Canadian Inventions: Sports

philatelynews_Inventions_sports
Title:
Canadian Inventions: Sports
Date of Issue: 10 August 2009
Country: Canada
Denominations: 54c x 4

As signs of our national ingenuity can be found scattered throughout the realm of sport, Canada Post will issue a set of four philately stamps celebrating Canada’s sporting inventions.

Basketball
Hoping to devise an indoor game to fill the winter months between football and baseball seasons, James Naismith’s experiment in a YMCA class was an instant hit. A long way from its peach-basket beginnings, basketball is now an international athletic and marketing phenomenon that stands among the world’s most widely played sports.

Lacrosse
When French explorers were first introduced to the native ball and stick game, baggataway, they called it “la crosse” for the stick’s resemblance to a bishop’s crosier. Europeans began playing the game in the 19th century, but rules were not standardized until lacrosse goalkeeper George W. Beers published the first set in Montreal in 1867. In 1994, lacrosse was declared the national summer sport of Canada.

Five-Pin Bowling
When members of the Toronto Bowling Club complained about the weight of the standard ten-pin bowling ball, Thomas F. Ryan, the club’s co-founder, introduced a smaller ball and had his father whittle down five pins to match. He devised a new scoring system and introduced his game in 1909. This year, five-pin bowling, now the number-one participant sport in the country, celebrates its 100th anniversary. Note that on the first day cover, a bowler holds the coveted goose prize.

Ringette
In 1963, Sam Jacks, Director of Parks and Recreation in North Bay, Ontario, combined the speed of hockey with the strategy of basketball to create ringette, an on-ice alternative to hockey for girls and women. Designed to emphasize skill and teamwork with no intentional body contact, Jacks was confident his game would be a hit—and it was. Today, more than 50,000 girls and women belong to ringette teams worldwide.

Related posts:

  1. Sports of the 2010 Winter Games
  2. East Asian Games
  3. Canadian Navy: 1910-2010
  4. Modern Sports Constructions
  5. Extremes Sports

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One Response to “Canadian Inventions: Sports”

  1. I love your take on this, could not agree more.

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