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1862 in sports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1862 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.

National championship

Events

  • National Association membership drops from 55 to 33 clubs, shedding every one outside greater New York except the Victory club of Troy, which plays only local matches.
  • Death of Jim Creighton, aged just 21 and the sport's first great player, perhaps from organ damage sustained on the field. A memorial is established at Green-Wood Cemetery.

Events

  • Joe Coburn challenges John C. Heenan for the American Championship. Heenan refuses to fight and Coburn claims the title.[1]
  • 28 January — Jem Mace successfully defends his British Championship against Tom King, winning in the 43rd round.[2]
  • 26 November — Tom King becomes British Champion after defeating Jem Mace at Medway in the 21st round.[3]

Events

England

Events

  • An impromptu team formed in Nottingham around this time is understood to have been the original Notts County. Although County will be formally constituted in December 1864, the club will celebrate its centenary in 1962.
  • Invention of the India rubber bladder enables the modern ball to be created with the bladder inside a hard outer casing, at first made of leather. During the days of "mob football", the ball in an organised game had often been an inflated pig's bladder but in fact it could have been made of any material (for example, tin can football is still played now) with no rules about its size either. In certain games that were somewhat less civilised, such as among soldiers after a battle, human skulls are known to have been used.
  • 15 October - Two units of the British Army stationed in Montreal play the first written account of Canadian football.
  • 29 December — Bramall Lane, which opened as a cricket ground in 1855, hosts its first football match between Sheffield F.C. and Hallam F.C. under Sheffield Rules. Bramall Lane will become the home of first Sheffield Wednesday (1867–1887) and then of Sheffield United from 1889. It is the oldest stadium in the world that stages professional football matches.

Major tournaments

England

Australia

Canada

The Boat Race

Events

  • First recorded competition held in Trysil

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Cyber Boxing Zone – John C. Heenan. Retrieved on 8 November 2009.
  2. ^ Cyber Boxing Zone – Jem Mace. Retrieved on 8 November 2009.
  3. ^ Cyber Boxing Zone – Tom King. Retrieved on 8 November 2009.
  4. ^ "Epsom Derby | History, Winners, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 28 December 2021.