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Soccer is, in essence, a simple game, requiring only a ball and a handful of players. For this reason, a form of soccer has been around for as long as people realized that a round object would roll.

But for the game to become an international institution, certain refinements had to take place. The game needed standardized rules, and a general understanding of how to play it. As Britain spread its empire around the world, one of the things they took with them was a ball---and whether in its rugby form, which has given rise to American and Assie-rules football, or its "association" form, which has become the sport we know as Soccer, one of the most enduring legacies of the British Empire---in addition to a fondness for tea---is what Pele called "the Beautiful Game"...the game we know as soccer.

Tactics may change over the years, but the challenge of moving a ball around a field without using the hands has proved to be an irresistable attraction for much of the world. Football commentator Jack Summers traces the roots on the game, and offers some thoughts and hopes for its future.

History of Football (Soccer)

By: Jack Summers