1
|
| General Information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Originated | 1895, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England | |
| World Governing Body | Rugby League International Federation | |
| International Rugby League | ||
| Test Nations | Australia · Cook Islands · England · Fiji · France · Great Britain · New Zealand · Papua New Guinea · Russia · Samoa · South Africa · Tonga | |
| Major Competitions | The World Cup The Tri-Nations World Club Challenge The Ashes ANZAC Test Challenge Cup | |
| Domestic Rugby League | ||
| Major Competitions | National Rugby League (Australasia) Super League (Europe) State of Origin (Australia) French Rugby League Championship (France) Bartercard Cup (New Zealand) | |
Rugby league football is a full-contact team sport played with a prolate spheroid-shaped ball by two teams of thirteen on a rectangular grass field. Rugby league is one of the two major codes of rugby football, the other being rugby union. The league code is most prominent in Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and France, where the sport is played professionally. Rugby league is also immensely popular in Papua New Guinea where it is considered the national sport and many national players figure prominently in the Australian Rugby League. The game is played to a lesser extent in several other countries, such as Russia, the United States and Lebanon.
Rugby league takes its name from what was initially a breakaway faction of England\'s Rugby Football Union (RFU) known as the Northern Union when established in 1895. Both unions played rugby football under the same rules at first, until similar breakaway factions occurred from RFU-affiliated rugby unions in Australia and New Zealand in 1907 and 1908, and formed associations known as rugby football leagues, introducing modified Northern Union rules to create a new form of rugby football. The Northern Union later changed its name to the Rugby Football League in 1922 and thus, over time the sport itself became known as "rugby league". Over the following decades, the rules of both forms of rugby were gradually changed, and now rugby league and rugby union are distinctly different sports.
Contents |
The grass roots of rugby league can be traced to early football history, through the playing of ball games which bear little resemblance to modern sports. It is then important to acknowledge the development of the modern football codes and two separate schisms in football history.
In 19th century England, football was most prominently played in private schools. Each school had its own rules based on whatever playing field was available to them. The rules could be categorised as either handling or kicking forms of football. The kicking and handling forms were later codified by The Football Association and the Rugby Football Union (RFU) respectively. Rugby football, as is was widely known, had its main origins at Rugby School, Warwickshire, England.
In 1895 rugby football was beset with a schism that resulted in the formation of the Northern Rugby Football Union (NRFU). Although many factors played a part in the split, including the success of working class northern teams, the main division was caused by the RFU decision to enforce the amateur principle of the sport, preventing \'broken time payments\' to players who had taken time off work to play rugby. Northern teams typically had more working class players (coal miners, mill workers etc.) who could not afford to play without this compensation, in contrast to southern teams who had other sources of income to sustain the amateur principle. There were similar movements in other countries. In 1895 a decree by the RFU banning the playing of rugby at grounds where entrance fees were charged led to the famous meeting on 29 August 1895. Twenty-one clubs (plus Stockport who negotiated by telephone) met at The George Hotel in Huddersfield, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, and formed the "Northern Rugby Football Union". Within fifteen years, more than 200 RFU clubs had left to join the rugby revolution.
Players on field are divided into forwards and backs. Each position has a designated number, 1 to 13. Numbers 14 to 17 are given to players starting on the bench, who will come into the game as substitutes for other players who are injured, in need of a rest, or less suited to the coach\'s strategy for that particular phase of the game. Typically the bench is comprised of three forward substitutes and a hooker/halves substitute. Each side is allowed 12 substitutions per game. (For 2008, in the National Rugby League, each side may use up to 10 substitutions."\'No grapple tackle\' for NRL in 2008", National Rugby League, 2007-12-26. Retrieved on 2008-01-16. )
The backs are generally smaller, faster and more agile than their forward counterparts. They are often the most creative and evasive players on the field, preferring fine kicking, passing or manoeuvring skills, tactics and/or set plays to break the defensive line instead of brute force.
The forwards\' two responsibilities can be broken into \'normal play\' and \'scrum play\'. For information on a forward\'s role in the scrum see rugby league scrummage. Forward positions are traditionally named after the player\'s position in the scrum yet are equal with respect to \'normal play\' with the exception of the hooker. Forward positions are traditionally broken into:
Rugby league is played in more than 30 countries, though it is most commonly played in the United Kingdom (predominantly northern England), Australia and New Zealand. Australia, where it is a winter sport, is generally thought to be the strongest of the three. Rugby league is most popular in England, Australia, New Zealand, and France and it is recognised as the national sport in Papua New Guinea.
A National Rugby League game in Brisbane, Australia.
Australia has won every world cup since 1975. Until November 25, 2005, they had also not lost an international tournament or series of any kind for twenty seven years until they lost to New Zealand in the final of the 2005 Tri-Nations Series at Elland Road in Leeds.
In the United Kingdom, rugby league has traditionally struggled to become accepted outside of the "heartland" counties of northern England where the game originated (Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cumberland).
The game is also attempting expansion in Europe. Despite having had many strong teams historically, rugby à treize in France has struggled to compete with rugby union since the Vichy government banned the sport and seized some assets during World War Two. However the French reached the finals of the 1954 and 1968 rugby league world cups. In 2006, the Super League admitted the Catalans Dragons, who on July 29, 2007, made it to the Challenge Cup final, being the first non-English team to do so.
Early 21st century developments have seen Georgia, the Netherlands, Germany, Estonia, Malta, Serbia, Argentina, Jamaica, and others take part in international rugby league tournaments or matches.
| Rugby League International Federation | |
|---|---|
Australia · Cook Islands · England · Fiji · France · Great Britain · New Zealand · Papua New Guinea · Russia · Samoa · South Africa · Tonga | |
American Samoa · Argentina · Austria · Canada · Czech Republic · Estonia · Germany · Greece · Ireland · Italy · Ivory Coast · Jamaica · Japan · Lebanon · Malta · Morocco · Netherlands · New Caledonia · Niue · Norway · Scotland · Serbia · Sweden · Tokelau · Tuvalu · United States · Wales | |
Georgia · Latvia · Moldova · Norfolk Island · Portugal · Singapore · Solomon Islands · Ukraine · West Indies | |
Competitions |
Baskerville Shield · European Nations Cup · Mediterranean Cup · Pacific Cup · Pacific Rim Championship · The Ashes · Tri-Nations · World Club Challenge · World Cup · World Sevens · Tertiary Student Rugby League World Cup |
| |
| Team sports |
|---|
| Sport · Governing bodies · Sportspeople · National sport |
| Basketball / Korfball / Netball · Buzkashi · Curling · Handball / Beach handball · Hurling / Camogie Kabaddi · Lacrosse · Polo / Cycle polo · Shinty · Ultimate · Volleyball / Fistball / Sepak takraw · Water polo |
| Football codes: American football · Association football (Beach, Indoor, Futsal) · Australian rules football · Canadian football · Gaelic football · Rugby league · Rugby union |
| Hockey codes: Bandy · Broomball · Field hockey · Floorball · Ice hockey · Indoor field hockey · Ringette · Roller hockey (Inline) |
| Bat-and-ball games: Baseball · Cricket · Kickball · Pesäpallo · Rounders · Softball · Stoolball |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia