How Are Sports Continuing to Evole
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Sports practices are more than three thousand years old.
Sports in society have changed in form and technology, and even the meanings attached to them have evolved throughout time.
Nevertheless, to learn about where we are right now, I believe it's essential to always go back to history to discover its roots. How did sports look like thousands of years ago? In which ways did it evolve? What's seemed normal before that would sound crazy today?
In today's article in the magazine, we'll explore a particular sport that existed long before society invented basketball, football, or baseball. A game that happened from tiny courts found throughout small Mexican villages to huge courts in Chichen-Itza. The Mesoamerican ballgame.
Let's get to it!
The Mesoamerican ballgame —also known as Pitz in Mayan, Pok-ta-Pok in English, and Juego de Pelota in Spanish— exists since around 1650 BCE.
Ancient Mesoamerica's territory covered most of Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, Belize, and El Salvador. The discovery of over two thousand courts in such regions shows how popular and influential the sport was for ancient cultures.
Different areas had different sports versions with different rules and customs, but the game was generally the same.
Mesoamerican cultures played the Juego de Pelota with a rubber ball called ulama to score points in a 'hoop' in a court formed of walls and end-zones.
Teams accumulate points by passing the ball through the rings on the wall or striking markers in the opposite team's end zone.
Athletes could not use their hands, but they controlled the ball by hitting it with the upper arms, hips, and thighs.
Dreamworks did a great job by recreating a ball game in a Road to El Dorado movie scene. Check it out:
Aztecs considered Pok-ta-Pok as more than just a game, as it had many levels of meanings;
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Recreational: indulged in by most adolescent boys;
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Public entertainment: where enthusiastic spectators actively gambled on the results;
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Gladiatorial ritual: where they killed captives in rigged ballgames in the form of sacrifice;
Due to lack of evidence, it is not clear if they executed the losing team, the losing captain, or the victorious crew.
Alternatively, Mayan literature suggests that they perceived ballcourts to be entryways to the underworld;
" Sacred places where man and god met. "
While they wouldn't execute every athlete who played Pok-ta-Pok , the game's religiousness often encouraged violence, and frequently, people wanted to see blood.
During the Spanish Conquest of the Aztecs in 1519-21, the Mesoamerican ballgame was a shock for the conquerors. They've never seen anything like it before.
The conquerors admired Pitz athletes' skill. They were particularly thrilled by the rubber ball (a material unknown to them) due to its ability to bounce more than any other material they knew.
The incorporation of the rubber ball significantly transformed European ball games and sports.
You can think about the development of the Mesoamerican ballgame a lot like the evolution of the arena games in Roman antiquity, where violence was celebrated rather than restricted.
However, the difference between the gladiator fights at the Coliseum and Pitz is that Mayans and Aztecs saw the court as a religious center. The Coliseum was a facility for sheer entertainment.
The Spanish conquerors eventually vanished the game from Mesoamerica due to its connection with religiosity. Nevertheless, the prehispanic game remains an excellent case study of society and modern sports.
What was normal before (i.e., sacrifices, blood, religiosity) would be deemed crazy today.
Modern sports take safety very seriously.
Although we don't sacrifice losing sports teams today, it's fascinating to think about what seems 'normal' for us now but may sound crazy in the future.
Take boxing or rugby, for instance; violence in these sports is evident. But we tell ourselves that it's 'normal'! Yet, the recurrence of violence in these sports should lead us to consider whether there is an inherent ritualized warfare or simple and straightforward entertainment.
Learning about the Mesoamerican ballgame, history, and sports evolution should help us understand more about sports culture and its role in society.
🎙Taking Better Decisions Using Data; This week's Halftime Snack features Asaf Nevo —CEO & co-founder of Pico! We talked about his journey as an entrepreneur, the role of data in sports, and customer-centric organizational culture! Come snack with us!
🦾The Race to be the Peloton of Weight Lifting; Tempo, Tonal, and Forme Life — are competing to replace gyms with at-home smart machines priced in the four figures.
Did you learn something new today?
😃- (absolutely!)
😐- (nope..!)
Until next week,
Ronen Ainbinder
Twitter: @Ronenain
Website: ronenainbinder.com
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Source: https://www.sportstechbiz.com/p/the-evolution-of-sports
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