|
Football
Football, a field game
played by two teams with a ball of various
types, usually
an
inflated bladder or rubber bag in a leather or
rubber cover (an increasing number of balls are
plastic), which is spherical or ellipsoidal in
shape. The object of the game is to score points
by kicking the ball through, into, or over the
opponents' goal, or by carrying the ball across
the opponents' goal line and grounding it. There
are seven main codes today: American football,
association football, Australian Rules football,
Canadian football, Gaelic football, Rugby
League, and Rugby Union.
Football is an ancient
game. Some 2,500 years ago the Chinese played a
form of it called Tsu chu, in which they kicked
a ball of stuffed leather. Natives of Polynesia
are known to have played a variation of the game
with a ball made of bamboo fibres, while the
Inuit had another form using a leather ball
filled with moss. However, much of the game's
development came about in England where it was
first known in the 12th century. It became so
popular that kings, including Edward II and
Henry VI, tried to ban it on the grounds that it
distracted men from the necessary military duty
of regular archery practice. Such edicts had
little effect.
Varieties developed in England and in Europe (in
14th-century Florence there was a form called
calcio). A traditional version in England was
known as Shrovetide football, common in the
Midlands and the north of England for centuries.
Such games might involve hundreds of men on each
side and were usually a free-for-all between
sections of a town, villages, or adjoining
parishes that would often develop into a brawl.
Many schools played football and some, notably
Eton, Harrow, Winchester, and Rugby, evolved
codes of their own, particularly Rugby, which
established a code from which others (American
football, for example) developed. During the
19th century there were concerted efforts to
organize and structure the different forms and
provide acceptable rules.
Football In India
Football is one of the
most popular games in India. The game commands a
massive fan following across the length and
breadth of the country.
But of late football has lost out to its more
illustrious cousin cricket in the popularity
stakes. The dwindling interest in the
once-popular game is an ample reflection of the
shabby state of affairs in Indian football.
At a time when Indian sportspersons are
asserting themselves in the world stage and
bringing laurels for the country, the Indian
football team is languishing at the bottom of
the world football rankings. This, despite the
fact that India has been Asiad champions in
football and have performed commendably well in
the Olympics in the 1960s.
The All India Football Federation (AIFF), the
governing body in football, introduced the
National Football League in 1996 in a bid to
raise the standards of the game in India. The
effort has met only partial success due to the
lack of a comprehensive package to focus on the
fitness and tactical dimensions of the players.
But a wind of change is blowing in Indian
football. The AIFF has roped in Bob Houghton as
the new manager of the national team and the
Englishman is expected to deliver the goods on
account of his associations with some top-ranked
Asian teams.
<<<Back |