1. BRITISH SPORTS
Ema
R Dwi Indah
Rio Gumelar
Vevi Wulansari
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Pipit Aprianti
Rizki Wahyu Idriani
2. A National Passion
• Sports play a more important part in people’s
lives in Britain than it does in most other
countries.
• The British are only rarely the best in the
world at particular sports in modern times.
However, they are one in the world in much
larger number of different sports than any
other country.
3. The Social Importance of Sports
• In British if anyone want to joint or participation in sport
they must have a legal recognition. That is a duty of every
local authority to provide and maintain playing fields and
other facilities, and usually their using that with cheap and
sometimes free.
• Almost millions of people who have no great interest in
rowing or horse –racing , every year “the Boat Race and the
Grand National” are watched on television. Some events
have developed a mystique which gives them a higher
status than the standard at which they are played deserve.
In modern times, been rather low and yet it is always
shown on television.
4. SPORTS AND MONEY
• Summer has traditionally been a season of
great sporting events. But what seems less
traditional to many observers is the way in
which the commercial side of sport is these
days, so much on display too.
7. CRICKET
• Cricket is the national English game in a
symbolic sense. However, to some people
cricket is more than just symbol.
• One game of cricket takes a terribly long time,
which a lot of people simply do not have to
spare.
• In fact there are millions of people in the
country who do not just cricket but are
passionate about it.
8. CRICKET
• Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between
two teams of 11 players each on a field at the
centre of which is a rectangular 22-yard long
pitch. Each team takes its turn to bat,
attempting to score runs, while the other
team fields. Each turn is known as an innings.
9. CRICKET
• The bowler delivers the ball to the batsman who
attempts to hit the ball with his bat away from
the fielders so he can run to the other end of the
pitch and score a run.
• Each batsman continues batting until he is out.
The batting team continues batting until ten
batsmen are out, or a specified number of overs
of six balls have been bowled, at which point the
teams switch roles and the fielding team comes
in to bat.
12. FOOTBALL
• For all the evidence of early ball sports played
elsewhere in the world, the evolution of football
as we know it today took place in Britain.
• The game that flourished in the British Isles from
the eighth to the 19th centuries featured a
considerable variety of local and regional versions
- which were subsequently smoothed down and
smartened up to create the modern-day sports of
association football, rugby football and, in
Ireland, Gaelic football.
13. FOOTBALL
• International
England, Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland,
Scotland, Wales
• Premier League
Chelsea, arsenal, aston villa, burnley, crystal
palace, everton, liverpool, manchester unite,
stoke city, swansea, etc
14. FOOTBALL
Scottish Premiership
• Aberdeen
• Celtic
• Dundee
• Dundee United
• Hamilton Academical
• Inverness Caledonian Thistle
• Kilmarnock
• Motherwell
• Partick Thistle
• Ross County
• St Johnstone
• St Mirren
15. FOOTBALL
League One
• Barnsley
• Bradford City
• Bristol City
• Chesterfield
• Colchester United
• Coventry City
• Crawley Town
• Crewe Alexandra
• Doncaster Rovers
• Fleetwood Town
• Gillingham
• Leyton Orient, etc
16. FOOTBALL
Championship
• Bournemouth
• Birmingham City
• Blackburn Rovers
• Blackpool
• Bolton Wanderers
• Brentford
• Brighton & Hove Albion
• Cardiff City
• Charlton Athletic
• Derby County
• Fulham
• Huddersfield Town, etc
17. RUGBY
• Rugby football is a style of football that
developed at Rugby School and was one of
many versions of football played at English
public schools during the 19th century.
• The two main types of rugby are rugby league
and rugby union. Although these two forms
share the same objective of getting the ball
over the line to score a try, the specific rules
are different.
19. RUGBY
history
• In 1871, English clubs met to form the Rugby
Football Union (RFU). In 1892, after charges of
professionalism (compensation of team
members) were made against some clubs for
paying players for missing work, the Northern
Rugby Football Union, usually called the
Northern Union (NU), was formed.
20. RUGBY
laws
• The main differences between the two games, besides
league having teams of 13 players and union of 15, involve
the tackle and its aftermath:
• • Union players contest possession following the tackle:
depending on the situation, either a ruck or a maul can
occur. League players may not contest possession after
making a tackle: play is continued with a play-the-ball.
• • In league, if the team in possession fails to score before
a set of six tackles, it surrenders possession. Union has no
six-tackle rule; a team can keep the ball for an unlimited
number of tackles before scoring as long as it maintains
possession and does not commit an offence.
21. Animals in Sport
• Traditionally animals sport in Britian there are
hunting, shooting and fishing. Those are a
favourite sport in upper class.
• In britian the word hunting that is usually
mean foxhunting. It is popular hobby in
around some members of the higher social
classes and few people from lower social
classes
22. Animals in Sport
• Fishing is one type of hunting which populari
all social class and in fact between four and
five million people go fishing regularly.
• And also in Britian there is called angling.
Angling is when fishing done competitively.
23. Animals in Sport
• Shooting in Britian is killing birds with guns,
itnis the hobby minorities higers social class,
the people try to shoot birds like a grouse. but
may only shot during certain specified times
of the year.
26. OTHER SPORTS
• Almost every sport which exists is played in
Britain. As well as the such as sport 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.
28. OTHER SPORTS
• Ice hockey is Britain's largest indoor spectator
sport, and the only team sport to have a
United Kingdom-wide league with at least one
team from every nation.
32. OTHER SPORTS
athletic
Athletics does not have a very high profile in Britain on a
week-in week-out basis, but it leaps to prominence during
major championships.
35. OTHER SPORTS
tennis
• Tennis is yet another sport which originated in
the United Kingdom, first originating in the
city of Birmingham between 1859 and 1865.
• However, it has not flourished there in recent
decades: its profile is highly dependent on the
Wimbledon Championships, the most
prestigious event of the global tennis calendar.
37. GAMBLING
• Even if they are not taking part of 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”.
38. GAMBLING
• Every year, billion 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 questions “who won the 2.30 at
Chester?”