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Extensive Definition
Shinty (derived from the Scottish
Gaelic sinteag although it is referred to as camanachd or
iomain in modern Gaelic) is a team sport
played with sticks and a ball. Shinty is now played almost
exclusively in the Highlands
of Scotland, and
amongst Highland migrants to the big cities, but it was formerly
more widespread, reaching as far as England.
Whilst comparisons are often made with field
hockey, the two sports have several important differences. In
shinty, a player is allowed to play the ball in the air and is
allowed to use both sides of the stick. The stick may also be used
to block and to tackle, although a player may not come down on an
opponent's stick, this is defined as hacking. A player may tackle
using the body as long as this is shoulder-to-shoulder as in
football.
The sport was derived from the same root as the
Irish game
of hurling, and is
similar to bandy but has
developed different rules and features. The old form of hurling
played in the northern half of Ireland resembled shinty more
closely than the standardised form of hurling of today. Like shinty
it was commonly known as camánacht and was traditionally played in
winter.
Shinty is also one of the forebears of ice hockey: in
1800, Scottish
immigrants to Nova Scotia
played a game on ice at Windsor.
In Canada,
informal hockey games are still called shinny.
In the Scottish
Lowlands, it was formerly referred to as common/cammon (caman),
cammock (from Scottish
Gaelic camag), knotty
and various other names.
The Game
The objective of the game is to play a small ball
into a goal, or "hail", erected at the ends of a 140 to
170-yard-long pitch. The ball is played using the caman, a stick of
about 3 1/2 ft in length. Unlike the Irish camán, it has no blade.
The caman is traditionally made of wood and must not have any plate
or metal attached to it. The caman would be made from any piece of
wood with a hook in it, hence caman, from the Scottish Gaelic, cam
meaning bent or crooked.
A team consists of 12 players, including one
goalkeeper. A match is played over two halves of 45 minutes. With
the exception of the keeper, no player is allowed to play the ball
with his hands. There are also variants with smaller sides, with
some adjustments in the field size and duration of play.
A player may play the ball in the air and is
allowed to use both sides of the stick. The stick may also be used
to block and to tackle, although a player may not come down on an
opponent's stick, this is defined as hacking. A player may tackle
using the body as long as this is shoulder-to-shoulder as in
football.
A player may only stop the ball with the stick,
the chest, two feet together or one foot planted on the ground.
Only the goalkeeper may use his hands and then only with an open
palm. He may not catch it. Playing the ball with the head
constitutes a foul whether intentional or not.
Fouls result in a free-hit, which is indirect
unless the foul is committed in the penalty area, commonly referred
to as "The D". This results in a penalty hit from 20 yards.
A ball played by a team over the opposing bye
line results in a goal hit from the edge of the D, a ball played by
a team over their own results in a corner. A ball hit over the
sideline results in a shy. A shinty shy involves the taker tossing
the ball above his head and hitting the ball with the shaft of the
caman. The ball must be directly overhead when struck to be
legal.
History
Gaelic settlers from
Ireland
brought the sport of hurling to Scotland, where the game was played
as such until the 14th
century, albeit with a different caman from the Irish one. A
similar game was played on the Isle of Man
known as cammag, a name
cognate with camanachd.
The game was traditionally played through the
winter months, with New Year's Day being the day when whole
villages would gather together to play games featuring teams of up
to 80 a side, players often using any piece of wood with a hook as
a caman. In Uist, stalks of
seaweed were put to use
due to a lack of trees. Modern camans are made from several
laminates of ash which are
glued and cut into shape, although one-piece camans were still
commonplace until the early 1980s.
In 1887, a historic game was played between
Glenurquhart
Shinty Club and Strathglass
Shinty Club in Inverness. This
game was attended by thousands of people and was a major milestone
in developing a set of common rules. This fixture was to be
repeated on 12th January 2007 in Inverness as the opening
centrepiece of the Highland
2007 celebrations in Scotland, but was postponed due to a
waterlogged pitch.
The modern sport is governed by the Camanachd
Association (Scots
Gaelic: Comann na Camanachd). The association came into being
in the late Victorian
era in as a means of formulating common rules to unite the
various different codes and rules which even differed between
neighbouring glens, in this the sport shares similarities with
other sports which became organised around this time. The first
meeting of the Camanachd Association was held in Kingussie in
1893.
Competitions and Organisation
Shinty is traditionally divided into two
administrative and playing areas, the North and the South. The
geographic divide is at Ballachulish,
with all clubs south of here being classified as South teams,
although most are still northerly in comparison to most of
Scotland. The long distances to travel have meant that the game in
the South and in the North habitually have slightly different
approaches to the game. The South considered to be more skilful in
comparison to the more physical style propagated in the North. The
South also has a slightly differing formation which is more
commonly used than that of the North.
Clubs compete in various competitions, both cup
and league, on a national and also North/South basis. Whilst the
top premier league is played on a national basis the lower leagues
are based on geography. Many clubs run second teams which also
compete in these leagues against clubs with only one senior
side.
In League shinty, Kingussie
has been dominant for the past 20 years and, according to the
Guinness
Book of Records 2005, is world sport's most successful sporting
team of all time, winning 20 consecutive league championships and
going 4 years without losing a single fixture in the early 1990s.
This incredible, unmatched run of dominance was ended on 2nd
September by ancient rivals Newtonmore
who defeated Oban
Camanachd 2-0 to ensure that Kingussie could not catch the team
at the top of the league. However, Newtonmore were unable to usurp
their neighbours as champions, as the first post-Kingussie
champions were confirmed as Fort
William who sealed the title on 30th September 2006 having won
their games in hand over Newtonmore. Kingussie regained the title
in 2007.
League shinty has always been seen as being less
important than cup shinty and the premier national competition
remains the Scottish Cup or the Camanachd Association Challenge Cup
(the Camanachd
Cup for short) which has also been dominated by Kingussie in
the last twenty years. The other dominant team in shinty history
has been Newtonmore, Kingussie's
near neighbours. Strangely these two teams only met in the
Camanachd Cup Final for the first time in 1984 as before 1983 the
competition was designed to ensure the final was a North/South
affair.
The 2007 final was played
at the Bught Park,
Inverness
between Fort William and Inveraray, the 100th Cup Final being held
as part of Highland
2007 and Fort William winning 3-1.
In 2003, shinty clubs voted for a trial period of
two years of a summer season from March to October, with a view to
moving permanently to summer shinty if the experiment was judged to
be a success. Despite opposition from the "Big Two", Kingussie and
Newtonmore,
and other small groups in the game, an
EGM in November 2005 voted by an overwhelming majority (well
over the required two thirds) to make summer shinty the basis upon
which the game would proceed.
Although Camanachd Cup finals and internationals
have been shown over the years, 2006 marked the first
ever regular TV deal for shinty with matches being shown on the BBC
Sports show Spòrs.
In August 2006, the Camanachd Association decided
to move its main offices to Inverness from
Banavie
near Fort William. This move was met with consternation by many in
the sporting community with calls for an extraordinary general
meeting. The EGM was held but a vote of no confidence in the Board
of Directors was voted down. In 2006 the Association appointed its
first female chief executive Gill
McDonald.
Shinty outside the Highlands
Predominantly a Highland game, there are also
clubs to found in
Aberdeen, Edinburgh,
Glasgow,
Perth
and even London. University
Shinty is a popular section of the sport, with almost all
Scotland's main universities possessing a team. Historically,
Glasgow
University, Aberdeen
University and Edinburgh
University have vied for supremacy but in recent years,
Strathclyde University, Robert
Gordon's College and Dundee
University have risen to prominence. It is also played in the
British
Army with
The Highlanders Shinty Club keeping alive the tradition of the
game being played in the Forces.
London
Camanachd is the only shinty club in England. They do not play
league matches but do compete at present in the Bullough Cup. They
have historically been attached to the South District. They went
into abeyance in 1992 but were reconstituted in 2005. They played
the first officially recognised shinty match outside Scotland in 80
years on Saturday 22nd July 2006 against
the Highlanders. Shinty was previously played widely in England
in the 19th Century
and early 20th century and Nottingham
Forest F.C. was established by Shinty Players.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/top-football-clubs-played-host-to-scots-sport-of-shinty-415259.html
Shinty is also spreading to North
America, though originally played in the 18th and 19th century
by Scottish immigrants, the sport died out. However, it is enjoying
a revival, teams such as
Northern California Camanachd Club (NCCC), Houston
Camanachd Club (HCC), Washington
Camanachd Club (WCC), Dunedin
Camanachd (Florida) play at Highland
Games and other venues across the USA. There is interest in
forming clubs in Utah, Arizona and North Carolina, however the
Morro Bay Shinty Club went inactive as of April 2007. See also
Shinty
in North America.
Shinty/Hurling Internationals
In recognition of shinty's shared roots with
hurling, an annual international between the two codes from
Scotland and Ireland is played on a home and away basis using
composite rules. In recent years the Irish have had the upper
hand but the Scots won the fixture narrowly in 2005 and again in
2006, this time at Croke Park,
Dublin
albeit with the Irish fielding weaker players from the second tier
Christy
Ring Cup.
See also
References
External links
- The Camanachd Association
- Bounci - Streaming Videos and Online Community
- The World's First Shinty blog, Keeping Out Of The D
- The World's Second Shinty blog, Catastrophic Inversion
- The Making of a Caman
- The Scotsman Shinty News
- How to Start a Shinty Club
- Shinty Trivia Quiz
- Spot The Shinty Ball
- A list of Shinty Stadiums in Scotland
- Hugh Dan's Shinty and its place in World Sport
- Discussion on the playing of Shinty in the Lowlands
- Shinty was played at Stamford Bridge and Old Trafford
- Glasgow University Shinty Club
- A Quick Guide to Shinty
- Northern California Camanachd, America's First Shinty Team
- Photographs of shinty games in action
shinty in German: Shinty
shinty in Spanish: Shinty
shinty in French: Shinty
shinty in Irish: Camanachd
shinty in Scottish Gaelic: Camanachd
shinty in Italian: Shinty
shinty in Russian: Шинти
shinty in Simple English: Shinty
shinty in Finnish: Shinty