20 things you did not know about the beautiful game
1. During the
very first international
football match between Scotland
and England in 1872, players not
only wore knickerbockers” or
long pants but bobble hats or
caps too. The head dresses were
a normal part of the footballing
attire at the time and lasted
well into the 20th century.
2. Balls were not
exactly round when the first
club and country matches took
place. A pig’s bladder was blown
up like a balloon, tied at the
ends and placed inside a leather
case, affording it an egg shape.
The discovery of Indian rubber
in the 1860s gave the ball
greater roundness.
3. While it is
true footballs of yesteryear
gained weight in wet conditions,
they were in fact lighter than
today’s ball. In 1889, the
spherical object used had to be
between 12-15 ounces (340 – 425
grams) but this increased to
14-16 ounces (397 -454 grams) in
1937.
4. In the FA
rules of 1863, there was no
mention of a crossbar. As in
rugby today, a goal could be
scored at any height as long as
the ball went between the sticks
or posts. A tape was used to
close the goal during the first
internationals before a crossbar
replaced it in 1875.
5. Mob football,
a descendant of the modern game,
stormed into England around the
12th Century and caught on to
such an extent it was banned by
Royal decree by many kings and
queens. It was a violent game in
which “murder and manslaughter”
were allegedly the only barriers
to transporting the ball to
village ends. King Henry VIII,
however, is believed to have
been a keen player.
6. Contrary to
some beliefs, football was very
much an upper class sport in
England during its infancy. The
rules of the game were largely
drafted by students belonging to
public schools and universities.
The working class adopted the
sport during the late 19th
Century.
7. The first
meeting of the Football
Association on 26 October 1863
in London did not end in total
agreement among the 12
attendees. One club walked out,
refusing to accept the
non-inclusion of hacking
(kicking below the knee) among
the original rules.
8. Early football
tactics resembled those of
today’s rugby. Teams were
top-heavy with forwards and
because of the offside law,
which prevented advanced players
touching the ball, attacking
often meant players grouping or
scrummaging together around the
ball to move it towards goal.
9. Penalties or
referees found no place in the
original rules of the game.
Gentlemen would never
intentionally foul, it was
assumed. In fact debating
techniques were almost as
important as ball skills in
those days as players could
appeal against decisions first
to captains and then to umpires
before referees, named so
because they had originally been
referred to by umpires, found
their place on the pitch in
1891.
10. It was only
in the 20th Century that the
penalty spot was introduced. In
the decade before penalties,
originally called the kick of
death, could be taken anywhere
along a line 12-yards from goal.
11. The word
soccer does not come from the
United States but was a term
used by public school and
university students, most
notably at Oxford, in the 19th
Century to shorten the new game
“Association Football”. The
predilection to shorten words
with “er” extended to Rugby too,
known as rugger.
12. Many of
football’s terms and expressions
are of military origin: defence,
back line, offside, winger,
forward, attack, etc
13. The FA’s 1863
rules of the game permitted the
use of handling. Although a
player could not handle the ball
if it was on the ground, he was
able to catch it in the air and
make a mark to gain a “free”
kick, which opposing players
were not allowed to charge down.
14. There were no
David Beckhams or Roberto
Carlos’ before 1927 as goals
could not be scored from direct
free kicks.
15. Goalkeepers,
in their own half, could handle
the ball both inside and outside
the penalty area before 1912.
16. London’s
Kensington High Street traffic
lights are the inspiration for
the red and yellow cards used in
today’s game. English referee
and then FIFA’s Head of
Refereeing Ken Aston was driving
through central London thinking
of ways to better illustrate a
caution or sending off when the
change of green to yellow to red
of the lights gave him the idea.
17. Before 1913
when a corner was taken, instead
of deciding on an inswinger,
outswinger or taking a short
one, there was nothing to stop a
player dribbling the ball by
himself. The rules were changed
after several players teed
themselves up before scoring.
18. Not
surprisingly with hacking only a
thing of the recent past, shin
pads or guards were first
permitted in the rules as early
as 1874. They first appeared as
a cut down version of the
cricket pad.
19. The first act
of a goalkeeper on a Saturday
morning was not always to throw
open the doors of his wardrobe
before selecting his mood colour
that day. Back in 1909, he was
given a choice of royal blue,
white or scarlet. If a
goalkeeper became his country’s
number 1 in 1921, he wore
yellow.
20. Referees
attempted to catch up with play
around the turn of the century
decked in black trousers, blazer
and bow tie!
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