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  • The earliest evidence for an activity recognized as a form of football is from 3rd century BC

  • during the Han Dynasty in China. It was a simple ball game known as Cuju where the

  • objective was to kick a leather ball through a small hole in a piece of cloth positioned

  • a couple of meters above ground. It was originally used and intended as a military exercise but

  • the popularity of the game quickly spread among the upper class. The game later spread

  • to other nations and also inspired the Japanese game Kemari in which people stand in a circle

  • trying to keep a ball in the air by kicking it for as long as possible. It's essentially

  • the same as kick-ups but with slightly different rules. And clothes. Evidence for ancient games similar

  • to football has also been found in places like Greece and Italy. But it wasn't until

  • the 9th century that modern day football truly began to take shape. Between the 9th and 13th

  • century, an activity known as medieval- or mob football spiked in popularity in England,

  • Scotland, and France. Mob football is exactly what it sounds like, large mobs (usually entire villages)

  • would compete against each other trying to get a small object, like an inflated

  • animal bladder, to a specific location. And with the exception of murder and manslaughter,

  • almost anything was allowed to complete this objective. The games got so violent and disruptive

  • to non-participants that in 1314, King Edward II issued a proclamation banning football

  • in London. Many attempts to ban the games would follow in all three countries, but the

  • bans were not very effective as people just kept on playing in secret. Beginning in the

  • 16th century, a slightly different and familiar form of football were being played at public

  • schools across England. It was a lot less violent than regular mob football and more

  • strict regulations where soon established. Things like only being allowed to use your

  • feet, having a referee and a coach, passing, dribbling, and having a goal with a designated

  • goalkeeper on each end of the playing field. Football began to transform into an organized

  • sport rather than a chaotic riot. The problem was that each school developed it's own version

  • of the game with slightly different rules. For example at Rugby School, they preferred

  • a more violent game where you could tackle your opponents and still carry the ball in

  • your arms and hands and thus Rugby and Gridiron Football was born.

  • Increasing attempts to unify and reconcile the various public school games were made and in 1848,

  • the first written rules where penned at the University of Cambridge. These rules became widely adopted

  • and in 1863 The Football Association was founded in London to continue to promote football under a unified

  • set of regulations. As the sport became increasingly popular all over the globe, a need for an

  • international association became apparent and thus FIFA was founded in France in 1904.

  • Today it's estimated that 3.5 billion people, or half the

  • population of the entire globe, are fans of football.

  • Why is it that countries like the US and Canada insist on calling the sport soccer while the

  • rest of the world calls it football? It also makes a lot less sense to call a sport football

  • when it mostly consist of using your hands. But it does make a bit more sense if you know

  • where it came from. Calling the sport soccer actually began back in England and here's

  • why. As The Football Association was founded in London in 1863, the sport became officially

  • known as Association Football. That was and still is the full title of the sport. This

  • was done to distinguish Association Football from other variations of the game such as

  • Rugby Football and Gaelic Football. But using the full titles in conversation can be a bit

  • tedious so shorthand names where used in their place. And a popular conversational form of

  • creating abbreviations at the time was by applying the suffix "-er".

  • So Rugby Football became "rugger" and Association Football became "footer" or "socker".

  • Often spelled with a "ck" at the time. So the word soccer comes from the abbreviation of the word

  • association (assoc.) found in the full title of the sport Association Football.

  • In 1998 a match in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo was suddenly disrupted by

  • a lightning strike. Now lightning strikes during football matches are not exactly unheard

  • of, but this one was definitely a unique case. Not only did half the players on the field

  • die as a result of being struck by lightning. They where all from the same team. The other

  • team remarkably left the match completely unharmed. The local population, known to believe

  • in things like charms and spells, was divided over weather or not the team was cursed. And

  • what further fueled this rumor was that the game was tied 1-1 at the time of the incident

  • and the team that died was the visiting team.

  • The record for the highest scoreline of all time in professional football occurred in

  • 2002 in Madagascar and ended with a score of 149-0. However, the reason for this absurd

  • amount of goals was that the players of the loosing team kept on kicking the ball into

  • their own goal. They did this as a protest against a referee decision. The previous record

  • occurred in 1885, with a scoreline of 36-0. The record for the largest victory in an international

  • football match happened in 2001 between Australia and American Samoa with a scoreline of 31-0.

  • Just like the game in 1885, the reason for the high score counts were because of the teams

  • skill level being incredibly mismatched.

  • To a lot of people, football is a big deal. In places like Brazil for example it's more

  • or less comparable to a religion. And just like a religion, this extreme passion for

  • the sport can lead to some quite extreme situations. A perfect example of this is the 1950 FIFA

  • World Cup hosted in Brazil. In the finals, it was Brazil up against Uruguay. For multiple

  • days prior to the match both the press and the general public assumed that Brazil would

  • come out as the world champions. The organizers of the event had even prepared a speech for

  • when Brazil ultimately won. To everyone's surprise, Brazil lost the match with a final

  • score of 2-1, resulting in one of the biggest upsets in football history. So much so that

  • some fans actually committed suicide by throwing themselves off the stands at the stadium.

  • And a noticeable wave of suicides where reported in the days that followed. Brazilian newspapers

  • and radio hosts even tried to ignore or deny the fact that they had been defeated. The

  • entire thing has become known as "Maracanazo" after the name of the stadium.

  • Even more dramatic, the 1970 FIFA World Cup prompted a war between two nations. In 1969,

  • Honduras and El Salvador met during the qualification rounds for the upcoming World Cup. Honduras

  • won the first game with a score of 1-0 which sparked a lot of violence among the fans.

  • El Salvador would go on to win the second game with a score of 3-0 which ignited another

  • wave riots and violence. Finally, a play-off match took place which ended with El Salvador

  • as the winner with a score of 3-2. Now, before all of this, these two nations where not exactly

  • friends. Issues over land reform, immigration, and demographic problems where all rampant

  • long before these games ever took place. So when El Salvador won the final game, Hondurans

  • began assaulting and harassing Salvadoran immigrants all across the country as a sort

  • of retaliation for losing the game. El Salvador, seeing this as a form of genocide, dissolved

  • all democratic relations with Honduras the very same day, and launched an attack on the

  • nation only two weeks after the final match. The war lasted for 4 days until a cease-fire

  • was signed, at which point more than 2000 people had died. Because of this, it's become

  • known as The Football War.

  • The oldest football ball still in existence was found during an excavation project at

  • Stirling Castle in Scotland. It's believed to be around 450 years old and is made out

  • of a pigs bladder and cow leather.

  • Whenever the Mexican player Javier Hernández plays a match, crime rates in Mexico actually

  • drop significantly. Mexican police has discovered that criminals across the country take a break

  • from criminal activities to watch this national hero play a match. Crimes like carjackings,

  • muggings, and robberies all have a noticeable drop whenever he's on TV. Not only that but

  • his appearance in a match even increases Mexico's birth rates.

  • During the 1962 FIFA World Cup, a game between Chile and Italy became infamously known as

  • "The Battle of Santiago". Tension between the two nations and teams had built-up long

  • before the game began and as a result, the players became rather violent during the game.

  • The first attack happening only 12 seconds after the match began and later in the game

  • one player even performed a dropkick-style maneuver. The referee during the game was

  • Ken Aston who did his best to control the increasingly violent players. As a direct

  • result of this violent match, Ken Aston later introduced the idea of using yellow and red cards as

  • a means of penalizing a player. Apparently the idea came to him as he drove down a street

  • and saw the green, yellow, and red traffic lights.

  • In 1863, the newly formed Football Association in England stated that the goal posts for

  • a goal should be 24 feet (7.32 m) apart. A rule which still stands to this day. However

  • nothing was said of the height of the goal. The height was usually indicated by a string

  • between the two posts but could theoretically be limitless. Meaning that a goal could be

  • scored at any height as long as the ball passed in between the two posts. Of course, not having

  • a standardized rule for the height resulted in arguments and disagreements. It wasn't

  • until 1882 that a solid crossbar was required at height of 8 feet (2.44 m). Which remains

  • true to this day. However it is still not a requirement (only mandated)

  • for a goal in Association Football to have a net.

The earliest evidence for an activity recognized as a form of football is from 3rd century BC

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