Posts Tagged ‘outdoor’

Olympic Games- the Foremost Sporting Event in the World

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

The Olympic Games are a sporting event played every two years at international level. A number of competitions are organized where thousands of athletes from around the world take part. The history of this fantastic sporting competition dates back to the 5th Century AD.

The Olympic Movement classified the Olympic Games into the Winter Olympic Games, the Summer Olympic Games, the Paralympic Games and the Youth Olympic Games during the 20th and 21st Century.

The Paralympic Games are organized for after the Olympic Games and these are for disabled athletes. The Youth Olympic Games are for adolescents and were first held in 2010. The Olympic Charter defines the structure of the International Olympic Committee i.e. the governing body of the Olympic Games.

The Olympic flag carries five interlocking circles of red, blue, yellow, green and black and was introduced in 1920. The Olympic motto says ?Swifter, Higher, and Stronger?.

Some of the sports events held in the Summer Olympics are baseball, badminton, basketball, cycling, boxing, diving, soccer, sailing, rowing, hockey, water polo, wrestling, swimming, weightlifting, tennis etc.

Games played during the Winter Olympics are skiing, ice hockey, skating, ski jumping, curling, free style skiing, cross country skiing, down hill skiing,

A gold medal is presented to each first winner whilst silver and bronze medals are presented to the second and third winners respectively. Victory Diplomas are the certificates which are given to some top winners of every sport. The Olympic Flame is lit according to a tradition allied with these games.

A new flame is lit for each Olympics in the Ancient Olympic Stadium in Olympia, Greece. This flame is taken to the host country where the games are to be held.

The flame is carried around the whole host country by individuals walking, running, scuba diving, riding, and using other types of transport. Actually, several torches are carried around the country where the games are held.

The sizeable Olympic torch is lit by the last runner bearing the torch. This large torch keeps burning throughout the games. The flame is put out at the end of the games during the closing ceremony. A new torch is designed for every Olympics.

Just about all the nations of the world are represented at these games. National and international media coverage provides a opportunity to unknown athletes to become well-known. The host city and country gets an opportunity to showcase their country to the world.

The host country organizes and funds the whole event. Over 13,000 athletes compete in the Summer and Winter Olympics in more than 400 events.

Many challenges are faced when organizing this mega event. Some of the major challenges are terrorism, bribery of officials, boycotts and doping. The host city is usually chosen seven years ahead of the Olympic Games.

The United States has had the chance to host four Summer and four Winter Olympics. No other nation has hosted so many Olympic games.

The next Summer Olympics are scheduled to be held in London in 2012. Women are being particularly promoted to take part in these games. Female athletes will be able to take part in all the men?s sports in the coming Olympics for the first time. Women?s boxing has also been introduced thereby ending gender discrimination.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many topics, but is now concerned with London Olympics 2012 Venues. Click a link to find out more 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

Celebrity Cruises

Sunday, July 10th, 2011

Are you planning a pretty extraordinary vacation? Say to celebrate a special event like retirement or an anniversary? If you are, then you really should add a cruise to your shortlist of holidays to research more.

A cruise is a very special sort of holiday, because you get to visit a number of locations and even a number of different countries during the length of your holiday.

It is a very relaxing sort of vacation because you have nothing to do except enjoy yourself between destinations. You do not even have to pack and unpack between destinations because your hotel takes you to your port of call not a bus or a car. Usually, the cruise liner has already docked when you wake up for breakfast.

After breakfast, you can decide whether to go ashore or not, as you like. Usually, the ship will have a couple of tours you can pick from or you can go it alone. You are told what time to get back on board, say 19:00 hours and when you go down to dinner, the liner will weigh anchor and head for the next port of call.

This routine will be repeated every day, but at another port, although you do have a ‘day at sea’ on some cruises. This is not a bad thing as it permits you to spend all day relaxing and enjoying the motion of the ocean. Most cruise liners have lots to do during these days at sea.

Nearly all liners will have a cinema and special interest lectures or groups, some of which are led by guest celebrities. For instance, you may be interested in learning about wine. Well, there is normally a wine appreciation group on board or you might like to learn some of the history of the next port of call, especially if it has connections to an ancient civilization.

Food figures big on cruises. On my last cruise, we had: breakfast, elevenses, luncheon, high tea, dinner and a midnight feast. Breakfast, lunch and dinner were comparable to five course meals, but really you could just eat as much as you wished. In between the meals, there was room (or cabin) service.

Food was included in the cost of our cruise, but you had to pay for alcoholic drinks, although they are free too on all inclusive cruises. Luckily, cruise liners also have gyms, swimming pools and deck sports to help you endeavor to keep the pounds off. I was unsuccessful at that and I gained two pounds for each week of the voyage, which I am told is around average.

After dinner, there is usually a cabaret, a piano bar and a night club going on somewhere and if you can remain awake, you can normally visit all three dos to find out which one suits you the best that evening. For me it was cabaret, night club and last drink in the piano bar before going to my cabin.

The bunk was always turned down with a sheaf of papers on my pillow explaining about the next port and the excursions available, which could be booked any time of the day or night over the cabin phone. I would go again tomorrow.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is currently involved with cruises to St Croix. If you are interested in St Croix Vacation Rentals in the US Virgin Islands, please click through to our site.

The Advantages Of Gymnastics

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Gymnastics is probably not being taught enough in our schools, but there a lot of advantages to practicing gymnastics. It is fairly obvious that gymnastics will improve physical condition, but there are psychological and emotional advantages too. If you begin learning gymnastics in school and if you like it, it could also supply you with a job.

There are quite a few exercises that the novice gymnast can practice, while gradually adding harder trials as the gymnast’s body becomes more and more supple and fit. This is a quite slow process, but it is an extremely worthwhile one.

Learning how to raise one’s goals slowly but surely is very useful for the mind and physical stamina. Stamina is more useful in daily life than strength, although gymnasts have to be strong as well.

This continuous improvement and sense that you can do something that most people cannot is very good for confidence. Children, particularly girls, often lack confidence, so practicing gymnastics would help bring them out of themselves.

If the child enters competitions like representing the school or the town, they will meet numerous strangers in a safe situation which will further enhance their confidence and social skills, This is an area that many other children find a problem until they are more than fifteen years of age.

The young gymnast may even be taken abroad to compete or compete against visiting foreign teams. Making foreign contacts like this and perhaps staying in touch by letter or email with a gymnast friend from the other side of the world will widen the child’s horizons significantly.

Increasing one’s degree of skill and competence necessitates planning by the athlete and his or her coach. When the blueprint to success has been though out, the gymnast will be expected to stick to the goals they have made together. Learning responsibility like this is a very worthwhile thing for an adult let alone a child. The child will learn self-discipline in training, diet and exercise.

Gymnasts are also judged by people they frequently do not know and in quite a public fashion. Many individuals would resent this type of public criticism and find it a problem to take, however the gymnast must learn to take the criticism as it was intended - not as an attack, but as a helpful tool for advancement. This is another difficult lesson to learn for a lot of the general public.

It is easier to conceal oneself in a team. If a football team loses a game, some may blame the defence and some may blame the forwards, but when it is just you on the mat, everything that is said is about you and just you. This hurts in the beginning, but it is character and confidence building once you comprehend that not all criticism is meant to hurt. It can be used to your benefit as well.

If the student gymnast really likes gymnastics, he or she might go far in more senses than one. Even gymnasts that are not the best get to travel, take part in competitions abroad and take sponsorship. After all, not every company can afford to sponsor the top athletes, most are happy to sponsor a fairly good athlete who works hard.

If you get to this stage, your advice will become sought after and there is a career waiting for you once you get too old to take part in competitions yourself - you can pass on your knowledge to other youngsters as their coach.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many topics, but is now concerned with London Olympic dates. Click a link to find out more 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

What About Formula One?

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Formula One, also known as Formula 1 or F1, and officially referred to as the FIA Formula One World is the highest class of single seater auto racing authorized by the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA).

The “formula” in the name refers to a set of regulations with which all participants’ cars must comply. It is almost certainly the most widely watched televised spectator sport in the world after football.

Formula One can be seen live or tape delayed in almost each country and territory around the world and attracts one of the largest global television audiences. The 2008 season attracted a global audience of 600 million people per race.

It is a massive TV event; the cumulative TV audience was calculated to be 54 billion for the 2001 season, broadcast to two hundred countries.

This is a long way indeed from its early beginnings. The very first Formula One World Championship Motor race took place at Silverstone in the United Kingdom in 1950 . In those initial days, teams who no longer contend on the modern F1 circuit dominated proceedings with the very first World Championship being won by Italian Giuseppe Farina in an Alfa Romeo.

His team mate, the legendary Juan Fangio, won the title almost continuously until 1957 and, in fact, his record of five World Championship wins held until 2003 when Michael Schumacher won his sixth title.

It was during this timespan that almost certainly the greatest driver never to win the World Championship was contending - the U.K.?s Stirling Moss.

One team that did compete in those early years was Ferrari, or Scuderia Ferrari to give the team its full title, whose prancing horse logo is followed by the red shirted fans or ?tifosi? around the world. In fact, over the last couple of years the sport has been dominated by Ferrari who until recently has been one of the few teams to assemble the complete car, engine and all.

However the U.K. team of Maclaren, using engines from Mercedes Benz, have proved extremely successful. A different very successful team during the 2010 season proved to be Red Bull racing using engines provided by Renault.

It is interesting to note that in the cases of both Maclaren and Red Bull, they have proved a lot more successful than the teams fielded by their engine suppliers, Mercedes and Renault. This almost certainly goes a long way to supporting the argument that it is the aerodynamic properties of the car that win races.

After several years in which we have seen the number of teams has stayed quite static or even declined, 2010 saw a renaissance in the number of cars on the grid with new entries from Lotus, Virgin Racing, and Hispania Racing bringing the number of starters to 24.

The calendar of races is also in a constant state of flux with Korea joining for the 2010 season and India being added in 2011 as Formula 1 becomes more and more a world- wide spectacle as it moves away from its traditional European heartland.

But wherever the teams race and whatever the number of cars on the beginning grid it will continue to set the pulses racing as those 5 red lights go out!

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is currently involved with London Olympic dates. Click a link to find out more 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

Landscaping Your Garden In The Texas Style

Monday, July 4th, 2011

Most people simply let their garden mature naturally in that they do not select a particular style. This is all right, but it can turn into a hodge-podge, if not looked after. Some people, though, deliberately choose to landscape their garden according to a clear style or a theme. Some of these themes are very sophisticated and others are fairly simple.

One of the many themes to pick from is the Texas Style. We all know that everything in Texas is done on a grand scale, so you would be excused for thinking that landscaping in the Texas Style would necessitate a large garden.

It is perhaps easier to carry out your landscaping in the Texas Style in a bigger garden, but it just depends how you go about it.

The first things to remember are that Texas is very hot and so the terrain closely resembles wilderness. Plants and shrubs are thin on the ground, so to speak. Landscaping in the Texas Style is what you could call minimalist gardening.

You will have to make use of every square inch of your property, if you only have a small plot and the climate will have to be fairly warm in the daytime although it is good if it gets cold at night. This will allow you to grow many of the plants that thrive or at least grow in Texas. One good thing about Texan flowers is that when they do blossom, they really do show a lot of colour.

One of the kinds of plant that you are sure to have success with is the cactus. There are many varieties of cactus, so you should not have too much difficulty finding several types that will grow in your garden in order to produce a Texan dry climate look, as long as it does not rain every other day where you live.

Cacti yield spectacular flowers when they bloom, but they have big thorns, so if you have young children, the Texas Style garden may not be for you for a few years yet.

Once you have your plants sorted out, you can begin looking for accessories. You can pick up ideas from the old cowboy films and from magazines, but a few recommendations are: a chow wagon style barbecue area with a canvas hood; some broken wagon wheels; a well, functioning or not (it could even be a fish pond that looks like a well); boulders and wooden fence posts.

Boulders are usually overlooked by gardeners but there are some intriguing stones, boulders and rocks in all kinds of shapes and colours. Boulders with fossils in them are great conversation starters. Smaller rocks can be used to make a rock garden and this will expand the choice of plant life that you can grow in your Texas Style garden. You will be able to plant succulents, small cacti and other small plants that frequently grow in this harsh environment.

Lighting should be low and subtle so that you can see the stars at night. You could even have a camp fire with log seating or you can accomplish this look by using low powered solar lighting. Solar powered lighting will also save you from having to have an electrician wire up your garden.

When you have finished landscaping in the Texas Style, do not forget to get pleasure from it by eating outside as often as you can. Barbecues, steaks and Texmex food are the order of the day.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on quite a few subjects, but is at present involved with outdoor accent lighting. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Outdoor Wall Lamps.

The Surprising History of Golf

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

A lot of debate has taken place concerning the history of golf, long traditionally believed to have started in the area surrounding the Firth of Forth in Scotland. A golfing-like game is recorded as taking place on 26 February 1297, in the Netherlands, where the Dutch played a game with a stick and leather ball.

However, contemporary research into the history of golf has discovered references to a game very comparable to modern day golfing being played in China during the period of the Southern Tang dynasty, at least 500 years before golf was first documented in Scotland.

It has been asserted that the game was first exported to Europe and later Scotland by Mongolian travellers in the later Middle Ages.

In Scotland the first known documentary evidence for golfing was in an act of the Scottish parliament in 1457 which prohibited the playing of ?gowf? and football lest they detract from the vital military exercise of archery practice. In a subsequent ban of 1491 golf was described as ‘an unprofitable sport’!. Something which Tiger Woods is probably oblivious of!

There are records in the accounts of a Scottish lawyer, Sir John Foulis of Ravelston, that he played golf at Musselburgh Links on 2 March 1672, and this has been accepted as proving that The Old Links, Musselburgh, is the oldest golf course in the world. Mary, Queen of Scots is believed to have played there in 1567.

The Company of Gentlemen Golfers, later renamed The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers set down the oldest existing rules of golfing in 1744. Their “Articles and Laws in Playing at Golf, known as the Leith Rules, after the course at which they played support the club’s claim to be the world?s first golfing club, though an almanac published about a century later is the first record of a rival claim that The Royal Burgess Golf Society had been set up in 1735.

The directions in the Leith Rules formed the basis for all subsequent codes, for instance needing that “Your Tee must be upon the ground” and “You are not to change the Ball which you strike off the Tee”

When King James VI of Scotland became King James I of England in 1603 the spread of golf to be a world wide sport commenced. He and his courtiers played golf at Blackheath, London, from which the Royal Blackheath Golf Club traces its beginning.

The spread of golfing world wide was started by Scottish soldiers, expatriates and emigrants who took the sport to British colonies and elsewhere.

The Royal Calcutta Golf Club (1829) and the club at Pau (1856) in south western France are significant reminders of these trips and are the oldest golfing clubs outside of the British Isles and the oldest in continental Europe respectively.

Proof of early golfing in the United States includes an advertisement published in the Royal Gazette of New York City in 1779 for golfing clubs and balls, and the notice of the annual general meeting for a golf club in Savannah printed in the Georgia Gazette in 1796.

However, as in England, it was not until the late 19th century that golfing started to become firmly established. There are several competing claims to be the oldest club, but what is not contested is that in 1894 delegates from the Newport Country Club, Saint Andrew’s Golf Club, Yonkers, New York, The Country Club, Chicago Golf Club, and Shinnecock Hills Golf Club met in New York City to kind what was to become the United States Golf Association (USGA).

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many subjects, but is at present concerned with the London 2012 Olympics mascot. Click a link if you are interested in the 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

Choosing Your Patio Garden Furniture

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Once you have finished making your patio, your deck or your lawn, you will unquestionably start thinking about how you can enjoy more time out of doors. Therefore, you will need some garden furniture. Many shops stock garden furniture. You can try home improvement centres, large department stores and garden centres. There are also businesses on line that will deliver. The hard job is picking your garden furniture.

There is a very broad choice of designs of garden furniture - a style to suit every person and complement every garden. So, before rushing down to the garden centre, it is worth considering for a while what you would like to accomplish with your open-air seating area. Do you want a theme? Do you want to entertain or dine there? Or do you just want to sit peacefully, take pleasure in your garden and read a magazine?

Indeed, the reply may well be a permutation of all those things. If you simply want to sit there with a drink and a book, you may be satisfied to just buy a couple of chairs and a small table, but if you want to entertain or eat family meals outside, you may prefer a more substantial table. A large oak table would be quite expensive, but it would look fabulous and last for a decade or more.

If you choose a table, you will have to have chairs to match, but do you want loungers as well? They could be of plastic and kept in the shed until wanted.

You will likely need some form of shade. This can be supplied by folding, even removable umbrellas or by overhanging trees or shrubs. Wisteria or clematis can do the task as well and cost you next to nothing.

Do you intend cooking in this space? If you do, what and how? Do you fancy a barbecue pit or a proper hob and oven? A lot of people in regions where the climate permits are doing a great deal of cooking outside in a carbon copy of an indoor kitchen, but without all the walls.. If you plan the outdoor kitchen carefully, you will be able to use it in the rain too. I find it lovely not to have kitchen smells in the house and cooking out of doors is a good experience as well.

If it gets nippy in the evenings then you can consider buying some patio heaters. They are not expensive to buy or to run and one standard patio heater can keep quite a crowd of people warm. (By the word ’standard’ here, I mean upright, like a lamp post).

Lighting is the last major point in the list when choosing garden furniture. There are actually two sorts of garden lighting to mull over: lighting to see by and lighting to lure insects away. Again, you could use standard lamps to illuminate your patio. They shine their light far enough so that you can still look at your garden after dusk or you could have separate wall light on dimmers.

The one light I would definitely have is a mosquito lantern. Hang this away from where you sit, because they do draw insects to them which they then electrocute with a pleasing zap.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with visual comfort lighting. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Outdoor Wall Lamps.

What Is The History Of Hurling?

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Although hurling is normally accepted as a Gaelic sport it should possibly be called a Celtic one. For the history of hurling is in fact older than the history of Ireland itself. It started even before Christianity, arriving in Ireland more than three thousand years ago with the Celts.

The earliest references to hurling in Ireland is in early Irish laws dating back to the fifth century. Hurling played a major part in early Irish mythology. Legendary Irish heroes such as Cuchulainnt and Fionn Mac Cumhail and his Fianna are both written of as taking part in hurling.

Hurling is, basically, a stick and ball game. The game is thought to be allied to the games of shinty that is played primarily in Scotland, cammag on the Isle of Man and bandy that was played formerly in England and Wales.

The stick was, and indeed, still is called a hurley and the ball a sliotar. Early Irish lawn Law stated that the son of a r? (local king) could have his hurley banded in bronze, while others could only make use of copper. It was unlawful to confiscate a hurley.

The object of the game is for players to use the hurley to hit a small ball through the opposition’s goalposts either over the crossbar for one point, or under the crossbar into a net defended by a goalkeeper for one goal, which is the same as three points.

The sliotar can be caught in the hand and carried for not more than four steps, struck in the air, or hit on the ground with the hurley. It can be kicked or slapped with an open hand (the hand pass) for short-range passing. A player who wants to carry the ball for more than three steps has to bounce or balance the sliotar on the end of the stick and the ball can only be handled twice while in his possession.

The English occupation of Ireland led to many statutes prohibitting or proscribing the playing of hurling as it diverted people from archery practice. The earliest of these dates from the 13th century.

However, it was the Eighteenth Century that came to be known as the ?The Golden Age? of hurling as members of the Anglo-Irish landowning gentry often kept teams of players on their land and challenged each other’s teams to games for the amusement of their tenants.

Tales of colourful hurling games from this era continue to be gathered from contemporary Irish storytellers and newspapers of the period. The contemporary era of hurling In Ireland dates from the establishment of the Gaelic Athletic Association formed in 1884 in Thurles, County Tipperary under the memorable patronage of Thomas Croke, Archbishop of Cashel and Charles Parnell.

The 20th Century saw more organisation in hurling. The all-Ireland Hurling championship came into existence along with the provincial championships. Cork, Kilkenny and Tipperary dominated hurling in the 20th Century with each of these counties winning more than 20 All-Ireland titles each. Wexford, Waterford, Clare, Limerick, Offaly, Dublin, and Galway were also powerful hurling counties during the 20th Century.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on several subjects, but is currently concerned with London Olympics 2012 venues. Click a link if you are interested in 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

The Origins of Baseball

Sunday, May 29th, 2011

A lot has been written regarding the history and birth of the sport of baseball and disagreement has surrounded the topic for over a hundred years.There has long been a legend, once extensively believed by many Americans, that baseball was invented by one Abner Doubleday in 1839.

However there never has been a single shred of evidence to support this assertion, which was in fact never supported by Doubleday himself. There is a large quantity of documentary evidence left by him including letters and nowhere is there mention of the game of baseball, or that he thought he played any big part in the expansion of the game.

In fact, baseball (and softball), as well as the other contemporary bat, ball and running games, cricket and rounders, was developed from earlier folk games. Baseball probably originated in Britain, but comparable games were played in many regions of Europe such as a game comparable to the British rounders. It was called schlagball and was played in Germany.

Russians had played a bat and ball game known as lapta since medieval times, whilst In Romania they played a version called Oina. There is very little information as to how the modern game of baseball developed from these earlier types of ballgames .

There is one school of thought that holds that they evolved into a game called town ball which was the forerunner of baseball. Although others believe that town ball and baseball are autonomous developments. The real ?father of American baseball? was not Abner Doubleday but one Shane Ryley Foster, who wrote the first printed rules of baseball in 1845 for a New York (Manhattan) base ball club called the Knickerbockers.

But on June 3, 1953, Congress formally credited Alexander Cartwright with inventing the modern game of baseball, and he was also elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Alexander Cartwright was a New York bookseller who umpired the first-ever recorded U.S. baseball game with written rules in Hoboken, New Jersey on June 19, 1846.

He also founded the older of the two teams that played that day, the New York Knickerbockers. Cartwright later became contaminated by ?gold Fever? and emigrated to California, introducing the game of baseball to a lot of of the cities he stopped at on his way to California..

In 1857 a convention was held to update the old rules laid down for the Knickerbocker club and delegates came from sixteen clubs in New York. In 1858, twenty-five teams including one from New Jersey came together to form the National Association of Base Ball Players . It governed until 1870 but arranged and sanctioned no games.

During and after the American Civil War, the deployment of soldiers and exchanges of prisoners helped spread the game. In 1869 the first honestly professional baseball team was created. Earlier players were nominally amateurs.

The Cincinnati Red Stockings took on players nationally and effectively toured the country. No one defeated them until June 1870. After 1870, more and more professional teams were formed and the era of the game that we know and love today commenced.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with London Olympics 2012 venues. Click a link if you are interested in 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.

The Football Association Challenge Cup

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

The FA Cup, or Football Association Challenge Cup to give it its right title, is the oldest football competition in the world. It was started in 1871, when it was suggested that “a Challenge Cup ought to be established in connection with the Association”.

Merely eight teams were entered for the first round which was played on the 11 November 1871. The final was played at the Oval on 16 March, 1872 and was won by The Wanderers who defeated The Royal Engineers by the only goal of the match.

Not only is the FA Cup the oldest association football competition in the world but it is also one of the biggest. It is open to teams who play in most levels of the English football league system and during the 2009 - 2010 season, 762 teams entered the competition.

Because it is the one competition that mixes teams of all levels of playing ability, it does allow for the occasional ?upset? when a ?minnow? from a lower league defeats one of the more bet on upper echelon clubs.

While at least one such giant killing act will happen in any given season, no non-league club has ever won the tournament since Tottenham Hotspur won the trophy in 1901 when playing in the old Southern League.

For some reason, certain clubs seem to gain a reputation as giant killers and Yeovil Town holds the current record for most wins against teams playing in the league. There are several sporting records associated with the FA Cup, some of them standing for a considerable period of time .

One name connected with many early records is that of Lord Kinnaird. He played in the second final in 1873 and then played in a further eight, thereby establishing a record which still stands to this day of playing in nine finals. He played on the winning team no less than five times, a further record which is still unbroken.

However he is also credited with a less fortunate record, that of scoring the first ?own goal” in cup history in 1877. He was playing in goal and involuntarily stepped back past his own goal line.

In 1886 Blackburn Rovers became the second club to win three successive finals, and is the sole club still in existence who can assert this feat as the first club to do so. The Wanderers went out of existence in 1883.

The record for the largest win in FA Cup history is held by Preston North End who in 1887 defeated Hyde 26-0. One of the longest standing sporting records was ultimately broken in 2009 by Everton?s Louis Saha whose 25 second goal beat that of the 30 second goal scored by Bob Chatt of Aston villa in 1895 . A record which had stood for 115 years!

After a timespan of seven years when the Cup final was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, while the new Wembley Stadium was being rebuilt, The Cup Final has come back to its traditional home at Wembley where it has been played since 1923 when the famous ?White Horse? took place between Bolton and West Ham. This match also holds the record for people attendance when an estimated 200,000 fans crammed in.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on several subjects, but is at present concerned with tickets for London Olympics. Click a link if you are interested in 2012 London Olympics Volunteers.