"The Beautiful Game Was Almost Banned"
The true origin of football
Before the Premier League. Before the Champions League. Before Pelรฉ, Maradona, Ronaldo, before any of it, football was a violent, lawless street brawl that governments across Europe were desperately trying to ban.
This is where it all started.
Football in its earliest form wasn't a sport. It was chaos. As far back as the 9th century in England, entire villages would play against each other, hundreds of men, no referees, no boundaries, no rules. The "ball" was usually an inflated pig's bladder. The goal was to get it to a landmark in the opposing village, which could be miles away.
Buildings got destroyed. People got seriously hurt. Sometimes people died.
It was less of a game and more of a controlled riot.
Kings hated it. In 1314, King Edward II banned football in London, declaring it caused "great noise in the city." Edward III banned it in 1349. Henry IV banned it in 1410. Henry VIII, the man with six wives and zero chill, banned it too.
Every generation banned it. Every generation kept playing anyway.
Fast forward to the early 1800s. Football had survived every attempt to kill it and found a home in one very specific place, English boarding schools.
Eton. Rugby. Harrow. Winchester. Each school played their own version with their own rules. Some allowed carrying the ball. Some allowed hacking at opponents' legs. When students from different schools tried to play each other, it was a disaster, nobody could agree on anything.
Something had to be done.
On the 26th of October 1863, representatives from clubs across London gathered at a pub called the Freemason's Tavern and founded The Football Association, the world's first governing body for the sport.
They sat down and wrote a unified set of rules. No carrying the ball. No hacking. No tripping.
One meeting in a London pub. That's why football exists the way it does today.
But not everyone agreed.
One representative from Rugby School absolutely refused to give up hacking, kicking opponents in the shins. He argued removing it would make the game soft. He lost the vote. He stormed out.
That walkout is literally why rugby and football are two separate sports today.
From that pub in 1863, the game spread in a way nobody predicted. British sailors, merchants, and workers carried it to every corner of the world. South America. Africa. Europe. Asia.
Each place adopted it, made it their own, and gave it back transformed. Brazil gave it flair. Italy gave it tactics. Germany gave it power. Spain gave it poetry.
The violent village brawl that kings spent 500 years trying to ban became the most watched, most played, most loved sport in human history.
4 billion people follow football today.
It started with a pig's bladder and a riot.
๐ New football story every single day. Follow and retweet โ your timeline needs this.
What is the actual lore behind football?
How did a violent street brawl played by peasants become the biggest sport on earth?
Check the quote for the full story โฌ๏ธโฌ๏ธ
Div 1 reward ranking โ who was actually worth the grind?
๐ฅ Tonali
๐ฅ Timber
๐ฅ De Gea
๐ด Guirassy
Drop your pick below ๐
RT if you agree ๐
.@mednasah_ i have watched your review. but I have a question, if you had only 2000 coins for one pack which would you go for that would suit all playing styles or should I hold out for the remaining packs to be released?
@_Zaheer56@mednasah_ the only reason i might buy a pack is because of events. if the France and Brazil pack is 1k coin or less I will try to buy it. if not it's a no from me.