Football (soccer)/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Football (soccer), or pages that link to Football (soccer) or to this page or whose text contains "Football (soccer)".
Parent Topics
Sport: Activity that involves skill and physical exertion, and is governed by a generally accepted set of rules and guidelines. [e]
Football (general): Any of a number of team sports which involve kicking and/or handling a ball with the purpose of territorial gain leading to the scoring of goals or points. [e]
Subtopics
- Back line: Add brief definition or description
- Front line: Add brief definition or description
- Goalkeeper: Add brief definition or description
- Midfielder: Add brief definition or description
- Red card: Add brief definition or description
- Referee: Add brief definition or description
- Shot on goal: In association football, an attempt at scoring by kicking (or heading) the ball towards the opposing team's goal. [e]
- Striker: In association football, a member of the team's front line who is especially adept at scoring goals (also called a centre forward). [e]
- Winger: Add brief definition or description
- Yellow card: Add brief definition or description
Related topics
American football: A high-contact sport played by two teams of 11 players on a 100-yard field that originated in the United States of America. [e]
Australian rules football: A form of football involving two teams of eighteen players on an oval-shaped field. Players can kick or handle the ball. [e]
Football to 1900: A history of football's development through the 19th century from a folk activity into its modern variants. [e]
Gaelic football: An outdoor sport played by two teams of 15 players a side. It is a form of football using a round ball which the players may both handle and kick, with the object of kicking or punching the ball into the goal. [e]
Rugby league: A form of rugby football played in teams of thirteen. It began in 1895 as a breakaway sport from rugby union on the issue of professionalism. [e]
Rugby union: The original form of rugby football played in teams of fifteen. It was strictly amateur until 1995 when it opened up to professionalism. [e]