Forms of football: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Warren Schudy m (subpagified so deleting categories) |
imported>John Leach m (corrected link which was to a redirect) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | {{subpages}} | ||
For millions of participants around the world, the term '''football''' refers to [[Association football]], a team sport played according to the rules of the [[International Football Association Board]] and [[FIFA]], and known also as ''soccer''. However, in specific countries, the word ''football'' has a different understanding and can refer to a number of other team sports, including: | For millions of participants around the world, the term '''football''' refers to [[Association football (soccer)|Association football]], a team sport played according to the rules of the [[International Football Association Board]] and [[FIFA]], and known also as ''soccer''. However, in specific countries, the word ''football'' has a different understanding and can refer to a number of other team sports, including: | ||
* [[American football]] | * [[American football]] |
Revision as of 00:15, 6 February 2010
For millions of participants around the world, the term football refers to Association football, a team sport played according to the rules of the International Football Association Board and FIFA, and known also as soccer. However, in specific countries, the word football has a different understanding and can refer to a number of other team sports, including:
- American football
- Australian rules football (or, colloquially, Aussie rules)
- Canadian football, a variant of the North American game, whose differences from the U.S. version include three downs rather than four, and a larger playing field. Canadian football is played professionally in the Canadian Football League
- Gaelic football
- Rugby football, which exists in these variants:
History of football
"Played on foot" or "played with the feet"?
The word "soccer"
The word "soccer" began as a colloquialism in Britain, derived from "Association football", from the name of the Football Association, to distinguish it from rugby football, but it has become the formal name of the game in the United States and Australia. (A similar term, "rugger" for "rugby" is also quite common.)