In the United
States, the major forms are high school football, college football and
professional football. Each of these are played under slightly different rules.
High school football is governed by the National Federation of State High
School Associations and college football by the National Collegiate Athletic
Association. The highest level league for professional football is the National
Football League.
Football’s Early Beginnings
Football (as well as rugby and soccer) are
believed to have descended from the ancient Greek game of harpaston. Harpaston
is mentioned frequently in classical literature, where it is often referred to
as a “very rough and brutal game“. The rules of this ancient sport were quite
simple: Points were awarded when a
player would cross a goal line by either kicking the ball, running with it
across the goal line, or throwing it across the line to another player. The
other team’s objective was simply to stop them by any means possible. There was no specific field length, no side
line boundaries, no specified number of players per team, only a glaring lack
of rules.
Most modern versions of football are
believed to have originated from England
in the twelfth century. The game became so popular in England
that the kings of that time (Henry II and Henry IV) actually banned football.
They believed that football was taking away interest from the traditional
sports of England , such as fencing and archery.
History of
American football
The birth date of
football in the United States is generally regarded by football historians as
November 6, 1869, when teams from Rutgers and Princeton Universities met for
the first intercollegiate football game. In those early games, there were 20
players to a team and football still more closely resembled rugby than modern
football.
The game of
football has a history of constant rule changes. Rule changes have been
implemented to bolster the excitement of the game of football and to increase
the game's safety.
In 1873,
representatives from Columbia, Rutgers, Princeton, and Yale Universities met in
New York City to formulate the first intercollegiate football rules for the
increasingly popular game. These four teams established the Intercollegiate
Football Association (IFA) and set 15 as the number of players allowed on each
team.
Walter Camp, the
coach at Yale and a dissenter 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 committee, 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 1882 Camp also introduced
the system of downs. After first allowing three attempts to advance the ball
five yards, in 1906 the distance was changed to ten yards. The fourth down was
added in 1912.
Within a decade,
concern over the increasing brutality of the game led to its ban by some
colleges. Nearly 180 players had suffered serious injuries, and eighteen deaths
had been reported from the brutal mass plays that had become common practice.
So in 1905, 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
redesign of the ball and a more open style of play on the field. The rough mass
plays, which once caused so many serious injuries, were prohibited by the
committee. Also prohibited 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.
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