Field Hockey
History & Tradition
Before the home
run...
before the layup...
before the slap shot...
there was a ball and a stick.
One of the oldest of competitive
pastimes, the sport of field hockey dates back well before the Ancient Olympic Games.
Although the exact origin of the game remains unknown, 4,000-year-old drawings found in
the tomb at Beni-Hasen in the Nile Valley of Egypt depicted men playing the
sport. Throughout the following centuries, variations of the game were played by a
spectrum of cultures ranging from Greeks and Romans to Ethiopians and Aztecs.
The modern game of field hockey
evolved in England in the mid-19th century. The first mens hockey club, Blackheath,
was formed in 1849, and led to the establishment of the Hockey Association in London in
1886. The British army introduced the game to India and throughout the British colonies,
leading to the first International competition in 1895.
Hockey first appeared on the Olympic
program at the 1908 London Games and again in 1920 at Antwerp. The sport was again
featured on the program at Amsterdam in 1928 and has been an Olympic sport ever since.
Women's hockey became a fixture on the Olympic program in Moscow in 1980.
Originally considered far too dangerous for female participation, field hockey quickly
became popular with women whose previous introduction to sport included the "socially
acceptable" outdoor activities of croquette and lawn tennis. With more and more women
becoming active in the sport, the liberating game of field hockey earned the dubious title
as the only team sport considered proper for women.
By 1887, the first womens
hockey club appeared in East Mosley, England, and was quickly followed by the creation of
the All England Womens Hockey Association in 1889 . The sport spread across the
Atlantic in 1901 when English physical education instructor
Constance Applebee
introduced
the sport to the U.S. while attending a seminar at Harvard.
Appalled at the parlor games passing for exercise among young American women, Applebee
borrowed some sticks and a ball and staged the first hockey exhibition in the United
States behind the Harvard gymnasium. The game received an enthusiastic response, and
Applebee quickly spread the sport to some of the region's most prestigious women's
schools.
By the early 1920s, several colleges and clubs sponsored field hockey teams for
women. The U.S. womens touring field hockey team participated in its first
international competition in 1920, and two years later the United States Field Hockey
Association was founded for the purpose of promoting and generating enthusiasm for the
sport.
With the increasing popularity of
the sport, and through the pioneering efforts of the Association's early touring teams,
the U.S. continued its rise to international prominence. In 1975, the U.S. appeared in the
first I.F.W.H.A. World Championship of women's hockey in Edinburgh, Scotland (10th), and
five years later earned an invitation to the first women's Olympic Games tournament in
Moscow. The U.S. boycott of the 1980 Games prevented the team from competing in Moscow.
Under legendary coach Vonnie Gros, the USA captured the bronze medal
four years later at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic
Games. The team would continue its Olympic tradition with appearances in Seoul in 1988 and
Atlanta in 1996.
After the FIH conducted the first
women's World Cup in 1975, the U.S. team began an impressive string of successive trips to
the prestigious tournament in 1983. The U.S. would qualify for each of the ensuing
World Cup tournaments including a bronze medal finish in Dublin in 1994.
With similar humble beginnings, mens field hockey began in the United States with
the first official match between the Westchester Field Hockey Club (Rye NY) and the
Germantown Cricket Club (near Philadelphia) in 1928. That same year, the Field Hockey
Association of America was formed, and in 1930, the FHAA became the fourteenth member of
hockey's international federation, the Federation International de Hockey (FIH). Today,
the FIH features over 100 member nations. Henry Greer,considered the founder of men's
hockey in the United States, served as president of the FHAA from 1930 to 1959 and served
as player-coach on the 1932 U.S. Olympic team.
Bolstered by its new international
membership, the U.S. Mens team competed in the Olympic Games for the first time at
the 1932 Los Angeles Games. The three-team tournament saw the United States earn the
bronze medal after losing to silver medalist Japan, 9-2, and gold medal winner India,
24-1.
The U.S. men went on to compete in other Olympic Games in 1936, 1948, 1956, 1984 and 1996.
A lack of funds and political challenges kept the team from competing in 1952. With
the inclusion of hockey in the Pan Am Games in 1967 and Olympic qualification dependent on
success in Pan Am event, the FHAA faced mounting obstacles in returning to the Games.
In April of 1993, the FHAA and the USFHA, at the urging of the United States Olympic
Committee, merged to form one national governing body for both womens and mens
field hockey. The USFHA currently seeks to foster and develop the amateur sport of field
hockey by providing participation opportunities for players, coaches, officials, and
administrators and preparing teams to represent the United States in international
competitions.
Today, nearly 14,000 players,
coaches, officials and fans enjoy the benefits of U.S. Field Hockey Association
membership. With programs ranging from elite teams and futures identification to club
hockey and grassroots development, today's U.S. Field Hockey continues to raise public
awareness and promote the sport as a lifetime activity. The U.S. Field Hockey Association
provides players, coaches, officials and administrators educational and participation
opportunities while supplying support and resources essential to the development and
enjoyment of the game.
Even if its just a ball and stick.
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