Contact sport

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Many sports involve a degree of player-to-player and/or player-to-object contact.

The term "contact sport" is used in both team sports and combat sports, medical terminology and television game shows (such as American Gladiators and Wipeout) to certain degrees.

Contact between players is often classed by different grades ranging from non-contact (where there is no contact between players) to full-contact or collision sports (where the rules allow for significant physical contact).

Contents

Issues and Trends

Medical

Current medical terminology in the United States uses the term collision sport rather than contact sport to refer to Rugby, American football, lacrosse, and ice hockey. The term contact sport is used to refer to sports, such as basketball and association football that allow limited contact. For example, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a policy statement in 2001 entitled "Medical Conditions Affecting Sports Participation" that included the following definitions:

In "collision" sports (eg, boxing, ice hockey, football, and rodeo), athletes purposely hit or collide with each other or inanimate objects, including the ground, with great force. In "contact" sports (eg, basketball and soccer), athletes routinely make contact with each other or inanimate objects but usually with less force than in collision sports.

Committee on Sports Medicine and Fitness, American Academy of Pediatrics[1]

This terminology may have evolved from a quote attributed to both Vince Lombardi and Duffy Daugherty: "Football isn't a contact sport; it's a collision sport. Dancing is a contact sport."[original research?]

Contact sports have a higher risk of transmission of blood-borne disease between players.[1]

Injury & Legal

Many sports will penalise contact with the rules for certain situations or instances to help reduce the incidence of physical trauma or litigation for assault or grievous bodily harm.

Equipment

As a result of the risk of injury, some sports require use of protective equipment a notable example is American football protective equipment, and other sports require to be played on soft grounds and for padding on physical obstacles, such as goal posts.

The cost of equipment can be an obstacle to people participating in the sports.

Social

There is a perception among some sections western society toward full-contact sports being barbaric prone to sporting violience, thuggery and cause injury. This has led to the phenomenon of the soccer mom and a general increase in sports with less contact.

There is a predicted trend away from participation in contact sports.[2]

In some societies, contact in sports can have an influence on the attitudes of sex roles.[3]

Trends

Because of the issues raised above, many sports are reducing their levels of contact. In recent years, very few sports governing bodies have encouraged aggression and rough play.

One example of a sport which has shifted between levels of contact is Australian rules football. While degrees of contact are still allowed between players, the Australian Football League the sport's governing body has in recent years moved to penalise any form of "rough play" and including incidental contact and aggressive actions. The move has led to perceptions of it no longer being classed as a full-contact sport.[4] The AFL has argued that this has not effected the number of people attending matches or watching it on television.

The Grades of Contact

Full-contact

A (full) contact sport or collision sport is any sport in which significant physical Impact force on players, either deliberate or incidental is allowed for within the rules of the game.

Contact actions include tackling, body checking and blocking and a whole range of other moves which can differ substantially in their rules and degree of application.

Examples of contacts sports are: Rugby league, Rugby Union, American football, Ice Hockey, Lacrosse, Water Polo,Amateur wrestling and Handball in Europe. Full-contact martial arts include e.g. boxing, MMA, puroresu, Muay Thai, judo, and full-contact styles of karate. Also, kick-boxing in the early seventies in the USA was born which introduced a controlled version of full contact to martial arts.

Semi-contact

A semi-contact sport is typically a combat sport involving striking and which contains physical contact between the combatants simulating full-power techniques. The techniques are restricted to limited power, and rendering the opponent unconscious is forbidden.

Some semi-contact sports use a point system to determine the winner and use extensive protective gear to protect the athletes from injury. Examples of semi-contact sports include Taekwondo (under ITF rules), amateur kick-boxing and various styles of Kung Fu that incorporate semi-contact rules sparring.

Light-contact

A light-contact sport is sometimes distinguished from above in which only light contact, intended to be non-damaging, is allowed.

In martial arts it refers then to sparring similar in style to fencing, where only touching the opponent (or, in case of hits and kicks to the head, just marking the blow) counts. Occasional or deliberate hits are counted against the hitter and may be the reason for disqualification. Light-contact combat sports include some styles of karate (e.g., American Kenpo).

Limited-contact Sports

Limited-contact sports are sports in which the rules are specifically designed to prevent contact between players either intentionally or unintentionally. Although contact can still happen, strong penalties are often used to discourage all contact between players. These penalties, including physically removing players from the field of play, means that contact is generally rare. Examples include soccer and netball.

Non-Contact Sports

Non-contact sports are sports where players are physically separated such as to make it nearly impossible for them to make contact during the course of a game. Examples include all forms of tennis and bowling.

References

  1. ^ Blood Borne Diseases and Contact Sports
  2. ^ http://www.sportdevelopment.org.uk/dupfuture2004.pdf
  3. ^ Influence of sport participation upon sex role orientation of caucasian males and their attitudes toward women. Springer Netherlands. ISBN 0360-0025
  4. ^ AFL not fazed by 'netball' gaff