Sean Fagan
A
bit of football history: until the mid-1800s, there was just "football".
Teams played against each under rules (of which there were few)
agreed to at the start of the game by the captains. English public
schools and universities developed their own variations.
As
football spread around the globe, club and "scratch"
matches began to be played under their favoured rules and local
variations. Some preferred more kicking of the ball than handling,
others were against the "off-side" rule, while the idea
of a cross-bar seemed unnecessary to many.
Understandably,
this led to many disputes over rules before
and during matches. To overcome the problem, local football associations
and unions were formed to codify rules. The most notable were
the Football Association (1863), the Rugby Football Union (1871)
and the Victorian [Rules] Football Association (1877).
The
frontispiece to the Rugby Football Union's
"Laws of the Game of Football"
issued in 1872.
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Each
of these bodies found their own loyalists and advocates across
the globe. In the USA and Canada, further variations on "football"
were created, and in 1895 Rugby League began after the split from
the RFU.
Throughout
the world the locally dominant winter code was simply "football".
In Sydney and Brisbane it is Rugby League, in Melbourne it is
Australian Rules, in Auckland it is Rugby Union, in New York it
is American Football. Practically
everywhere else, it is Soccer that is the preferred code.
English and Australian newspaper sports pages in the late 1800s
and early 1900s all listed Football as the column heading,
then under it they listed the various forms.
The
words 'soccer' and 'rugger' were in common use in England a hundred
years ago. The words emanate from where the rules of their version
of football originated. In soccer's case, it was the formation
of the Football Association. Rugger is a variation of Rugby
School football rules, and later the Rugby Football Union.
The
argument that soccer is the only true form of football (and it
alone is entitled to use the name) is fanciful. It also ignores
that the origins of football and that all the codes are variants
of the one game.
All forms of football allow handling of the ball to some degree.
Indeed, in the 1860s handling of the ball was allowed under the
F.A. rules, before eventually being cut back to only the goal
keeper and restarting play from the touchlines. All football codes
vary the balance between kicking and handling - from soccer at
one end of the spectrum, to American Football at the other.
Over
recent years, both rugby codes in Australia have dropped the use
of "football" from within their marketing titles. For
example, the "NSW Rugby Football Union" became the "NSW
Rugby Union".