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#1
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The shape of a football
Link to Cecil's column:
Why is a football called a pigskin On the origin of the shape of the football Cecil says: Quote:
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#2
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Pig bladder
As a kid, growing up in the Netherlands in the 70s, we played with two types of soccerballs.
The first was the cheap non-regulation ball that most kids owned, usually made from some kind of plastic. The real ball, probably for economic reasons only owned by the happy few, was an inflatable innerball covered with leather patches, usually faded to the max by playing on the streets rather than on a field. The last one was refered to as a "bladder". Yes, the English word, that at that time had no other meaning to me than forementioned soccer ball. I wasn't a big fan of playing with bladders, cause they would seriously hurt when you would position your head in front of a forcefully played shot. I checked the dictionary for any mention of the word bladder (in the context of a ball), but it came up blank. I have no clue if the term was used nation wide. My world was a lot smaller back then. Nowadays it is no longer a luxury to own a regulation style ball, so I assume they are simply referred to as balls. |
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#3
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I wondered that too. A bit of googling showed that both codes arrived at roughly the same shape within about a year of each other (1869/1870, IIRC). I wouldn't mind betting that this was due to a technological advance in rubber, say vulcanisation.
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#4
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Quote:
Powers &8^] |
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#5
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Quote:
The Rugby Football History web-page suggests that the rugby ball got its pointy shape by the 1830's, citing a passage from Tom Brown's Schooldays: Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Northern Piper; 08-29-2012 at 09:03 AM. Reason: added link |
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#6
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Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by aldiboronti; 08-29-2012 at 09:34 AM. |
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#7
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Isn’t “bladder” still the technical term for, so to speak, the “inner tube” of balls that have such, even though it’s made of rubber now?
__________________
John W. Kennedy "The blind rulers of Logres Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue." -- Charles Williams. Taliessin through Logres: Prelude |
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#8
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Yes, the word "bladder" is used generically for any membranous bag that is inflated.
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#9
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Quote:
Powers &8^] |
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#10
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Rugby was invented after a guy called William Webb Ellis picked up the ball during a game of soccer and carried it to the opponents end of the field. I always assumed the shape of the ball was a reference to the shape of Webb Ellis' head after the other players caught up with him.
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My photograpy Last edited by Fiendish Astronaut; 08-29-2012 at 07:16 PM. |
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#11
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Quote:
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#12
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[cough]1869[/cough]
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#13
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Quote:
I was Googling "caser" without success and worried I might have been making that up, but here's a nostalgic football forum thread on "caseys". Perhaps "caser" was just a local regional variant. |
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#14
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Yeah, yeah, you know what I meant.
The odd thing is, I thought I went back and fixed that before posting. Powers &8^] |
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#15
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Maybe I'm reading it wrong. It read to me as if the ball had taken on its pointy shape at Princeton. If they were already using the ovoid rugby ball then the anecdote seems a little, if you'll pardon the term, pointless.
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#16
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Quote:
You originally asked: Quote:
Powers &8^] Last edited by Powers; 09-06-2012 at 06:33 PM. |
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