Soccer History: More than 2000 Years of Football
The colorful history of the fascinating game of Soccer:
By Dr. Wilfried Gerhardt
This article was first published in April 1979 in FIFA News. The author
was the former press officer for the German Football Association.
The
contemporary history of football spans almost 150 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 skillful 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.
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.
It 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.