Thursday, 21 July 2011

History Of Soccer - Interesting Facts

By Matt Hick

Soccer has become increasingly more popular in the United States in the last 30 years, with nearly 3 million children between the ages of 5-19 now playing in youth soccer leagues throughout the nation.

Soccer began in England in the mid-1800's, and was originally played by the higher, more aristocratic English classes in their boarding schools and private clubs. The ease and inexpense of the sport quickly moved it ahead as a sport for the masses however. Today soccer is ranked as one of the world's leading sports for commoners.

The London Football Association was founded and 1863 and is responsible for standardizing game rules throughout Europe. In less than 20 years, professional players and teams were hitting the field.

Soccer began to spread throughout Europe almost immediately, with Spain, Germany, Italy, and France all taking up the game b the early 20th century. As interest in the sport grew throughout the world, so did an interest in formal competition. In 1900, the first soccer game was played at the Olympics, with medals introduced just eight years later. Professional players, however, were exempt from competition in the Olympic Games for more than 80 years.

In 1904, The Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), was formed, followed by the first World Cup international competition in 1930. A round-robin style tournament that pits teams from individual nations against each other every four years, the World Cup has grown into an international affair, with nearly 200 teams now seeking admittance. Only 24 are permitted to compete.

Although it took the United States years to enter the soccer arena on a widespread basis, the U.S. Soccer Federation (USSF) was formed in 1913. Unfortunately, most Americans preferred watching (and playing) a different form of the sport -- American football -- until a Brazilian named Pele, (considered to the greatest soccer player of all time), joined the N.Y. Cosmos team in 1975. With such an amazing player to watch in America, popularity of the sport grew throughout the states, until his retirement in 1977, when soccer once again took a backseat to football. Following Pele's retirement, the North American Soccer League slowly lost fan support, finally dissolving in 1985.

It wasn't until the men's World Cup competition, was held in the United States in 1994, that soccer interest was renewed among American youth. The Major League Soccer (MLS), was founded in 1993, and began its first season in 1996 with 10 teams and 32 regular season games. More than 3 million fans watched the playoffs that year. By 1991, women were finally allowed to play on a professional level, when the Women's World Cup competition was introduced for the first time.

The interest in youth soccer remains strong throughout the United States today. Sports teams and leagues are now available in nearly every American community. From pee-wee players who aren't even in school yet, to semi-professional high school teams, players of all interest and abilities are now hitting the soccer field for both spring and fall competition. The U.S. Youth Soccer, a division of the USSF, now includes nearly 3 million official players.


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Wednesday, 12 January 2011

How Odds Comparison Info and Sure Bets Can Help You Beat Bookies

If there is one thing it pays to be aware of before venturing upon a career as a gambler it is this - that, all else being equal, the bookmaker always wins.

That is not to say that the occasional gambler will never get lucky. Those lucky few people who scoop a jackpot on the lottery will never be anything other than in pocket as a result of their good fortune. And by the same token, the occasional punter who triumphs with a 100/1 shot on the Grand National may similarly be forever a beneficiary of Lady Luck's benevolence.

But for the regular bettor the house edge, which in essence is the proportion of the "correct" price withheld by the bookie as commission, will ensure that sooner or later he or she will be down on the deal.

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Contrary to popular wisdom, it can actually be done.

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Where the price on offer is so generous as to actually reverse the house edge, the punter has what is known as a value bet. That is not to say that it will necessarily be a winning bet, but the gambler who takes only value bets at all times will in the long run make a profit, in exactly the same way as the sportsbook ordinarily assures itself of an eventual profit by means of the house edge.

There is an even more certain way through which the punter can be assured of a profit than by means of the value bet, and that is through what is known as sure bets

A sure bet, also known as an arbitrage (or "arb"), is where the bettor actually backs all eventualities in the certain knowledge that one will be triumphant. By backing each eventuality with different books at prices that ensure that, whatever the outcome, the return will be greater than the sum total of all the stakes, a small guaranteed profit is the result.

Sports arbitrage is unsurprisingly a growing industry, and notwithstanding the efforts of the sportsbooks to throw obstacles into the way of those who practice it it is an appealing option for those in sports betting whose objective is actually to win money.