
History
of American Football
The history
of American football is an important part of both the culture
of the United States and the broader history of various
football games around the world, in which a ball is kicked
at a goal and/or or carried over a line.
The Rutgers College football team of 1882, wearing uniforms typical of the
period. The team would have played under the slightly modified rugby union
rules used in American football at the time.Before the 19th century, when
modern forms of football first emerged, the name "football" was
applied to a widely-differing variety of codes of rules. Although there
are mentions of native Americans playing ball games, modern American football
has its origins in traditional ball games played at villages and schools
in Europe for many centuries before America was settled by Europeans. There
are reports of early settlers at Jamestown, Virginia playing games with
inflated balls in the early 17th century.
As is
the case with many sports, modern football games were popularized
in the USA by students at and/or from elite schools and
universities. These appear to have had much in common with
the traditional "mob football" played in England,
especially on Shrove Tuesday.
By 1820,
a notoriously violent game known as "ballown" was
being played at the College of New Jersey (later known
as Princeton University). In 1827, a Harvard University
student composed a humorous epic poem called The Battle
of the Delta, one of the first accounts of football in
American universities. Also in the 1820s, students at Dartmouth
College, in Hanover, New Hampshire, were playing a kicking
game that would be called "Old Division Football" (for
which they published rules in 1871).
Varieties
of "football"
Within the spectrum of modern football codes there are several "families",
which have diverged from and/or influenced each other in their development.
Many of these games have their origins in varieties of football played in England.
By the 1850s, the two main families of football in England were the "kicking
games", in which the ball was mostly kicked along the ground, and the "running
games", in which the ball was mostly carried by players. Some codes combined
elements from both families. In 1845, at Rugby School in England, rugby football
became the first of the running games to have codified rules.
The best-known
of the kicking games is soccer (a word which originated
as an abbreviation of "Association football"),
which began with a code of rules devised in 1863 in England,
by The Football Association. This form of Football (Soccer)
has gone on to become the world's number one sport with
the FIFA World Cup Finals attracting the worlds highest
televised audiences. However from these English roots it
can be said that these FA rules laid the basis for many
derivations of football in many forms.
The Oneida Football Club, formed in Boston in 1861, is claimed by some sources
as the first American football team. However, no one knows what rules the
club used. They may have played "kicking" games, "running" games,
both or some hybrid form. The latter seems most likely, since the "Oneidas" are
often credited with inventing the "Boston Game," which both allowed
players to kick a round ball along the ground, and to pick it up and run
with it. The game seems to have been popular at least in Massachusetts
in the mid-19th century and there are references to it being the most popular
form of football at Harvard University shortly thereafter.
The Canadian contribution,
late 1860s
The first known instances of rugby football in North America were in the 1860s
in Canada. In 1864, at Trinity College, Toronto, F. Barlow Cumberland and Frederick
A. Bethune devised rules based on the Rugby School game. However, the first
game of "rugby" in Canada is generally said to have taken place in
Montreal, in 1865, when British Army officers played local civilians. The game
gradually gained a following, and the Montreal Football Club was formed in
1868, the first recorded football club in Canada.
Codes
based on the Rugby School rules began to be played at other
Canadian universities in the late 1860s and these games
were the basis of Canadian football.They would also prove
to have a major influence on American football.
Rutgers
v. Princeton, 1869
Rutgers
University and Princeton University played a game on November
6, 1869 using a slightly modified version of the rules of
Association Football. The Rutgers website provides the following
details of the game.
Rutgers
won the game, 6 goals to 4
It was played by two teams of 25.
Two members of each team were stationed near their opponent's goal in the hope
of scoring from unguarded positions.
Each team was divided into 11 "fielders" and 12 "bulldogs".
The ball could be advanced only by kicking or batting it with the feet, hands,
heads or sides. The rules banned throwing or running with the ball.
Rutgers players formed "a perfect interference" around the ball.
Rutgers players advanced the ball by "short, skillful kicks."
A Princeton player threw himself into a group of Rutgers players, "bursting
us apart, and bowling us over."
One Rutgers player used a technique of kicking the rolling ball with his heel.
An illustration on the Rutgers website suggests that they were using a round
ball.
Touchdowns were not a feature. (In fact none were recorded in games played
by Rutgers until 1878-79.)
The rules generally were the same as the rules of Association Football at the
time. Points 1, 5, 7, 9 and 10 above in particular reflect the influence of
soccer, which at the time did not bar players from hitting the ball with their
hands, (or taking a "fair catch" followed by a free kick), but did
not allow them to hold and run with the ball.
Princeton
and the NFL also state that the 1869 game was based on
soccer. The historian Stephen Fox identifies it as "New
York Ball", a soccer-like game (which should not be
confused with a type of baseball that also went by the
same name), common in the vicinity of New York City.
Games
between the two colleges and other teams soon followed.
The
early 1870s
On October 19, 1873, representatives from Yale, Columbia, Princeton, and Rutgers
met at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City to codify the first set of intercollegiate
football rules, based directly on the rules of the F.A. in London. Harvard
students chose not to attend.
In the
words of the U.S. Professional Football Researchers Association,
the four colleges decided, among other things, that: "5.
No player shall throw or carry the ball. Any violation
of this regulation shall constitute a foul...", "7.
[No] player use his hands to hold or push an adversary...",
and "12. In all matches a No. 6 ball shall be used,
furnished by the challenging side and to become the property
of the victor." "The No. 6 ball was imported
from England where it was used by the London Football Association.
It was 30 inches in circumference, entirely round, and
very strong. It was not pigskin; rather, the covering was
heavy canvas thoroughly saturated with rubber.'" The
PFRA adds:
Rules
number five and number seven stamped the game as soccer
by eliminating carrying and the use of hands. There was
unanimity among the four assembled schools for the exclusion
of these practices. And, it was because everyone knew that
the four assembled schools felt that way about it that
Harvard, although invited, chose to skip the whole get-together.
McGill
v. Harvard, 1874 & Harvard v. Yale, 1875
Harvard was isolated from its US counterparts by the fact that it did not play
soccer. As a result, in 1874, Harvard footballers welcomed a request from the
rugby team of McGill University of Montreal to play a pair of games at Harvard.
In these games, the two teams alternated between the rules used by each college.
Following these games, Harvard also adopted a game based on the rugby football
code and played Yale under these rules in 1875 for the first edition of The
Game. Within a few years, other US universities had also adopted rugby.)
The
birth of American football, 1876
On November 23, 1876 representatives from Harvard, Columbia, Princeton, and
Yale met at Massasoit House in Springfield, Massachusetts to decide on standard
American rules, an event which became known as the Massasoit Convention. They
adopted the rugby football rules in their entirety, except for two innovations:
at the time a touch-down in rugby only counted toward the score if neither
side kicked a field goal.
Princeton,
Harvard, and Columbia agreed that four touchdowns would
be worth one goal; in the event of a tied score, a goal
converted from a touchdown would take precedence over four
touch-downs. The three colleges also founded the original
Intercollegiate Football Association (IFA).
The influence of Walter
Camp, 1880s
Between 1880 and 1883, Yale coach Walter Camp devised a number of major changes
to the American game—including some major breaks with the rugby tradition—beginning
with the reduction of teams from 15 to 11 players; reduction of the field area
by almost half; and the introduction of the scrimmage, in which a player heeled
the ball backwards to begin a game.
These
were complemented by a more significant innovation: a team
had to surrender possession if they did not gain five yards
after three downs (successful tackles), a rule introduced
to thwart Princeton and Yale's strategy of controlling
the ball without trying to score. Camp also introduced
the seven-man offensive line, plus a quarterback, two halfbacks
and a fullback in the backfield, an arrangement which soon
became the norm.
Canadian
football eventually absorbed many of these developments,
but also retained many unique characteristics. One of these
was that Canadian football, for many years, did not officially
distinguish itself from rugby. For example, the Canadian
Rugby Football Union (founded in 1884) was the forerunner
of the Canadian Football League, but not an internationally-recognised
rugby body.
Professionalism,
1892
Football caught on among the general population and began to be the subject
of intense competition and rivalry, albeit of a localised nature. In 1892,
although payments to players were considered unsporting and dishonorable at
the time, a Pittsburgh area club, the Allegheny Athletic Association, surreptitiously
hired former Yale All-American guard William "Pudge" Heffelfinger.[18]
On November 12, Heffelfinger became the first known professional football player.
He was paid $500—a huge amount at the time—to play in a game against
the Pittsburgh Athletic Club. Heffelfinger picked up a Pittsburgh fumble and
ran 35 yards for a touchdown, winning the game 4-0 for Allegheny. Although
many observers held suspicions, the payment remained a secret for many years.
On September
3, 1895 the first wholly professional game was played,
in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, between the Latrobe YMCA and
the Jeannette Athletic Club. Latrobe won the contest 12-0.
The
reform of American football
In the second half of the Harvard-Yale game of 1892, Harvard introduced the
flying wedge — an interlocking offensive formation play devised by chess
master Lorin F. Deland — which resulted in so many injuries to Yale players
that it was outlawed the following season. In 1894, newspapers reported seven
players carried off "in dying condition" in the Harvard-Yale game,
and the two schools broke off all official contact including athletic competition
for two years.
By 1900,
American football had become infamous for serious injuries,
as well as the deaths of a significant number of players.
Interlocking formations and the practice of teammates physically
dragging ball-carrying players forward had made the game
extremely dangerous. Despite the introduction of some restrictions,
18 players were killed in 1905.
The death
rate had resulted in national controversy and football
was banned by a number of colleges. Although U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt reportedly liked the game, he informed
the universities that it must be made safer. The President
reportedly threatened that, if it were not made safer,
he would campaign to outlaw the game.
Consequently,
a series of meetings was held by 19 colleges in 1905-06.
The meetings led to many restrictions on tackling and two
more innovations: the first was the addition of a neutral
zone between the scrimmage lines, with a requirement that
at least six players from each team be positioned on them.
The second was legalisation of the forward pass, a major
deviation from the game's forebear of rugby. As an alternative
means of opening out the play, Walter Camp had wanted to
widen the field, but representatives from Harvard pointed
to recently constructed Harvard Stadium, which could not
be widened.
The meetings
also led to formation of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association
of the United States on March 31, 1906 (the foreunner of
the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA).
The changes
did not immediately have the desired effect, and 33 football
players were killed during 1908 alone. As a result, in
1910, interlocking formations were finally outlawed. The
number of deaths and injuries gradually declined.
In 1912,
football fields were reduced in width by 35 yards, the
value of a touchdown increased to six points, and a fourth
down was added, before possession would switch. The game
had gained the main attributes of its modern form. One
of the early professional teams, the Racine (Chicago) Cardinals,
who began playing as early as 1898 as the Morgan Athletic
Club and became fully professional by 1913, are the oldest
consecutively-operated professional football club in the
United States.
After 1912
In the early years of the 20th century, college football was the predominant
form of American football. Innovations in strategy and style of play originated
in college football and spread to the pro game gradually. It was not until
much later that professional leagues surpassed the university football competitions
in standing and influence.
Jim Thorpe,
a two-time gold medal winner in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics
and former college football star, began playing pro football
in 1913, giving the pro sport its first legitimate star.
In the 1910s, the most influential professional league
was the Ohio League, dominated by the rivalry between the
Massillon Tigers and Canton Bulldogs. Thorpe was eventually
signed to play for Canton. In 1919, Curly Lambeau organized
the Green Bay (Meat) Packers as a full-fledged professional
team, funded by the Indian Packing Company. The Packers
are the longest lasting professional football franchise
in the same location in history.
Establishment of the NFL,
1920-45
The final result was Chicago Bears 9, Portsmouth Spartans 0.While attention
in most areas was still paid to football at elite colleges, the professional
game spread widely in the Midwest. In 1920, the first pro league, the American
Professional Football Association, was founded, in a meeting at a Hupmobile
car dealership in Canton, Ohio. The legendary Olympian and all-round athlete
Jim Thorpe was elected president. The initial group of 11 teams, of which all
but one were located in the Midwest, was originally less a league than an agreement
not to rob other teams' players. In the early years, APFA members continued
to play non-APFA teams.
By
the start of the 1920 season, the list of teams had
grown to 14. They were:
Akron
Pros
Buffalo All-Americans
Canton Bulldogs
Chicago Cardinals
Chicago Tigers
Cleveland Tigers
Columbus Panhandles
Dayton Triangles
Decatur Staleys
Detroit Heralds
Hammond Pros
Muncie Flyers
Rochester Jeffersons
Rock Island Independents
In 1921, the APFA began releasing official standings, and the following year,
the group changed its name to the National Football League (NFL). However,
the NFL was hardly a major league in the 1920s. Teams entered and left
the league frequently. Franchises included the Oorang Indians, an all-Native
American outfit that also put on a performing dog show.
Former
college stars like Red Grange and Benny Friedman increasingly
joined professional teams, and the pro game slowly began
to increase in popularity. By 1934, all of the small-town
teams, with the exception of the Green Bay Packers, had
moved to or been replaced by big cities.
In the
1932 season, the Chicago Bears and the Portsmouth Spartans
tied with the best regular-season records. To determine
the champion, the league voted to hold their first playoff
game. Because of very cold weather, the game was held indoors
at Chicago Stadium, which forced some temporary rule changes.
Chicago won, 9-0. The playoff proved so popular that the
league reorganized into two divisions for the 1933 season,
with the winners advancing to a scheduled championship
game. A number of new rule changes were also instituted:
the goal posts were moved forward to the goal line, every
play started from between the hash marks, and forward passes
could originate from anywhere behind the line of scrimmage
(instead of the previous five yards behind).
The NFL becomes dominant
within football, 1945-59
By the end of World War II, in 1945, pro football had begun to rival the college
game for fans' attention. The spread of the T formation led to a faster-paced,
higher-scoring game that attracted record numbers of fans. In 1945, the Cleveland
Rams moved to Los Angeles, becoming the first big-league sports franchise on
the West Coast. In 1950, the NFL accepted three teams from the defunct All-America
Football Conference, expanding to 13 clubs.
In the
1950s, pro football finally earned its place as a major
sport. The NFL embraced television, giving Americans nationwide
a chance to follow stars like Bobby Layne, Paul Hornung
and Johnny Unitas. The 1958 NFL championship in New York — considered
by many to be the most-important game in the rise of the
NFL — drew record TV viewership and made national
celebrities out of Unitas and his Baltimore Colts teammates.
Football
achieves supremacy, 1960-90
The rise of pro football was so fast that by the mid-60s, it had surpassed
baseball as Americans' favorite spectator sport in some surveys. As more people
wanted to cash in on this surge of popularity than the NFL could accommodate,
a rival league, the American Football League, was founded in 1960. The costly
war for players which ensued, between the NFL and AFL, almost derailed the
sport's ascent. In 1966, the leagues agreed to merge, with effect from the
1970 season. The 10 AFL teams joined three existing NFL teams to form the NFL's
American Football Conference. The remaining 13 NFL teams became the National
Football Conference. Another result of the merger was the creation of the Super
Bowl to determine the overall champion of American football.
In the
1970s and 80s, the NFL solidified its dominance as America's
top spectator sport and its important role in American
culture. The Super Bowl became an unofficial national holiday
and the top-rated TV program most years. Monday Night Football,
which first aired in 1970 brought in high ratings by mixing
sports and entertainment. Rules changes in the late 70s
ensured a fast-paced game with lots of passing to attract
the casual fan.
The founding
of the United States Football League in the early 80s was
the biggest challenge to the NFL in the post-merger era.
The USFL was a well-financed competitor with big-name players
and a national television contract. However, the USFL failed
to make money and folded after three years.
College football in the
21st century
College football remains extremely popular throughout the U.S. This is in part
because professional teams are found only in major cities and because of long
standing NFL rules requiring players to be at least three years out of high
school before joining the NFL. The college form of the game is especially popular
in parts of the country not in close proximity to such cities, for example
in Oklahoma, Alabama and Iowa.However, the absence of a pro franchise does
not necessarily indicate where the college game is most successful.[citation
needed] For example, in Ohio, Texas and Florida — states which all have
more than one NFL franchise — there are universities that also rank in
the upper financial echelons of college football. This is also true in Louisiana,
where the LSU Tigers, an extremely popular college team from Baton Rouge, play
in fairly close proximity to the New Orleans Saints.
There
is also no strong rivalry between the NFL and the NCAA,
since there is enough TV and radio airtime for both. College
football is dominant on Saturday, the NFL on Sundays.
Over
the past quarter century, the University of Miami has had
the most successful Division I collegiate football program,
winning five national championships during this period;
the University of Nebraska–Lincoln is the second
most successful, with three national championships during
this period. The University of Southern California, having
been awarded the AP national championship and contending
for the last two BCS championships, has been the most prominent
college football program in the 21st century.
American football spreads
to other countries
Amateur
leagues
The Japan American Football Association was founded in 1934 with three collegiate
teams: Rikkyo, Meiji and Waseda.[19] By 1937, an allstar game involving teams
representing eastern and western Japan, attracted over 25,000 spectators.
American
football became popular in various countries after World
War II, especially those in which there were large numbers
of U.S. military personnel, who often formed a substantial
proportion of the players and spectators.
In Japan,
high school teams also began to appear. In the 1970s, the
movement of players between Japan and the U.S. increased
dramatically, along with greater exposure on Japanese television.
The first
amateur clubs in Europe were formed in West Germany in
the 1970s. The German Football League's first German Bowl
was played in 1979, with Frankfurt winning. In Europe the
use of experienced players from the USA or Canada, who
had to wear a large "A" on their helmets, brought
quick success, but hampered the development of local talent.
No more than two or three "A" players were allowed
on the field, and in countries like Finland, teams also
had to provide a local quarterback. This helped the Finnish
American Football Association win the European championships
in the 1980s, over Great Britain and Germany, where US
players often ran the offense in club games, but were not
available for the national teams. However they could play
for clubs that competed for the Euro Bowl. (See also: List
of leagues of American football).
History of American football. (2007, January
16). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 03:08,
January 19, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=History_of_American_football&oldid=101046326
Copyright
(c) Wikipedia.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the GNU
Free Documentation License, Version 1.2. |