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Words near each other
・ Touch Dance
・ Touch Detective
・ Touch Detective 2 ½
・ Touch Dictionary
・ Touch DNA
・ Touch Down 2 Cause Hell
・ Touch Down Fever
・ Touch El Arab
・ Touch FM
・ Touch FM (Burton, Lichfield and Tamworth)
・ Touch FM (Coventry)
・ Touch FM (Stratford-upon-Avon)
・ Touch FM (Warwick)
・ Touch football
・ Touch football (American)
Touch football (rugby league)
・ Touch Football Australia
・ Touch Football match officials
・ Touch Football World Cup
・ Touch Football – Australian Nationals
・ Touch Gold
・ Touch guitar
・ Touch hole
・ Touch House
・ Touch ID
・ Touch it
・ Touch It (Busta Rhymes song)
・ Touch It (Monifah song)
・ Touch judge
・ Touch Me


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Touch football (rugby league) : ウィキペディア英語版
Touch football (rugby league)

Touch Football was developed from rugby league, with the tackling of opposing players replaced by a touch. Touch is therefore not a contact sport but a limited-contact sport. The basic rules of Touch were established in the 1960s by the South Sydney Junior Rugby League Club.
Distinctive features of Touch include the ease of learning it, minimal equipment requirements and the ability to play it without fear of major injury. While it is generally played with two teams of six on-field players, some social competitions allow different number of players per team on the field. It is played by both sexes, and in age divisions from primary school children to over-50s. The mixed version of the game (where both male and female players are on the field at the same time) is particularly popular with social players, and it is widely played in schools.
==History==
Touch started in Australia in 1963 as a social or "park" game and as a training technique for rugby league. It was not then viewed as a sport in its own right. It was formalised into a sport proper by the "Founders of Touch", Bob Dyke and Ray Vawdon of the South Sydney Junior Rugby League Club. On 13 July 1968 the "South Sydney Touch Football Club" was formed and the sport of Touch Football was born. The first actual official game of Touch was played in late 1968 and the first official competition, organised by Dyke & Vawdon, was held at Rowland Park Sydney in 1968. From these humble beginnings the game quickly became a fully regulated and codified sport. It was first played in Brisbane in 1972 and by 1973 there were representative games.〔http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,,25181422-10389,00.html〕 It had spread to New Zealand by 1975.〔()〕
The establishment of the first national body, the Australian Touch Football Association came in 1976. A highlight came after the drawn Sydney Rugby League Grand Final of 1977 when the rematch needed a curtain-raiser and rugby league officials asked the newly formed ATFA to provide the prelude game. With a crowd of 40,000+ this game helped to raise the profile of Touch in Australia and was nothing short of spectacular according to Bob Dyke in the book "The Story of Touch". Another profile raiser came in 1978 when the Sydney Metropolitan Touch Football side played the touring Great Britain national rugby league team in a high-scoring match, with the local team winning with a disputed touchdown on the siren. As more people began to play Touch more organised competitions developed.
The game has also expanded rapidly in recent years, especially in Asia, the South Pacific, Europe and United Kingdom. Touch World Cups now attract over 50 nations including Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, China, Chinese Taipei, Chile, Cook Islands, Egypt, England, France, Fiji, Germany, Guernsey, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Iran, Italy, Jersey, Japan, Kenya, Kiribati, Malaysia, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Portugal, Samoa, Scotland, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Tonga, Tuvalu, Wales, United Arab Emirates, and the United States.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Touch football (rugby league)」の詳細全文を読む



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