Saturday, 1 January 2011

History Of american football

Football historians, those who have study the game and its beginning, place the game’s beginnings in rugby, an English game played with many similarities to football. Rugby began in eighteen twenty-three at the famous Rugby Boys’ School in England. Another cousin of the game of football is soccer; its beginnings can also be traced to English origin, being played as near the beginning as the eighteen twenties.
At the equal time, a group of students at Princeton began playing what was then known as ‘ballown’. First via their fists to move ahead the ball, and then their feet, this game consisted mostly of one goal: to proceed the ball past the opposing team. There were no hard and fast rules practical to this earliest effort at the game we now call football. At Harvard, the freshman and sophomore classes competed in a football-type game, played on the first Monday of each school year; this event came to be known as ‘Bloody Monday’ because of the coarseness of the game. Pick up games, similar in style to that played on ‘Bloody Monday’, soon became popular on the Boston Common, infectious on in popularity around eighteen sixty. Soon after the end of the American Civil War, around eighteen sixty five, colleges began organizing football games. In eighteen sixty seven, Princeton led the way in establishing some rudimentary rules of the game. Also in that year, the football itself was patented for the very first time. Rutgers College also well-known a set of rules in eighteen sixty seven, and with the relatively short space between it and Princeton, a game was decided upon by both universities. A date was chosen, November sixth, eighteen sixty nine; Rutgers won by a score of six goals to four, and thus was played what has become known as the very first intercollegiate football game. In eighteen seventy three, legislature from Columbia, Rutgers, Princeton, and Yale met in New York City to create the first intercollegiate football rules for the regularly more popular game, still being played with various of the rules of soccer. These four teams established the Intercollegiate Football Association, and set as fifteen the number of players allowed on each team. Walter Camp, the coach at Yale and a rebel from the IFA over his desire for an eleven man team, helped begin the final step in the evolution from rugby-style play to the modern game of American football. The IFA’s rules group, led by Camp, soon cut the number of players from fifteen to eleven, and also instituted the size of the playing field, at one hundred ten yards. In eighteen eighty-two Camp also introduced the arrangement of downs. After first allowing three attempts to proceed the ball five yards, in nineteen six it was tainted to ten yards. The fourth down was added in nineteen twelve. Tackling below the waist had been official in eighteen eighty-eight. Within a decade, anxiety over the increasing brutality of the game led to its ban by some colleges. Nearly one hundred eighty players had suffered stern injuries, and eighteen deaths had been reported from the brutal mass plays that had become common in practice. In nineteen hundred five, President Theodore Roosevelt called upon Harvard, Princeton, and Yale to help save the sport from demise. At a meeting between the schools, reform was agreed upon, and at a second meeting, attended by more than sixty other schools, the group appointed a seven member Rules Committee and set up what would later become known as the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or the NCAA. From this committee came the legalization of the forward pass, which resulted in a more open style of play on the field. The rough mass plays, which once caused so many stern injuries, and even deaths, were forbidden by the committee. Also forbidden was the locking of arms by teammates in an effort to clear the way for their ball carriers. The length of the game was shortened, from seventy to sixty minutes, and the neutral zone, which separates the teams by the length of the ball before each play begins, was also established. Today, almost one hundred years since the inception of the NCAA, the sport of college football flourishes as one of the most in style of collegiate games. Colleges and universities are placed into three divisions under NCAA rule and each division has many conferences. Seasonal and conference play leads to post-season sink games, where the champions of conferences meet to play in front of a world-wide television audience. Some of these bowls include the Rose Bowl, played on New Year’s Day in Pasadena, California, between the Big Ten and Pacific Ten conference champions. Other bowls include the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans, Louisiana, the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, and the Peach Bowl in Atlanta, Georgia.

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