Brief History on Rugby

Brief History on Rugby

  • Submitted By: kanzreid
  • Date Submitted: 10/28/2010 10:29 PM
  • Category: English
  • Words: 735
  • Page: 3
  • Views: 1

Intro:
Speech on: A SHORT BRIEF HISTORY ON RUGBY AND HOW IT IS PLAYED

Rugby is a game that the average Jamaicans are not too familiar with. Rugby is a good game for people of all shapes, sizes, qualities and skills. The players playing this game have gotten so rough that players have actually died from this sport.
The history of rugby is a long one. Some scholars believe it can be traced back to the ancient Romans but this history will be brief. The most popular view on when rugby began in 1823 when William Webb Ellis ran with the football in his arms instead of using his feet to kick it. This coincides with the theory that somewhere in the decade between 1820 and 1830, players who ran with the ball were accepted into the playing field. A player named Jem Mackie, who was a powerful player, actually helped cement this way of playing into the game during 1838 and 1839. However it was not a legal way to play until the 1841 to 1842 season of rugby.
Because the play of rugby was so dangerous, official rules were established on August 28, 1845. For fifteen years, these rules governed how the game was played by everyone with one exception. In 1848, the Cambridge Rules were established, which concerned the use of the players' hands and the football. There was a ban on the acts of 'hacking', 'tripping', and using the hands to hold the ball while running toward the opposite goal after the ball had been caught. This ban began in 1863.
The original ball was made from a pig's bladder, which had to be blown up before every game. The bladder was usually one that was fresh from a pig, so the chore of blowing the ball up did not appeal to many players. The length of the ball now is meant to be 11 to 11.25 inches. Its circumferences should be 30 to 31 inches in the biggest part and 25.5 to 26 inches in the width. It should weigh 12 to 13 ounces and should be hand sewn, with no more than 8 stitches per inch of the ball.
If this is the sport you choose, be cautious about...

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