enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of sport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_sport

    Study of the history of sport can teach lessons about social changes and about the nature of sport itself, as sport seems involved in the development of basic human skills (compare play). [ citation needed ] As one delves further back in history, dwindling evidence makes theories of the origins and purposes of sport more and more difficult to ...

  3. Amateur sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_sports

    Athletes of the Soviet Armed Forces Sports Society or Dynamo Sports Club (NKVD sports society) carried a rank and a uniform. The difference between the teams of masters and other teams was the fact that the first competed at all-Union level and was known as non-amateur sports, while others at republican was considered to be amateur sports.

  4. 1001 to 1600 in sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1001_to_1600_in_sports

    17 January 1597 — a court of law in Guildford heard from a 59-year-old coroner, John Derrick, who gave witness that when he was a scholar at the "Free School at Guildford", fifty years earlier, "hee and diverse of his fellows did runne and play at creckett and other plaies " on common land which was the subject of the current legal dispute ...

  5. History of sports in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_sports_in_the...

    The history of sports in the United States reveals that American football, baseball, softball, and indoor soccer evolved from older British sports—rugby football, British baseball, rounders, and association football, respectively. Over time, these sports diverged significantly from their European origins, developing into distinctly American ...

  6. Mixed-sex sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixed-sex_sports

    Mixed-sex sports (also known as coed sports) are individual and team sports whose participants are not of a single sex. In many organised sports settings, rules dictate an equal number of people of each sex in a team (for example teams of one man and one woman). Usually, the main purpose of these rules are to account for physiological sex ...

  7. Sport of athletics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_of_athletics

    In the 19th century, the term athletics acquired a more narrow definition in Europe and came to describe sports involving competitive running, walking, jumping and throwing. This definition continues to be prominent in the United Kingdom and the former British Empire. Related words in Germanic and Romance languages also have a similar meaning.

  8. Football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Football

    The various codes of football share certain common elements and can be grouped into two main classes of football: carrying codes like American football, Canadian football, Australian football, rugby union and rugby league, where the ball is moved about the field while being held in the hands or thrown, and kicking codes such as association football and Gaelic football, where the ball is moved ...

  9. Team sport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_sport

    Cricket is a popular team sport played at international level Ice hockey, a popular winter team sport Bandy is a popular Nordic winter team sport. A team sport is a type of sport where the fundamental nature of the game or sport requires the participation of multiple individuals working together as a team, and it is inherently impossible or highly impractical to execute the sport as a single ...