Swedish football ( ) was a
code of football devised and played in
Sweden
from the 1870s to the early 1890s, when the modern
association football was
introduced. Swedish football rules were a mix of the
association football rules and the
rugby football rules, most closely
resembling the former.
History
The
inspiration for Swedish football came from the English
football, however, when ball
games first were introduced in Sweden in the 1870s, the
distinct rules of the different codes of football that had been
adopted around ten years earlier in England were lost on the way
over to Sweden, and no distinction was made between the
codes. This caused confusion as some played the game with
the round ball, while others played with the oval ball.
One of the
first mentions of football being played was in an article in
Göteborgs-Posten on 24 May 1874, where the readers
were told that a gymnastics society had
been founded in Gothenburg
, and that the society also had played "a few
football player games, which seemed to be of a very animated
nature". A year later,
Göteborgs Bollklubb were founded, and the
club had amongst other sports football on the programme.
In 1880, the first set of rules for Swedish football were published
in the book
Fria Lekar. Anvisning till skolans
tjenst by Lars Mauritz Törngren. He had visited England to
study sports and returned to write down his experiences in the
book. He had misunderstood—or completely failed to notice—the
codification of football made almost 20 years earlier, and his set
of rules were thus a mix of association and rugby football, "a
middle course", as he expressed it. The rules were hard to
understand and did not come into widespread use. Instead, five
years later in 1885, Göteborgs BK along with the leading clubs in
Stockholm (
Stockholms Bollklubb
founded 1879) and Visby (
Visby Bollklubb)
met and established a set of rules that were to dominate the
Swedish football scene in the following years.
The first
association football match played on Swedish soil took place in
Malmö
on 12 October 1890 when Kjøbenhavns Boldklub visited the
city and two of the teams of the Danish
club played
an exhibition match. But it was in Gothenburg that the
modern football had its breakthrough, and the first national match
was played
22 May 1892
between the two Gothenburg clubs
Örgryte
Idrottssällskap and
Idrottssällskapet Lyckans Soldater.
By 1895,
association football had outrivaled the Swedish variant, with much
help by the English, Scottish
and Australian immigrant workers that introduced the
modern code at their workplaces.
Rules
The rules of Swedish football were much like the association rules,
with two main exceptions, the players were allowed to catch the
ball with their hands and run with it a short time before
drop kicking it away again, and the goal did not
have any
crossbar. The number of rules
written down by Lars Mauritz Törngren were ten:
- A goal is made by an honest full kick or drop kick of the ball
from the hand; [To not be surprised, a keeper is positioned at the
goal. He can, after order by the captain, be changed during the
game.] or an honest bulley which brings the ball through all
obstacles between the goal posts. Sometimes a certain height is
prescribed which the ball must pass over.
- The area or the field for the play shall be marked by
sidelines. When the ball is kicked outside these boundaries, any
competitor may kick him back perpendicular into the field at the
point where he passed out from the field.
- A player who is behind the ball, i.e. closer to the home of the
opposite team than his teammate at the moment he kicked the ball,
is out of play and may not participate except in agreement with the
following rule
- A player who, according to the preceding rule, is out of play
is not allowed to kick the ball or hinder anyone from doing this
until the ball has been touched by someone of the opposite team,
after which he is allowed participate like before.
- A player who has honestly got hold of the ball, either through
a catch or after the first bounce, may run with the same a short
part with the intention to gain an opportunity for a drop kick or a
punt.
- Every player of the opposite team may use lawful ways to hinder
him who has the ball, to drop kick or make a full punt.
- To take or hold someone is under no conditions allowed during
any part of the game.
- Hitting, kicking and tripping is not allowed.
- At the start of the game the captains of both sides shall
between themselves agree how long the game shall be played.
- At the agreed time, independent of what phase the game is in,
one of the captains shall yell "finished game", and the play shall
immediately be stopped.
See also
References
Notes
External links