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・ Underwater computer vision
・ Underwater cycling
・ Underwater Defence Group Command
・ Underwater demolition
・ Underwater Demolition Badge
・ Underwater Demolition Command
・ Underwater Demolition Team
・ Underwater diving
・ Underwater Dreams
・ Underwater Explorers Club
・ Underwater explosion
・ Underwater firearm
・ Underwater football
・ Underwater glider
・ Underwater habitat
Underwater hockey
・ Underwater hockey in Australia
・ Underwater Hockey World Championships
・ Underwater ice hockey
・ Underwater locator beacon
・ Underwater logging
・ Underwater Love
・ Underwater Love (film)
・ Underwater Love (Smoke City song)
・ Underwater Moonlight
・ Underwater navigation
・ Underwater Nightmare
・ Underwater Offence Group Command
・ Underwater orienteering
・ Underwater Orienteering World Championships


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Underwater hockey : ウィキペディア英語版
Underwater hockey

Underwater Hockey (UWH), (also called Octopush (mainly in the United Kingdom)) is a globally played limited-contact sport in which two teams compete to manoeuvre a puck across the bottom of a swimming pool into the opposing team's goal by propelling it with a pusher. It originated in England in 1954 when Alan Blake, the founder of the newly formed Southsea Sub-Aqua Club, invented the game he called Octopush as a means of keeping the club's members interested and active over the cold winter months when open-water diving lost its appeal.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://history.cmas.org/hockey )〕 Underwater Hockey is now played worldwide, with CMAS as the world governing body.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.cmas.org/hockey )〕 The first Underwater Hockey World Championship was held in Canada in 1980 after a false start in 1979 brought about by international politics and apartheid.
==Play==
Two teams of up to ten players compete, with six players in each team in play at any one time. The remaining four players are continually substituted into play from a substitution area, which may be on deck or in the water outside the playing area, depending on tournament rules.
Before the start of play the puck is placed in the middle of the pool, and the players wait in the water whilst touching the wall above the goal they are defending. At the start-of-play signal (usually a buzzer or a gong) in-play members of both teams are free to swim anywhere in the play area and try to score by manoeuvring the puck into the opponents' goal. Players hold their breath〔
〕 as they dive to the bottom of the pool (a form of dynamic apnoea, as in free-diving). Play continues until either a goal is scored, when players return to their wall to start a new point, or a break in play is signalled by a referee (whether due to a foul, a time-out, or the end of the period of play).
Games consist of two halves of typically ten to fifteen minutes (depending on tournament rules; 20 minutes at World Championship tournaments) and a short half-time interval of usually three minutes. At half time the two teams switch ends.
A typical playing formation is 3-3 (three offensive players or ''forwards'', and three defensive players or ''backs'') of which 3-2-1 (three forwards, two mid-fielders and a back) is a variation. Other options include 2-3-1 (''i.e.'', two forwards, three mid-fielders, and a back), 1-3-2, or 2-2-2. Formations are generally very fluid and are constantly evolving with different national teams being proponents of particular tweaks in formations, such as New Zealand with their 'box' (2-1-2-1) formation. As important to tournament teams' formation strategy is the substitution strategy—substitution errors might result in a foul (too many players in the play area) that can result in a player from the offending team being sent out, or a tactical blunder (with too few defenders in on a play).
There are a number of penalties described in the official Underwater Hockey rules, ranging from the use of the stick against something (or someone) other than the puck, playing or stopping the puck with something other than the stick, and "blocking" (interposing one's self between a team-mate who possesses the puck and an opponent; one is allowed to play the puck, but not merely block opponents with one's body). If the penalty is minor, referees award an advantage puck: the team that committed the foul is pushed back 3 metres from the puck, while the other team gets free possession. For major penalties, such as a dangerous pass (e.g. striking an opponent's head) or intentional or repeated fouls, the referees may eject players for a specified period of time or the remainder of the game. A defender committing a serious foul sufficiently close to his own goal may be penalized by the award of a penalty shot, or a penalty goal to the fouled player's team. Since this is an underwater sport, surface spectators may be unaware of just how physical Underwater Hockey is.
Often players who are most successful in this game are strong swimmers, have a great ability to hold and recover their breath, and are able to produce great speed underwater whilst demonstrating learned skills in puck control. It is also important that they are able to work well with their team members and take full advantage of their individual skills.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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