therefore not quite as new as some people may assume.
World Cup Summaries
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Women's World Cup
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2003 Another form of
the game, also originating from the Far East, was the Japanese
Kemari, which dates from about 500 to 600 years later and is
still played today. This is a type of circular football game,
far less spectacular, but, for that reason, a 'more dignified
and ceremonious experience, requiring certain skills, but not
competitive ' in the way the Chinese game was, nor is there the
slightest sign of struggle for possession of the ball. The
players had to pass the ball to each other, in a relatively
small space, trying not to let it touch the ground.
The
Greek game "episkyros", relatively little of which has been
handed down, was much livelier, as was the Roman game "Harpastum".
The latter was played with a smaller ball with two teams
contesting the game on a rectangular field marked by boundary
lines and a center-line. The object was to get the ball over the
opponents' boundary lines. The ball was passed between players
and trickery was the order of the day. Each team member had his
own specific tactical assignment and the spectators took a
vociferous interest in the proceedings and the score. The role
of the feet in this game was so small as scarcely to be of
consequence. This game remained popular for 700 or 800 years,
but, although the Romans took it to England with them, it is
doubtful whether it can be considered as a forerunner of
contemporary football. The same applies for hurling, a popular
game with the Celtic population, which is played to this very
day in Cornwall and Ireland. lt is possible that influences were
asserted, but it is certain that the decisive development of the
game of football with which we are now familiar took place in
England and Scotland.
The game that
flourished in the British Isles from the 8th to the 19th
centuries had a considerable variety of local and regional
versions - which were subsequently smoothed down and smartened
up to form the present day sports of association football and
rugby football. - They were substantially different from all the
previously known forms - more disorganized, more violent, more
spontaneous and usually played by an indefinite number of
players. Frequently, the games took the form of a heated contest
between whole village communities or townships - through
streets, village squares, across fields, hedges, fences and
streams. Kicking was allowed, as in fact was almost everything
else. However, in some of these games kicking was out of the
question due to the size and weight of the ball being used. In
such cases, kicking was instead employed to fell opponents.
Incidentally, it was not until nine years after the football
rules had been established for the first time in 1863 that the
size and weight of the ball were finally standardized. Up to
that time, agreement on this point had usually been reached by
the parties concerned when they were arranging the match, as was
the case for the game between London and Sheffield in 1866. This
match was also the first where the duration of the game was
prearranged for one and a half hours.
Shrovetide
football, as it was called, belonged in the "mob football"
category, where the number of players was unlimited and the
rules were fairly vague (for example, according to an ancient
handbook from Workington in England, any means could be employed
to get the ball to its target with the exception of murder and
manslaughter). Shrovetide football is still played today on
Shrove Tuesday in some areas, for example, Ashbourne in
Derbyshire. Needless to say, it is no longer so riotous as it
used to be, nor are such extensive casualties suffered as was
probably the case centuries ago.
This game is reputedly Anglo-Saxon in origin and there are many legends
concerning its first appearance. For example, in both
Kingston-on-Thames and Chester, the story goes that the game was
played for the very first time with the severed head of a
vanquished Danish prince. In Derby, it is said to have
originated far earlier, in the 3rd century, during the victory
celebrations that followed a battle against the Romans.
Despite the
legends of Kingston and Chester, certain facts appear to
contradict the Anglo-Saxon theory. Namely that there is no
evidence of it having been played at this time in Saxon areas or
on the continent, nor is the game mentioned in early Anglo-Saxon
literature. Prior to the Norman Conquest, the only trace found
of any such ball game comes from a Celtic source.
One other
possible theory regarding its origin is that when the
aforementioned "mob football" was being played in the British
Isles in the early centuries A.D., a very similar game was
thriving in France, particularly in Normandy and Brittany. So it
is quite feasible that the Normans brought this form of the game
to England with them.
All these
theories produce a picture quite bewildering in its complexity -
far more complex than the simple rules that governed this form
of the game, if we dare even to call them rules.
Quite apart
from man's natural impulse to demonstrate his strength and
skill, even in this chaotic and turbulent fashion, it is certain
that in many cases, pagan customs, especially fertility rites,
played a major role. The ball symbolized the sun, which had to
be conquered in order to secure a bountiful harvest. The ball
had to be propelled around, or across, a field so that the crops
would flourish and the attacks of the opponents had to be warded
off.
A similar
significance was attached to the games between married men and
bachelors that prevailed for centuries in some parts of England,
and, likewise, to the famous game between married and unmarried
women in the Scottish town of Inveresk at the end of the 17th
century which, perhaps by design, was regularly won by the
married women. Women's football is obviously not so new as some
people think.
Scholars might
have conflicting views on the origins of the game and the
influences that certain cults may have had on its evolution, but
one thing is incontestable: football has flourished for over a
thousand years in diverse rudimentary forms, in the very region
which we describe as its home, England and the British Isles.
The chain of prohibitions and censures, sometimes harsh,
sometimes mild, proves beyond a shadow of a doubt what
tremendous enthusiasm there was for football, even though it was
so often frowned upon by the authorities. The repeated
unsuccessful intervention of the authorities and high offices of
the land shows how powerless they were to restrict it, in spite
of their condemnation and threats of severe punishment.
As long ago as
1314 the Lord Mayor of London saw fit to issue a proclamation
forbidding football within the city due to the rumpus it usually
caused. Infringement of this law meant imprisonment. King Edward
III passed extremely harsh measures in 1331 to suppress
football, which was regarded as a public nuisance. At the same
time, similar measures were also introduced in France.
During the
100 years' war between England and France from 1338 to 1453 the
court was also unfavorably disposed towards football, albeit for
different reasons. Edward III, Richard II, Henry IV and Henry V
made football punishable by law because the well-loved
recreation prevented their subjects from practicing more useful
military disciplines, particularly archery, which played an
important and valuable role in the English army at that time.
All the Scottish
kings of the 15th Century also deemed it necessary to censure
and prohibit football. Particularly famous amongst these was the
decree proclaimed by the Parliament convened by James I in 1424:
"That na man play at the Fute-ball". None of these efforts had
much effect. The popularity of the game amongst the people and
their obvious delight in the rough and tumble for the ball went
far too deep to be uprooted.
The passion for
football was particularly exuberant in Elizabethan times. An
influence that most likely played a part in intensifying the
native popularity for the game came from Renaissance Italy,
particularly from Florence, but also from Venice and other
cities that had produced their own brand of football known as "Calcio".
lt was certainly more organized than the English equivalent and
was played by teams dressed in colored livery at the important
gala events held on certain holidays in Florence. It was a truly
splendid spectacle. In England the game was still as rough and
ungracious and lacking in refinement as ever, but it did at this
time find a prominent supporter who commended if for other
reasons when he saw the simple joy of the players romping after
the ball. This supporter was Richard Mulcaster, the great
pedagogue, head of the famous schools of Merchant Taylor's and
St. Paul's. He pointed out that the game had positive
educational value and it promoted health and strength. He
claimed that all that was needed was to refine it a little and
give it better manners. His notion was that the game would
benefit most if the number of participants in each team were
limited and, more importantly, there were a stricter referee.
Resentment of
football up to this time had been mainly for practical reasons.
The game had been regarded as a public disturbance that resulted
in damage to property, for example, in Manchester in 1608,
football was banned again because so many windows had been
smashed.
In the
course of the 16th century a quite new type of attack was
launched against football. With the spread of Puritanism, the
cry went up against "frivolous" amusements, and sport happened
to be classified as such, football in particular. The main
objection was that it supposedly constituted a violation of
peace on the Sabbath. Similar attacks were made against the
theatre, which strait-laced Puritans regarded as a source of
idleness and iniquity. This laid the foundations for the
entertainment ban on English Sundays, which would later become a
permanent feature during the Commonwealth and Puritanical eras
(even though it is said that Oliver Cromwell himself was a keen
footballer in his youth). From then on football on Sundays was
taboo. It remained so for some 300 years, until the ban was
lifted once again, at first unofficially and ultimately with the
formal consent of The Football Association, albeit on a rather
small scale.
However, none of
these obstacles could eradicate football. Take Derby as an
example. Between 1731 and 1841, the town's authorities made
continual attempts to ban football from the streets. In the end,
they had to resort to riot laws before there was any effect at
all.
All told there
was scarcely any progress at all in the development of football
for hundreds of years. But, although the game was persistently
forbidden for 500 years, it was never completely suppressed. As
a consequence, it remained essentially rough, violent and
disorganized. A change did not come about until the beginning of
the 19th century when school football became the custom,
particularly in the famous public schools. This was the turning
point. In this new environment, it was possible to make
innovations and refinements to the game.
The rules were
still relatively free and easy as there was still no standard,
organized form of the game. Each school in fact developed its
own adaptation and, at times, these varied considerably. The
traditional aspects of the game remained but innovations
depended for the most part on the playing ground available. If
use had to be made of a paved school playground, surrounded by a
brick wall, then there was simply not enough space for the old
hurly-burly mob football. Circumstances such as these made
schools like Charterhouse, Westminster, Eton and Harrow give
birth to the type of game in which more depended on the players'
dribbling virtuosity than the robust energy required in a scrum.
On the other hand, schools such as Cheltenham and Rugby were
more inclined towards the more rugged game in which the ball
could be touched with the hands or even carried. All these early
styles were given a great boost when it was recognized in
educational circles that football was not merely an excuse to
indulge in a childish romp, but could actually be beneficial
educationally. What is more it was accepted that it also
constituted a useful distraction from less desirable
occupations, such as heavy drinking and gambling. A new attitude
began to permeate the game, eventually leading to a "games cult"
in public schools. This materialized when it was observed how
well the team game served to encourage such fine qualities as
loyalty, selflessness, cooperation, subordination and deference
to the team spirit. Games became an integral part of the school
curriculum and participation in football became compulsory. Dr.
Thomas Arnold, the head of Rugby school, made further advances
in this direction, when in 1846 in Rugby the first truly
standardized rules for an organized game were laid down. These
were in any event quite rough enough, for example, they
permitted kicking an opponent's legs below the knees, with the
reserve that he should not be held still whilst his shins were
being worked on. Handling the ball was also allowed and ever
since the memorable occasion in 1823 when William Webb Ellis, to
the amazement of his own team and his opponents, made a run with
the ball tucked under his arm, carrying the ball has been
permitted. Many schools followed suit and adopted the rules laid
down in Rugby, others, such as Eton, Harrow and Winchester,
rejected this form of football, and gave preference to kicking
the ball and carrying it was forbidden. Charterhouse and
Westminster were also against handling the ball. However, they
did not isolate their style as some schools did, instead they
formed a nucleus from which this style of game began to spread.
Finally, in
1863, developments reached a climax. At Cambridge University,
where in 1848 attempts had already been made by former pupils
from the various schools to find a common denominator for all
the different adaptations of the game, a fresh initiative began
to establish some uniform standards and rules that would be
accepted by everyone. It was at this point that the majority
spoke out against such rough customs as tripping, shin-kicking
and so on. As it happened, the majority also expressed
disapproval at carrying the ball. It was this that caused the
Rugby group to withdraw. They would probably have agreed to
refrain from shin-kicking, which was in fact later banned in the
Rugby regulations, but they were reluctant to relinquish
carrying the ball.
This Cambridge
action was an endeavor to sort out the utter confusion
surrounding the rules. The decisive initiative, however, was
taken after a series of meetings organized at the end of the
same year (1863) in London. On 26 October 1863, eleven London
clubs and schools sent their representatives to the Freemason's
Tavern. These representatives were intent on clarifying the
muddle by establishing a set of fundamental rules, acceptable to
all parties, to govern the matches played amongst them. This
meeting marked the birth of The Football Association. The
eternal dispute concerning shin-kicking, tripping and carrying
the ball was discussed thoroughly at this and consecutive
meetings until eventually on 8 December the die-hard exponents
of the Rugby style took their final leave. They were in the
minority anyway. They wanted no part in a game that forbade
tripping, shin-kicking and carrying the ball. A stage had been
reached where the ideals were no longer compatible. On 8
December 1863, football and rugby finally split. Their
separation became totally irreconcilable six years hence when a
provision was included in the football rules forbidding any
handling of the ball (not only carrying it).
Only eight years
after its foundation, The Football Association already had 50
member clubs. The first football competition in the world was
started in the same year - the FA Cup, which preceded the League
Championship by 17 years.
International
matches were being staged in Great Britain before football had
hardly been heard of in Europe. The first was played in 1872 and
was contested by England and Scotland. This sudden boom of
organized football accompanied by staggering crowds of
spectators brought with it certain problems with which other
countries were not confronted until much later on.
Professionalism was one of them. The first moves in this
direction came in 1879, when Darwin, a small Lancashire club,
twice managed to draw against the supposedly invincible Old
Estonians in the FA Cup, before the famous team of London
amateurs finally scraped through to win at the third attempt.
Two Darwin players, the Scots John Love and Fergus Suter, are
reported as being the first players ever to receive remuneration
for their football talent. This practice grew rapidly and the
Football Association found itself obliged to legalize
professionalism as early as 1885. This development predated the
formation of any national association outside of Great Britain
(namely, in the Netherlands and Denmark) by exactly four years.
After the English
Football Association, the next oldest are the Scottish FA
(1873), the FA of Wales (1875) and the Irish FA (1880). Strictly
speaking, at the time of the first international match, England
had no other partner association against which to play. When
Scotland played England in Glasgow on 30 November 1872, the
Scottish FA did not even exist - it was not founded for another
three months. The team England played that day was actually the
oldest Scottish club team, Queen's Park.
The spread of
football outside of Great Britain, mainly due to the British
influence abroad, started slow, but it soon gathered momentum
and spread rapidly to all parts of the world. The next countries
to form football associations after the Netherlands and Denmark
in 1889 were New Zealand (1891), Argentina (1893), Chile (1895),
Switzerland, Belgium (1895), Italy (1898), Germany, Uruguay
(both in 1900), Hungary (1901) and Finland (1907). When FIFA was
founded in Paris in May 1904 it had seven founder members:
France, Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Spain (represented by
the Madrid FC), Sweden and Switzerland. The German Football
Federation cabled its intention to join on the same day.
This
international football community grew steadily, although it
sometimes met with obstacles and setbacks. In 1912, 21 national
associations were already affiliated to the Fédération
Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). By 1925, the
number had increased to 36, in 1930 - the year of the first
World Cup - it was 41, in 1938, 51 and in 1950, after the
interval caused by the Second World War, the number had reached
73. At present, after the 2000 Ordinary FIFA Congress, FIFA has
204 members in every part of the world.
Related Information
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