A BBBG guide to… Dressage
Just kidding. We know nothing about dressage. These guys know what they’re talking about though: British Dressage.
Just kidding. We know nothing about dressage. These guys know what they’re talking about though: British Dressage.
Squash has been a somewhat niche sport for over a century now but, thanks to a boom in participation across the Middle East and Asia, the sport looks like it could explode onto the global scene over the next decade. With a target of becoming an olympic sport by 2020, there is a huge drive in Britain and abroad to raise the profile of the game. BBBG sport is on hand to give you a dummies guide to the game…
1. History
The games origins lie at Harrow School, where the younger boys who couldn’t find a racquets court outside improvised and started using rooms indoors with rubber balls instead of harder ones. The sport grew in popularity in the 20th century and in 1928 the Squash Rackets Association was formed to set standards for squash in Great Britain. Over the next few decades, squash spread to the rest of the world and now has a competitive circuit worldwide.
2. “World’s healthiest sport” (As reported by Forbes Magazine)
The front, and largest, wall has three parallel lines marked out. The out line, which runs along the top of the wall and carries on to descend down the side walls until it meets the back wall, marks the highest point in which the ball may strike. Any higher and the point is lost. The middle line and lower line (“tin”) mark where the ball must strike when the ball is served. Anything higher or lower than these will result in a lost point.
A squash court consists of a playing surface surrounded by walls on all four sides. The court surface contains a front line separating the front and back of the court and a half court line, separating the left and right hand sides of the back portion of the court, creating three boxes – the front half, the back left quarter and the back right quarter. Both the back two boxes contain smaller service boxes. The floor markings only come into play during a serve.
Roughly four million people in the UK play golf. Go to any park on a summer’s day, and you will likely see frisbees gliding through the air. These activities might seem like chalk and cheese, but they have been combined to create a new sporting phenomenon: disc golf.
It was a hard day for futsal fans, as they watched Loughborough beat both of Lincoln’s A and B teams. There were, however, some very good signs of things to come.
Team B bravely stepped onto the field first, and tried their hand against Loughborough’s team B. It all started well as Lincoln took the lead, but this was short lived as the game ended 3-2 in favour of Loughborough.
It was team A’s chance to try their look in an enthralling game crammed full of goals. Too bad for Lincoln as the majority of them belonged to Loughborough yet again, as the game ended impressively at 8-5.
Video by Godfrey Mercado.
On Wednesday 11th November Lincoln’s very own futsal teams will be squaring off against Loughborough university. Here at BBBG sport we will be following the match and bringing you all the highlights. But first, here are a few things you might need to know about futsal.