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Field Hockey History
Games played withcurved sticks
and a ball have been found throughout history and the world; for
example, there are 4,000 year old drawings in Egypt of the game being
played, hurling
dates back to before 1272 B.C., and there is a depiction from 500B.C.
in Ancient
Greece. There were various hockey-like games throughout
Europe during the Middle Ages,
and the word 'hockey' was recorded in the Galway Statutes of 1527. The
modern game of hockey grew from the game played in English public schools
in the early 19th century. The first club was created in 1849 at Blackheath in
south-east London,
but the modern rules grew out of a version of hockey played by members
of Middlesexcricket clubs
for winter sport. The Hockey Association was founded in 1886, the first
international took place in 1895 (
Ireland
3,
Wales
0), and the International Rules Board was founded in 1900.
Hockey was played
at the Summer
Olympics in 1908 and 1920. It was dropped in 1924, leading to
the foundation of the Federation
Internationale de Hockey sur Gazon, or FIH as an international
governing body by seven continental European nations, and hockey was
reinstated in 1928. Men's hockey united under the FIH in 1970.
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The game had been
taken to
India by
British servicemen, and the first clubs formed there in Calcutta in
1885. The Beighton Cup and the Aga Khan
tournament had commenced within ten years. Entering the Olympic Games
in 1928,
India
won all five of its games without conceding a goal, and went on to win
in 1932 until 1956, and then in 1964 and 1980.
Pakistan
won in 1960, 1968, and 1984.
Women's
field hockey played on grass. Universal until the 1970's, this is now
quite rare for competitive hockey in many countries
In the early
1970's, artificial
turf fields began to be used in competition. The introduction of
synthetic pitches instead of grass ones has completely changed most
aspects of hockey. The game, as well as the material used to play, has
taken a definitive turn, gaining mainly in speed. In order to take into
account the specificities of this surface, new tactics and new
techniques have been developed, often followed by the establishment of
new rules to take account of these techniques. The switch to synthetic
surfaces essentially ended Indian and Pakistani domination of the
sport, because artificial turf was far more expensive than grass; too
expensive for the two countries to implement widely in comparison to
the wealthier European countries, and since the 1970's
Australia, The Netherlands, and
Germany
have dominated the sport at the Olympics.
Women do not seem
to have played hockey widely before the modern era. Women's hockey was
first played at
British
Universities
and schools, and the first club, Molesey Ladies Hockey Club, was
founded in 1887. The first national association was the Irish Ladies
Hockey Union in 1894, and though rebuffed by the Hockey Association,
women's hockey grew rapidly around the world. This led to the formation
of the International Federation of Women's Hockey Associations (IFWHA)
in 1927, though this did not include initially many continental
European countries where women played as sections of men's associations
and were affiliated to the FIH. The IFWHA held conferences every three
years, and the tournaments associated with these were the primary IFWHA
competitions. These tournaments were non-competitive until 1975.
By the early
1970's there were 22 associations with women's sections in the FIH and
36 associations in the IFWHA. Discussions were started about a common
rule book. The FIH introduced competitive tournaments in 1974, forcing
the acceptance of the principle of competitive hockey by the IFWHA in
1973. It took until 1982 for the two bodies to merge, but this allowed
the introduction of women's hockey to the Olympic Games from 1980
where, as in the men's game, The Netherlands,
Germany, and
Australia have been
consistently strong.
Most hockey field
dimensions were originally fixed using whole numbers of imperial
measures and are expressed as such in this article. It is,
nevertheless, the metric measurements shown in parenthesis which are
the current official dimensions of the field of play as laid down by
the International
Hockey Federation (FIH) in the "Rules of Hockey 2005".
The game is
played between two teams of eleven players on a 100
— 60 yard
(91.4 m — 55 m) rectangular field. At each end there
is a goal
7 feet (2.14 m) high and 12 feet (3.66 m) wide, and a semi-circle 16
yards (14.63 m) from the goal known as the shooting circle
(or D or arc), with a dotted line 5 yards (5 m)
from the semi-circle, as well as lines across the field 25 yards (22.9
m) from each end-line and in the center of the field. A spot, called
the penalty spot, is placed 7 yards (6.4 m) from the center of each
goal.
Traditional grass
pitches are far less common in modern hockey with most hockey being
played on synthetic surfaces. Since the 1970's sand based pitches were
favored as they dramatically speed up the pace of the game. However, in
recent years there has been a massive increase in the number of 'water
based' artificial turfs. Indeed, international hockey is now
predominantly played on this surface as it requires a greater level of
ball control due to the less predictable nature of the surface.
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