Posts Tagged "First Game"

History of Hockey

Posted by on Jul 16, 2010 in Articles | Comments Off

The history of hockey is similar to the Gulf because it is basically in every game that a stick and a ball or stone, which have all been played for thousands of years deeply involved. very rough and crude forms of these games took place thousands of years throughout Europe, Egypt and South America that shaped the history of hockey.

Hockey began to clear roots in England in the form of the sixteen and seventeen hundreds.These games were often treacherous whole village to another village and teams can often be combined up to a hundred players and the players have often played with injuries and endured several days of these games.

The sport that we are more familiar today began to form at Eton University in England, where it effectively rules began in 1860 to formulate. Then the first Hockey Association is. in the history of hockey was formed in 1875, which clarified several rules.

Continued growth of sport in North America, spawning a new settlers from the mainland.Montreal had been credited with the first game in the history of organized hockey won in 1875 by students. The students then formed several associations and leagues, and new rules in the same time.

The game has continued to grow in popularity and has become so popular that Montreal has a first world championship in ice hockey in 1883. European Hockey has continued to grow at the college level, while a number of universities, the fiercest rivalries.

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Who Invented Ice Hockey?

Posted by on Jun 29, 2010 in Articles | Comments Off

Hockey is a winter sport at most loved in the world, and is a national obsession in some countries, like Canada. The popular belief that hockey was invented in Montreal, but is this really the case? In a word – no. The truth is we really do not know who is hockey, or whether it was invented invented. We know it’s popular since at least 1700, and it may have arisen even before that time.

The word “hockey” could come from at least two sources. Many people think it is from Old French word “hiccup discharge,” literally a shepherd’s crook, “the” thinking (of the shape of the hockey stick, but it can also from the Middle Dutch word “come Hokke,” mean what can “Goal” if routinely used. We know that show similar to the 16th century Dutch painting a hockey game or report that on the frozen canals, which will be played today in front of the establishment and inventiveness in Canada.

The British in May

Hockey and lacrosse were popular in Europe, and many people believe that British soldiers stationed in Canada, created in the 1700s a modern form of hockey against boredom and the long, cold war, Canadian winters. There are other pictures that played this new form of entertainment in Nova Scotia, and also show in Virginia in the United States during this period. So we really do not know who to refine invent ice hockey, only helped.

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