Sport in the United Kingdom
МОУ Лицея “Экос”
Творческая
работа по теме
SPORT IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
Ученик
8а класса Гарбуз Максим
Учитель Горчакова Елена Георгиевна
Новоалексадровск
2007
CONTENTS
·
INTRODUCTION
·
THE
MAIN PART
1. The social importance of sport
2. Football
u
Football pools
3. Rugby
4. Cricket
5. Animals
in Sport
6. Racing
7. Gambling
8. Wimbledon
9. Other
Sports
·
CONCLUSION
·
The list of literature
INTRODUCTION
have I chosen such theme? Sport is supposed to be
interesting
only for men, not
for women. But I think it is a mistaken opinion. Sport is one of the most
amusing things in the world, because of fillings, experiences, excitements
connected with it. Particularly it is so when we speak about the UK.
Think of your favorite sport. Whatever it is, there is good chance
that it was first played in Britain,
and an even better chance that its modern rules were first codified in this
country.
Sport probably plays a more important part in people’s life in Britain than it
does in most other countries. For a very large number it is their main form of
entertainment. Millions take part in some kind of sport at least once a week.
Many millions more are regular spectators and follow one or more sports. There
are hours of televised sport each week. Every newspaper, national or local,
quality or popular, devotes several pages entirely to sport.
The British are only rarely the best in the world at particular
sports in modern times. However, they are one of the best in the world in a
much larger number of different sports than any other country (British
individualism at work again). My work looks at the most publicized sports with
the largest followings. But it should be noted that hundreds of other sports
are played in Britain
, each with its own small but enthusiastic following. Some of these may not be
seen as a sport at all by many people. For most people with large gardens, for
example, croquet is just an agreeable social pastime for a sunny afternoon. But
to a few, it is a deadly serious competition. The same is true of the game such
as indoor bowling, darts or snooker. Even board games, the kind you buy in a
shop, have their national championships. Think of any pastime, however trivial,
which involves some element of competition and, somewhere in Britain, there
is probably a ‘national association’ for it which organized contents.
The British are so fond of competition that they even introduced it
into gardening. Many people indulge in an informal rivalry with their neighbors
as to who can grow the better flowers or vegetables. But the rivalry is
sometimes formalized. Though the country, there are competitions in which
gardeners enter their cabbage, leeks, onions, carrots or whatever in the hope
that they will be judged ‘the best’. There is a similar situation with animal.
There hundreds of dog and cat shows throughout the country at which owners hope
that their pet will win a prize. There are a lot of such specific kinds of
sport in the United Kingdom
but I want to stop my thought on consideration of more widespread.
THE
MAIN PART
British are great
lovers of competitive sports; and when they are neither playing nor watching
games they like to talk about them, or when they cannot do that, to think
about them. Modern sport in Britain
is very different. 'Winning isn't everything' and 'it's only a game' are
still well-known sayings which reflect the amateur approach of the past. But to
modern professionals, sport is clearly not just a game. These days, top players
in any sport talk about having a 'professional attitude' and doing their 'job' well, even if, officially,
their sport is still an amateur one. The middle-class origins of much British sport means
that it began as an amateur pastime - a leisure-time activity which nobody was paid
for taking
part in. Even in football, which has been played on a professional basis since
1885, one of the first teams to win the FA (Football Association) Cup was a team of amateur players (the
Corinthians). In many other sports there has been resistance to professionalism. People thought it
would spoil the sporting spirit. May be they are right.
The social importance of sport
The importance of participation in sport has legal recognition in Britain. Every local
authority has a duty to provide and maintain playing fields and other
facilities, which are usually very cheap to use and sometimes even free.
Spectator sport is also a matter of official public concern. For example, there
is a law which prevents the television rights to the most famous annual sporting
occasions, such as the Cup Final and the Derby, being sold exclusively to satellite
channels, which most people cannot receive. In these cases it seems to be the
event, rather than the sport itself, which is important. Every year the Boat
Race and the Grand National are watched on television by millions of people who have
no great interest in rowing or horse-racing. Over time, some events have
developed a mystique which gives them a higher status than the standard at
which they are played deserves. In modern times, for example, the standard of rugby at
the annual Varsity Match has been rather low - and yet it is always shown live on
television.
Sometimes the
traditions which accompany an event can seem as important as the actual sporting
contest. Wimbledon, for instance, is not just a tennis
tournament. It means summer fashions, strawberries and cream, garden parties
and long, warm English summer evenings. This reputation created a problem for the
event's organizers in 1993,
when it was felt that security for players
had to be tightened. Because Wimbledon is
essentially a middle-class event, British tennis fans would never allow themselves to be treated like football fans. Wimbledon
with security fences, policemen on horses and other measures to keep fans off the court? It just wouldn't be Wimbledon!
The long history of such events
has meant that many of them, and their venues, have become world-famous. Therefore, it
is not only the British who tune in to watch. The Grand National, for example,
attracts a television audience of 300 million. This worldwide enthusiasm has
little to do with the standard of British sport. The cup finals of other countries
often have better quality and more entertaining football on view - but more
Europeans watch the English Cup Final than any other. The standard of British
tennis is poor, and Wimbledon is only one
of the world's major tournaments. But if you ask any top tennis player,
you find that Wimbledon is the one they really
want to win. Every footballer in the world dreams of playing at Wembley, every
cricketer in the world of playing at Lord's. Wimbledon, Wembley and Lord's are the 'spiritual homes' of their respective
sports. Sport is a British export!
There are a lot of sports in Britain today
and of course, there is no use in considering all of them. I try to make a
short review of the most famous in the world on the one hand and unusual sports
on the other hand. And the first one is the most popular game in the world:
Football
Football is the most popular team game in Britain. The
British invented it and it has spread to every corner of the world. There is no British team. England,
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
compete separately in European and World Cup matches. The English and Welsh
clubs have together formed a League with four divisions. The Scottish League
has three divisions. The champions of the English First Division, and the
Scottish Premier Division qualify to play in the European Cup competition.
British
football has traditionally drawn its main following from the working class. In
general, the intelligentsia ignored it. But in the last two decades of the
twentieth century, it has started to attract wider interest. The
appearance of fanzines is an indication of this. Fanzines are magazines
written in an informal but often highly intelligent and witty style,
published by the fans of some of the clubs. One or two books of literary
merit have been written which focus not only on players, teams and
tactics but also on the wider social aspects of the game. Light-hearted
football programmes have appeared on television which similarly give attention
to 'off-the-field' matters. There has also been much academic interest. At the
1990 World Cup there was a joke among English fans that it was impossible to
find a hotel room because they had all been taken by sociologists!
Many team
sports in Britain,
but especially football, tend to be men-only, 'tribal' affairs. In the USA, the whole
family goes to watch the baseball. Similarly, the whole family goes along to
cheer the Irish national football team. But in Britain, only a handful of children
or women go to football matches. Perhaps this is why active support for local
teams has had a tendency to become violent. During the 1970s and 1980s
football hooliganism was a major problem in England. In the 1990s,
however, it seemed to be on the decline. English fans visiting Europe
are now no worse in their behavior than the fans of many other countries.
For the great mass of the British public the eight months of the
football season are more important than the four months of cricket. There are plenty of amateur
association football (or 'soccer') clubs, and professional football is big
business. The annual Cup Final match, between the two teams which have defeated their
opponents in each round of a knock-out contest, dominates the scene; the
regular 'league' games, organised in four divisions, provide the main
entertainment through the season and the basis for the vast system of betting
on the football pools. Many of the graffiti on public walls are aggressive
statements of support for football teams, and the hooliganism of some British supporters has become notorious outside as well as inside Britain.
Football has been called the most popular game in the world, and it
certainly has a great many fans in Britain. And now I want to mention
the English terminology for football.
Association football (or soccer) is the game that is
played in nearly all countries. A
team is composed of a goalkeeper, two backs, three half-backs and five
forwards.
Association football remains one of the most popular games played in the British Isles. Every Saturday from late August until the beginning of
May, large crowds of people support their sides in football grounds up and down
the country, while an almost equally large number of people play the game in clubs
teams of every imaginable variety and level of skill. Over the last 20
years though, the attendance at football matches has fallen away sharply. This
is because of changing lifestyles and football hooligans about I have already written
but I want to add that violence at and near the football grounds increased, there
was an ever-increasing tendency for people to stay away, leaving the grounds to
football fans.
After serious disturbances involving English supporters
at the European Cup Finals in Brussels
in 1985 which led to the deaths of 38 spectators, English clubs were withdrawn from
European competitions for the 1985-1986 season by the Football Association. The Cup Final at
Wembley remains, though, an event of national importance. Here is a drawing of a football field, or
"pitch", as it is usually called.
The football pitch
should be between 100 and 130
metres long and between 50 and 100 metres wide. It is
divided into two halves by the halfway line. The sides of the field are called the
touch-lines and the ends are called the goal-lines. In the middle of the field there is a
centre circle
and there is a goal at each end. Each goal is 8 metres wide and between 21/2 and 3 metres high. In front of
each goal is the goal area and the penalty area. There is a penalty spot inside the
penalty area and a penalty arc outside it. A game of football usually lasts for one and a half hours. At
half-time, the teams change ends. The referee controls the game.
The aim of each team is obviously to score as many goals as possible. If both
teams score the same number of goals, or if neither team scores any goals at all, the
result is a draw.
The final of the football competition takes
place every May at the famous Wembley stadium in London. Some of the best known clubs in England are Manchester
United, Liverpool and the Arsenal. In Scotland either Rangers, Celtic or Aberdeen usually win the cup or the championship.
Today, many people are only interested in football
because of the pools and the chance of
winning a lot of money.
Football pools
"Doing the pools" is a popular form of betting on football
results each week. It is possible to win more than half a million pounds for a few pence.
The English
have never been against a gamble though most of them know where to draw the line and wisely refrain
from betting too often. Since the war the most popular form of
gambling is no doubt that of staking a small sum on the football pools.
(The word "pool" is connected with the picture of streams of money
pouring into a common fund, or "pool" from which the winners
are paid after the firm has taken its expenses and profit.) Those who do so
receive every week from one of the pools firms a printed form; on this
are listed the week's matches. Against each match, or against a number of
them, the optimist puts down a I, a 2 or an x to show that he thinks the
result of the match will be a home win (stake on fun’s team), an away win (stake on a
team of opponent) or a draw. The form is then posted to the pools firm, with a postal order
or cheque for the sum staked (or, as the
firms say, "invested"). At the end of the week the results of the matches are announced on television and
published in the newspapers and the "investor" can take out
his copy of his coupon and check his
forecast.
Rugby
There is another game called rugby football, so called because it
originated at Rugby, a well-known English
public school. In this game the players may carry the ball. Rugby football (or 'rugger') is played with an egg-shaped ball, which may be carried and thrown (but not forward). The ball is passed from hand to hand rather than
from foot to foot. If a player is
carrying the ball he may be
'tackled' and made to fall down. Each team has fifteen players, who spend a lot of time lying in the mud
or on top of each other and become
very dirty, but do not need to wear such heavily protective clothing as
players of American football.
There are two forms of
rugby - Rugby Union, which is strictly amateur, and Rugby League, played
largely in the north, which is a professional sport. Rugby Union has fifteen
players, while Rugby League has thirteen, but the two games are basically the
same. They
are so similar that somebody who is good at one of them can quickly learn to
become good at the other. The real difference between them is a matter of social
history. Rugby union is the older of the two. In
the nineteenth century it was enthusiastically taken up by most of Britain's
public schools. Rugby league split off from rugby
union at the end of the century. There are two versions of this fast and aggressive
ball game: rugby union and rugby league. Although it has now spread to many of the same
places in the world where rugby union is played (rugby union is played at top level
in the
British Isles, France, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand; also to a high level in
North America, Argentina, Romania and some Pacific islands). Rugby can be considered
the 'national
sport' of Wales, New Zealand, Fiji,
Western Samoa and Tonga, and of
South African whites. Its traditional home is among the working class of the
north of England,
where it was a way for miners and factory workers to make a little bit of extra
money from their sporting talents. Unlike rugby union, it has always been a
professional
sport.
Because of these
social origins, rugby league in Britain
is seen as a working class sport, while rugby union is mainly for the middle classes. Except in
south Wales.
There, rugby union is a sport for all classes, and more popular than football.
In Wales,
the phrase 'international day' means only one thing — that the national rugby team are
playing. Since 1970, some of the best Welsh players have been persuaded to 'change
codes'. They are 'bought' by one of the big rugby league clubs, where they
can make a lot of money. Whenever this happens it is seen as a national
disaster among the Welsh.
Rugby union has had some success in
recent years in selling itself to a wider audience. As a result, just as football has
become less exclusively working class in character, rugby union has become less
exclusively
middle class. In 1995- it finally abandoned amateurism. In fact, the amateur
status of top rugby union players had already become meaningless. They didn't
get paid a salary or fee for playing, but they received large 'expenses' as well as
various publicity contracts and paid speaking engagements.
Cricket
The game particularly associated with England is cricket. Judging by the
numbers of people who play it and watch it (ê look at ‘Spectator
attendance at major sports’), cricket is
definitely not the national sport of Britain. In Scotland, Wales
and Northern Ireland,
interest in it is largely confined to the middle classes. Only in England and a small part of Wales is it
played at top level. And even in England, where its enthusiasts come
from all classes, the majority of the population do not understand its rules.
Moreover, it is rare for the English national team to be the best in the world.
Cricket is,
therefore, the national English game in a symbolic sense. However, to some
people cricket is more than just a symbol. The comparatively low attendance at
top class matches does not give a true picture of the level of interest in the
country. One game of cricket takes a terribly long time, which a lot of people simply don't
have to spare. Eleven players in each team. Test matches between national teams can last up
to five days of six hours each. Top club teams play matches lasting between two
and four days. There are also one-day matches lasting about seven hours. In fact there are
millions of people in the country who don't just enjoy cricket but are passionate about it!
These people spend up to thirty days each summer tuned to the live radio commentary
of ‘Test’ (= international) Matches. When they get the chance, they watch
a bit of the live television coverage. Some people even do both at the
same time (they turn the sound down on the television and listen to the radio).
To these people, the commentators become well-loved figures. When, in 1994, one
famous commentator died, the Prime Minister lamented that 'summers will never:
be the same again'. And if cricket fans are too busy to listen to the radio
commentary, they can always phone a special number to be given the latest score!
Many other games which are English in origin
have been adopted with enthusiasm all over the world, but cricket has been seriously
and extensively adopted only in the former British empire, particularly in Australia, New
Zealand, India, Pakistan, Sri
Lanka, the West Indies and South Africa. Do you know how to
play cricket? If you don't live in these countries you won't learn it at school.
English people love cricket. Summer isn't summer without it. Even if you do not
understand the rules, it is attractive to watch the players, dressed in
white playing on the beautiful green cricket fields. Every Sunday morning
from May to the end of September many Englishmen get up very early, and take a lot of
sandwiches with them. It is necessary because the games are very long. Games between two
village teams last for only one afternoon. Games between counties last for
three days, with 6 hours play on each day. When England
plays with one or other cricketing countries such as Australia
and New Zealand
it is called a test match and lasts for five days. Cricket is played in schools, colleges and
universities and in most towns and villages by teams which play weekly games.
Test matches with other cricketing countries are held annually.
Cricket is also played by women and girls. The governing
body is Women's Cricket Association, founded in 1926. Women's cricket clubs have regular weekend games. Test matches
and other international matches take place.
The women's World Cup is held every four years. But There is The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and Lord's cricket
ground in the United Kingdom. The MCC was founded
in 1787, and is still the most important authority on cricket in the world. As
a club it is exclusively male. No woman is allowed to enter the club buildings.
There are special stands for members and their wives and quests.
Organised amateur cricket is played between club
teams, mainly on Saturday afternoons. Nearly every village, except in the far north, has
its cricket
club, and there must be few places in which the popular image of England, as sentimentalists
like to think of it, is so clearly seen as on a village cricket field. A
first-class match between English counties lasts for up to three days, with six hours
play on each day. The game is slow, and a spectator, sitting in the
afternoon sun after a lunch of sandwiches and beer, may be excused for having
a little sleep for half an hour.
When people refer to cricket as the English national game, they are not thinking so much
of its level of popularity or of the standard of English players but more of the
very English associations that it carries with it. Cricket is much more
than just a sport; it symbolizes a way of life - a slow and peaceful rural way
of life. Cricket is associated with long sunny summer afternoons, the smell of
new-mown grass and the sound of leather (the ball) connecting with willow (the wood from which cricket
bats are made). Cricket is special because it combines competition with the
British dream of rural life. Cricket is what the village green is for! As if to
emphasize the rural connection, ‘first class’ cricket teams in England, unlike
teams in other sports, do not bear the names of towns but of counties (Essex
and Yorkshire, for example).
ANIMALS IN SPORT
Traditionally, the
favourite sports of the British upper class are hunting, shooting and fishing.
The most widespread form of hunting is foxhunting — indeed,
that is what the word ‘hunting’ usually
means in Britain.
Foxhunting
works like this. A group of people on horses, dressed in eighteenth century
riding clothes, ride around with a pack of dogs. When the dogs pick up the scent
of a fox, somebody blows a horn and then dogs, horses and riders all chase the fox. Often the
fox gets away, but if not, the dogs get to it before the hunters and tear it to pieces. As
you might guess in a country of animal-lovers, where most people have little experience of
the harsher realities of nature, foxhunting is strongly opposed by some people. The League Against Cruel
Sports wants it made illegal and the campaign has been steadily intensifying. There are sometimes violent
encounters between foxhunters and protestors (whom the hunters call 'saboteurs').Foxhunting is a popular
pastime among
some members of the higher social classes and a few people from lower social classes,
who often see their participation as a mark of newly won status. The hunting of foxes is sport associated through the centuries with
ownership of land. The hounds chase the fox, followed by people riding horses, wearing red or black coats
and conforming with various rules and
customs. In a few hill areas stags are hunted similarly. Both these types of hunting are enjoyed mainly by
people who can afford the cost of
keeping horses and carrying them to hunt meetings in 'horse boxes', or trailer vans. Both, particularly
stag-hunting, are opposed by people who condemn the cruelty involved in
chasing and killing frightened animals.
There have been attempts to persuade Parliament to pass laws to forbid hunting, but none has been
successful. There is no law about hunting foxes, but there is a fox-hunting
seasons – from November to March.
Killing birds with guns is
known as 'shooting' in Britain. It is
a minority pastime confined largely to the higher social
classes; there are more than three times as many licensed guns for
this purpose in France
as there are in Britain.
The birds which people try to shoot (such as grouse) may only be
shot during certain specified times of the year. The upper classes often
organize 'shooting parties' during the 'season'. The British do not
shoot small animals or birds for sport, though some farmers who shoot rabbits or
pigeons may enjoy doing so. But 'game birds', mainly pheasant, grouse and partridge, have traditionally provided sport for the landowning gentry. Until Labour's election victory of 1964 many of
the prime ministers of the past two
hundred years, along with members of their cabinets, had gone to the grouse moors of Scotland or the Pennines
for the opening of the shooting
season on 12 August. Since 1964 all that has changed. Now there are not
many leading British politicians carrying guns in the shooting parties, though there may be foreign millionaires, not all of
them from America. Some of the beaters, whose
job is to disturb the grouse so that
they fly up to be shot, are students earning money to pay for trips abroad. But
there is still a race to send the first shot grouse to London restaurants, where there are people happy to pay huge amounts of money
for the privilege of eating them.
The only kind of hunting
which is associated with the working class is hare-coursing,
in which greyhound dogs chase hares. However, because the vast majority of
people in Britain
are urban dwellers, this too is a minority activity.
The one kind of ‘hunting’ which is popular among all
social classes is fishing.
In fact, this is the most popular participatory sport of all in Britain.
Between four and five million people go fishing regularly. When
fishing is done competitively, it is called ‘angling’. The most popular of all outdoor
sports is fishing, from the banks of lakes or rivers or in the sea, from jetties,
rocks or beaches. Some British lakes
and rivers are famous for their trout or salmon, and attract enthusiasts from all over the world.
Apart from being hunted,
another way in which animals are used in sport is when they race.
Horse-racing is a long-established and popular
sport in Britain,
both ‘flat racing’ and ‘national hunt’ racing (where there
are jumps for the horses), sometimes known as ‘steeplechase’.
The former became known as 'the sport
of kings' in the seventeenth century,
and modern British royalty has close connections with sport involving horses. Some members of the royal family own racehorses and attend certain annual race
meetings (Ascot,
for example);
some are also active participants in the sports of polo and show-jumping (both of which involve riding a
horse). The steeplechase (crosscountry running) is very popular in most European
countries. The first known organized crosscountry race in 1837 was the Crick Run at Rugby School.
Originally,
crosscountry running took place over open country where the hazards
were the natural ones to be found in the country. These included hedges, ditches,
streams and the like. Schools and some clubs still run over open country.
Sometimes, however, the competitors run off the course as, on one occasion,
happened to all the runners in a race. Because of this, the organization of these
races has to be very strict. Nowadays, crosscountry races (or
steeplechases) are often run in an enclosed area where the hazards are artificial.
This makes organization easier.
The chief attraction of
horse-racing for most people is the opportunity it
provides for gambling (see below). Greyhound racing, although declining, is
still popular for the same reason. In this sport, the dogs
chase a mechanical hare round a racetrack. It is easier to organize
than horse-racing and ‘the dogs’ has the reputation of being the
‘poor man's racing’. Greyhound racing has had a remarkable revival in the 1980s, and by 1988 it accounted
for about a quarter of all gambling. Its stadiums are near town centres, small
enough to be floodlit in the evenings. Until recently the spectators were mostly male
and poor, the surroundings shabby. The 1980s have changed all this, with the
growth of commercial sponsorship for advertising. There are fewer stadiums and fewer
spectators than in 1970, but the old cloth cap image has become much less appropriate. But one thing has not
changed. The elite of Britain's
dogs, and their trainers, mostly come from Ireland.
INFORMATION:
Famous (horse) race
meetings
The Grand National: at Aintree, near
Liverpool, in March or April It is England's main steeplechase (race
over fences). The course is over seven kilometres and includes thirty jumps, of which fourteen
are jumped twice. It is a dangerous race Jockeys have been hurt and horses
have been killed.
The Derby:
at
Epsom, south of London,
in May or June. It is England's
leading flat race (not over fences).
Ascot: near Windsor in June. Very fashionable. The Queen
always attends.
As I have mentioned horse-racing,
I think it will be good to draw attention to racing in hole.
RACING
There are all kinds of racing in England —
horse-racing, motorcar racing, boat-racing, dog-racing, and even races for donkeys. On sports days at
school boys and girls run races, and even train for them. There is usually a
mile race for older boys, and the one who wins it is certainly a good runner.
Usually those who run a race go as fast as possible,
but there are some races in which
everybody has to go very carefully in order to avoid falling.
There
is the "three-legged" race, for example, in which a pair of runners have the right leg of one tied to the
left leg of the other. If they try to go too fast they are certain to
fall. And there is the egg-and-spoon race, in which each runner must carry an
egg in a spoon without letting it drop. If
the egg does fall, it must be picked up with the spoon, not the fingers.
Naturally animals don't race unless they are made to
run in some way, though it often seems as if little lambs are running races with
each other
in the fields in spring.
Horses
are ridden, of course. Dogs won't race unless they have something to chase, and
so they are given a hare to go after, either a real one or an imitation one.
The
most famous boat-race in England
is between Oxford and Cambridge. It is rowed over a course on the River Thames,
and thousands of people go to watch
it. The eight rowers in each boat have great struggle, and at the end there is usually only a short distance between
the winners and the losers.
The University boat-race started in 1820 and has been
rowed on the Thames almost every spring since 1836.
At the Henly Regatta in Oxfordshire, founded in 1839, crews from all over the
world compete each July in various kinds of race over a straight course of 1 mile 550 yards (about 2.1 km).
Horse racing is big business, along with the betting
which sustains it. Every day of the year, except Sundays, there is a race
meeting at least one of Britain's
several dozen racecourses. Nine-tenths of the betting is done by people all
over the country, by post or at local betting shops, and it is estimated that a
tenth of all British men bet regularly on horse races, many of them never going to a
race course.
Horse racing accounts for about half of all gambling,
dog racing for a quarter (after increasing by 27 per cent in 1987-88). The
total gambling expenditure is estimated at over three billion pounds a year, or
nearly 1 per cent of the gross domestic product - though those who bet get
about three-quarters of their
stake back in winnings. There is no national lottery, though premium bonds are
a form of national savings, with monthly prizes instead of interest. About half
of all households bet regularly on the football pools, although half of the
money staked is divided between the state,
through taxes, and the operators. People are attracted by the hope of winning huge prizes, but some winners become miserable with their sudden unaccustomed wealth.
Bingo sessions, often in old
cinemas, are attractive mainly to women, and have a good social element. More popular are the slot machines in
establishments described as
'amusement arcades'. There has been some worry about the addiction of young
people to this form of gambling, which can lead to theft.
Gambling
A nation
of gamblers
In 1993 a total of £12.7 billion was wagered
by the British - that's £289
for every adult in the country. £9.5 billion was won. The government took
just over £1 billion in taxes. The rest was
kept by the bookmakers. About half of all the money bet in 1993 was on horses or greyhounds. 74%
of all adults gambled at least once during the year.
At least once every two weeks:
•39% did the football pools;
•20% played on gaming and fruit machines;
•18% played bingo;
•14% put money on the horses.
In Britain in 1993, there was one
betting shop for every 3,000 adults.
There were also:
120 casinos;
120,000 fruit machines;
1,000 bingo clubs;
1,000 lotteries;
59 racetracks;
37 greyhound stadiums.
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Even if they are not taking part or watching, British
people like to be involved in sport. They can do this by placing bets on future
results. Gambling is widespread throughout all social classes. It is so basic to sport that the word
'sportsman' used to be a synonym for 'gambler'.
When, in 1993, the starting procedure for the Grand
National did not work properly, so
that the race could not take place, it was widely regarded as a national disaster. The £70
million which had been gambled on the
result (that's more than a pound for each man, woman and child in the country!) all had to be given
back.
Every year, billions of pounds are bet on horse races.
So well-known is this activity that everybody in the country, even those with no interest in
horse-racing, would understand the meaning of a question such as 'who won the 2.30
at Chester?'
(Which horse won the race that was scheduled to take place at half past two
today at the Chester racecourse? The
questioner probably wants to know because he or she has gambled some money
on the result.) The central role of horse-racing in gambling is also shown by one of
the names used to denote companies and individuals whose business it is to take bets. Although these are
generally known as 'bookmakers', they sometimes call themselves 'turf accountants' ('turf is a
word for ground where grass grows);
Apart from the horses and the dogs, the most popular form of gambling connected
with sports is the football pools. Every week, more than ten million people
stake a small sum on the results of Saturday's professional matches. Another
popular type of gambling, stereotypically for middle-aged working class women,
is bingo.
Nonconformist religious groups traditionally frown upon gambling
and their disapproval has had some influence. Perhaps this is why Britain did not
have a national lottery until 1994. But if people want to gamble, then they
will. For instance, before the national lottery started, the British gambled
£250,000 on which company would be given the licence to run it! The
country's big bookmakers are willing to offer odds on almost anything at all if asked.
Who will be the next Labour party leader? Will it rain during the Wimbledon tennis tournament? Will it snow on Christmas
Day? All
of these offer opportunities for 'a flutter'.
Apropos of the Wimbledon tennis tournament: Wimbledon is a place to which every tennis-player aspire.
And I want to write some words about it.
WIMBLEDON
People all over the world know Wimbledon as the centre of lawn tennis. But most
people do not know that it was famous for another
game before tennis was invented. Wimbledon is
now a part of Greater London. In
1874 it was a country village, but it had a railway station and it was
the home of the All-England Croquet Club. The Club
had been there since 1864. A
lot of people played croquet in England at that time and enjoyed it, but the national
championships did not attract
many spectators. So the Club had very little money, and the members were looking for ways of getting some.
"This new game of lawn tennis
seems to have plenty of action, and people like watching it," they
thought. "Shall we allow people to play lawn tennis on some of our beautiful croquet lawns?"
In 1875 they changed the name of the Club to the "All-England Lawn
Tennis and Croquet Club", and that is the name that you will still find in the telephone book. Two years
later, in 1877, Wimbledon held the first world lawn tennis championship
(men's singles).3 The winner
was S. W. Gore, a Londoner. There were 22 players, and 200 spectators, each paid one shilling. Those who
watched were dressed in the very
latest fashion — the men in hard top hats and long coats, and the ladies in dresses that reached to the ground!
The Club gained £ 10. It was
saved. Wimbledon grew. There was some surprise and doubt, of
course, when the Club allowed women to play in the first women's singles
championship in 1884. But the ladies played
well—even in long skirts that hid their legs and feet.
The Wimbledon championships begin on the Monday
nearest to June 22, at a time when England
often has its finest weather. It is not only because of the tennis that people like to go
there. When the weather is good, it is a
very pleasant place to spend an afternoon. The grass is fresh and green, the players wear beautiful white clothes, the
spectators are dressed in the latest
fashion, there may be members of the
Royal Family among them, and there are cool drinks in the open-air cafes
next to the tennis courts. Millions of
people watch the championships on television.
OTHER SPORTS
Almost every sport which exists is played in Britain. As well as the sports already
mentioned, hockey (mostly on a field but also on ice) is quite popular, and both
basketball (for men) and netball (for women) are growing in popularity. So too
is the ancient game of rounders.
Rounders
This sport is rather similar to American baseball and
ancient Russian lapta, but it certainly does not have the same image. It has a long history in England as something that people
(young and old, male and female) can play together at village fetes. It is often
seen as not being a proper ‘sport’.
However, despite this image, it has recently become
the second most popular sport for state schools in Britain. More traditional sports such as cricket and
rugby are being abandoned in favour of rounders, which is much easier to
organize. Rounders requires less special equipment, less money and boys and girls can play it
together. It also takes up less time. It is especially attractive for state schools with
little money
and time to spare. More than a quarter of all state-school sports fields are now used
for rounders. Only football, which is played on nearly half of all state-school
fields, is more popular.
The British have a preference for team games.
Individual sports such as athletics, cycling, gymnastics and swimming have
comparatively small followings. Large numbers of people become interested in them only when
British competitors do well in international events. The more popular
individual sports are those in which socializing is an important aspect
(such as tennis, golf, sailing and snooker). It is notable in this context that,
apart from international competitions, the only athletics event which generates
a lot of enthusiasm is the annual London Marathon. Most of the tens of
thousands of participants in this race are 'fun runners' who are merely trying to
complete it, sometimes in outrageous costumes, and so collect money for charity. The biggest new
development in sport has been with long-distance running. 'Jogging',
for healthy outdoor exercise, needing no skill or equipment, became popular in the 1970s, and soon more and more people took it seriously. Now the annual London Marathon
is like a carnival, with a million
people watching as the world's star runners are followed by 25,000
ordinary people trying to complete the course. Most of them succeed and then collect money from supporters for
charitable causes. Many thousands of
people take part in local marathons all over Britain.
The Highland
Games
Scottish Highland Games, at which sports (including tossing the caber, putting the weight and
throwing the hammer), dancing and piping competitions take place, attract large
numbers of spectators from
all over the world.
These meetings are held every year in different
places in the Scottish Highlands. They include the clans led by their pipers,
dressed in their kilts, tartan plaids, and plumed bonnets, who march round the arena.
The features common to Highland Games are
bagpipe and Highland dancing
competitions and the performance of heavy athletic events — some of which, such as tossing the caber, are Highland in origin. All competitors wear Highland
dress, as do most of the judges. The games take place in a large roped-off
arena. Several events take place at the
same time: pipers and dancers perform on a platform; athletes toss the caber, put the weight, throw the hammer, and
wrestle. There is also a competition
for the best-dressed Highlander.
Highland dancing is performed to bagpipe music, by
men and women, such as the Sword Dance and the Reel.
No one knows exactly when the men of the Highlands first gathered to wrestle, toss cabers, throw
hammers, put weights, dance and play music. The Games reflected the tough life of
the early Scots. Muscle-power was their means of livelihood — handling timber,
lifting rocks to build houses, hunting. From such activities have developed the contests of tossing the caber, putting the weight
and throwing the hammer. Tossing the caber originated among woodmen who wanted
to cast their logs into the deepest part of a river. Tossing the caber is not a question of who can throw it farthest. For a
perfect throw the caber must land in the 12-o'clock position after being thrown in a vertical semicircle. The caber is
a very heavy and long log..
Conker Contest and
British Marbles Championship
Every year, usually on the Wednesday nearest to
20th October, about a hundred competitors gather to take part in the annual conker
competition in a chosen place. The conkers are collected by children from an avenue of
chestnut trees. The conkers are carefully examined and numbered on their flat sides,
then bored and threaded on nylon cord. Each competitor is allowed an agreed number of
"strikes", and a referee is present to see fair play. There are
prizes for winners and runners-up. The contest usually starts at about 7 p. m.
It is said that in Elizabethan times two suitors for a village beauty settled the matter by
means of a marbles contest. What is now the Marble Championship is believed
to be a survival of that contest. The game of marbles dates back to Roman times. Teams
of six compete on a circular, sanded rink. Forty-nine marbles are placed in the centre of the rink, and the
players try to knock out4 as many as possible with their marble. The
marble is rested on the index finger and flicked5 with the thumb. The two
highest individual scores battle for the championship with only thirteen marbles
on the rink. Similar contests are now held in some other English-speaking countries.
INFORMATION
The well-known sporting events
The Boat Race: (between Oxford and Cambridge
universities), on the River Thames
in
London at
Easter. The course is over seven kilometres. Oxford have won 64
times,
Cambridge 69
times.
The Wimbledon Tennis Tournament: in July, at Wimbledon,
south London,
regarded
by
many tennis players as the most important championship to win. There is great
public
interest in the tournament. Many tennis fans queue all night outside the
grounds
in order to get tickets for the finals.
The Open Golf Championship: golf was invented by
the Scots, and its headquarters
is
at the Royal and Ancient Golf Club, St.
Andrews, Scotland.
Henley (Rowing) Regatta: at Henley on the Thames
(between London and Oxford).
An
international summer event. It is a fashionable occasion.
Cowes Week: a yachting regatta. Cowes is a
small town on the Isle of Wight,
opposite
Southampton, and a world-famous yachting
centre.
CONCLUSION
At the end of my work I want to make a
short review of what I have already written and write what I haven’t written.
Many kinds of sport originated from England. The
English have a proverb, "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." They
do not think
that play is more important than work; they think that Jack will do his work better
if he plays as well, so he is encouraged to do both. Association football, or soccer is one of the most popular games in the British
Isles played from late August until the beginning of May. In summer the English
national sport is cricket. When the English say: 'that's not cricket' it means 'that's not fair', 'to
play the game' means 'to be fair'.
Golf
is Scotland's
chief contribution to British sport. It is worth noting here an interesting feature of sporting life in Britain,
namely, its frequently close
connection with social class of the players or spectators except where a game may be said to be a
"national" sport. This is the
case with cricket in England
which is played and watched by all classes. This is true of golf, which is
everywhere in the British Isles a middle-class activity. Rugby Union, the amateur
variety of Rugby football, is the Welsh national sport played by
all sections of society whereas,
elsewhere, it too is a game for the middle classes. Association football is a working-class sport as are boxing,
wrestling, snooker, darts
and dog-racing. As far as fishing is concerned it is, apart from being the most
popular British sport from the angle of the number of active participants, a sport where what is caught
determines the class of a fisherman.
If it is a salmon or trout it is upper-class, but if it is the sort offish found in canals, ponds or the sea, then
the angler is almost sure to be
working-class.
Walking and swimming are the two most popular sporting
activities, being almost equally
undertaken by men and women. Snooker (billiards), pool and darts are the next
most popular sports among men. Aerobics
(keep-fit exercises) and yoga, squash and cycling are among the sports
where participation has been increasing in recent years.
There are several places in Britain
associated with a particular kind of sport. One of them is Wimbledon — a suburb to the south of London where the
All-England Lawn Tennis Championships are held in July (since 1877). The finals of the tournament are played on the Centre Court. The other one is Wembley — a stadium in north London where international
football matches, the Cup Finals and other events have taken place since 1923. It can hold
over 100,000 spectators. The third
one is Derby, the most famous flat race in the
English racing calendar, it is run at Epsom near London since 1780.
Having
written my work I think that I have proved sport’s deserving attention.
Especially sport is a very interesting theme concerning the United Kingdom.
Of course, I couldn’t illustrate all Britain
sports, but which I still do reflect Britain’s life with all
contradictory combinations. Both life is calm and exciting, and sport is calm
with golf’s followers and exciting with football’s fans.
THE LIST OF
LITERATURE
1.
Приложение к газете «1 сентября» «English»//
«Football, made in Britain, loved by the world», 2001, №13, p.2
2.
Britain in Brief, Просвещение, 1993
3.
Peter
Bromhead «Life in Modern Britain»,
Longman, 1997
4.
James
O’Driscoll «Britain.
The country and its people», Oxford University Press, 1997
5.
David
McDowall «Britain
in close-up», Longman, 2000
6.
Satinova
V.F. «Read and speak about Britain
and the British», Minsk,
1997