A similar technique, known as a bully-off, is used in field hockey. The two opposing players alternately touch their sticks on the ground and against each other before attempting to strike the ball. Its use as the method of starting play was discontinued in 1981.
What does it mean to bully in hockey? hockey. 1. a method by which a game is restarted after a stoppage. Two opposing players stand with the ball between them and alternately strike their sticks together and against the ground three times before trying to hit the ball. Read More...
The Europeans' Influence on Lacrosse
In the 1600s in Quebec, French missionaries first witnessed Native Americans playing the game, according to Finn. "It was given the name 'lacrosse' because the missionaries thought that the sticks resembled the bishop's cross carried during religious ceremonies," he says.
Why do they call lacrosse lacrosse? Before it was called lacrosse, the Algonquin called the sport baggataway and the Iroquois called it tewaarathon. Legend has it that it was named lacrosse by French settlers who thought that the stick looked like the staff carried by their Bishops at church, called a crozier. Read More...
10 “fixed” or “retractable” roof stadiums are in use within the NFL. That is three for every 10 stadiums. Not exactly a big number, yet notable at the same time. There has also been an uptick of domed stadiums being built.
Do any NFL stadiums have a retractable roof? Yet, the NFL teams with retractable roofs — the Houston Texans, Arizona Cardinals, Indianapolis Colts and Dallas Cowboys — have played 66 percent of their games in their current stadiums with the roofs closed, according to figures obtained from the teams by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Read More...