|
Courtesy of the CBHA |
Although the sport is now
much more organized, for many, their first experience remains the same as
for those who first played ball hockey. It simply involved a few friends or
family members, an open area, such as a roadway or parking lot near their
home, some rocks or bricks to mark the goal posts, a tennis ball, old hockey
sticks, and the game was on.
The official version
of street or ball hockey is a relatively young sport, with a very short
modern history, but its roots can be traced back to similar games played
with a ball and stick. The first documented history of such a game, called hurling, dates back to the second millennium BC when it was played in
Ireland. The word hockey derives from a similar game played by the
Native Indians in North America, firstly observed in 1572.
The development of ball hockey until recently, has
closely followed that of ice hockey, as it has spread around the world in
the northern (colder) climates. Formally organized street or ball hockey
leagues, in its modern form, grew independently in several countries, Canada
(late 1960s), the USA (early 1970s), Austria, Czechia, and Slovakia (1980s),
Finland, Germany, Japan, and Switzerland (early 1990s). Due to its close
relationship with ice hockey, street and ball hockey developed with similar
rules throughout these countries. After the political changes in Eastern
Europe in 1989, international exchanges flourished, and included
cross-Atlantic competitions as early as 1991, leading to the establishment
of the
International Street & Ball Hockey Federation
in 1993, and the bi-annual World Junior and Senior Championships, which
commenced in 1996. The past few years have seen an explosion of the game in
tropical nations, and in the orient where it's ease of play is very
attractive.
The Canadian version
of the game began to take its shape in the late 1960s in Toronto, Ontario,
with Habitant Arena hosting a summer program in 1969, and some speculate
that it may have even started the year before in the east end of the city.
The oldest continuously run league is the Mississauga Ball Hockey
Association, which commenced in 1971. The first plastic orange ball was
introduced by Arnold Herka, of Viceroy Rubber, to George Butterwick who was
operating a Toronto league circa 1970, and the game has never looked back. The first provincial
association was formed in 1974 in Ontario, and the Canadian Ball Hockey
Association a few years later in 1977.
|
|