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The Hyde Grammar School netball team, 1949, wearing gymslips (Manchester, England). Navy woolen pinafore dress with velvet yoke, worn by students of Dunfermline College of Physical Education c. 1910–1920. A gymslip is a sleeveless tunic with a pleated skirt most commonly seen as part of a school uniform for girls.
There is also an Asian Youth Netball Championship for girls under 21 years of age, the seventh of which was held in 2010. [96] The major netball competition in Europe is the Netball Superleague, which features teams from England, Wales and Scotland. [97] [98] The league was created in 2005. [32] Matches are broadcast on Sky Sports. [99]
Products manufactured and commercialised by Mitre include sports equipment for association football (balls, team uniforms, clothing lines), rugby union (balls, training shirts), [2] basketball , and netball (balls, rings). Mitre also offers a list of accessories for those sports such as bags, space markers, water bottles, safety cones, among ...
This image is used by the netball kit template. For other patterns and instructions see the talk page. Body. Stripes _3bluestripes _3redstripes _3stripesonwhite ...
The Jamaica national netball team, commonly known as the Sunshine Girls, represent Jamaica in international netball competitions. Netball is the number one women's sport and the number one team sport in Jamaica, and the majority of the schools in Jamaica participate. [ 1 ]
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The Trinidad and Tobago national netball team, known as the Calypso Girls, represent Trinidad and Tobago in international netball. The Caribbean team competed at the first World Netball Championships in 1963, and are the only nation outside of Australia and New Zealand to have won a World Championship (in 1979). Throughout the mid-1970s and ...
The average Netball player in New South Wales has played the game for 10.8 years. [19] Most New South Wales based school-aged Netball players play at school and with friends. [19] Girls from non-English speaking backgrounds were more likely to play for fun than their English speaking counterparts, who often played for their school or parents. [20]