Take Your Sports Betting to the Big League

Sure, you have a few NFL and MLB fantasy leagues going with friends and you’ve waged a few dollars here and there with coworkers and neighbors on which teams will be in the Final Four. However, if you’re interested in increasing your winnings and having a blast while doing it, then it’s time to take your game to the next level with online sports betting.

All bets are on!
Whether it’s UFC, football, F1 racing or poker, online sports betting has your gambling needs covered. All you need to do is set up your account, throw in some funds, place your bets and you’re off to the races. Easy, right? The registration process is quick and depositing money is a breeze. There are several safe and secure ways to add funds to your account, including via credit card or money transfer—it’s up to you. As a new customer, you’ll receive a sign-up bonus after you have made your first deposit. Plus, you’ll receive bonuses every time you reload your account.

But the benefits don’t stop there. Once you’ve established your account, you’ll receive real-time updates on odds and analysis, up-to-the-minute wagering opportunities, and best of all, fast payouts and great bonuses on your winnings sent to you in the delivery method you choose. You’ll also be eligible to participate in free contests, all of which offer some of the best prizes out there including high-end electronics, authentic sports memorabilia and tons of cash.

You’ll also get gambler’s insurance, a twice-yearly payout of 10% of your lost wagers, best in class customer service and the latest news on sports and current events. So what are you waiting for? Say goodbye to the office pools and fantasy leagues and try your luck at online sports betting today.

NFL Beginnings

In 1920, the Columbus Panhandles became charte...
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In 1920, representatives from several professional football teams met in an automobile showroom in Canton, OH. The agreement reached at that session was that the teams play a common schedule and crown a champion at the end of each season. They called the league the American Professional Football Conference.

The initiation fee was set at $100. (Though, George Halas, one of the founders, remarked that he doubted that there was $100 in that showroom!).

The original teams were:

• Akron Pros
• Buffalo All-Americans
• Canton Bulldogs
• Chicago Cardinals
• Chicago Tigers
• Cleveland Indians
• Columbus Panhandles
• Dayton Triangles
• Decatur Staleys (Chicago Bears)
• Detroit Heralds
• Hammond Pros
• Muncie Flyers
• Rochester Jeffersons
• Rock Island Independents

Only two charter member teams are still in the league. The Chicago Bears (the team owned by the aforementioned George Halas and the Arizona Cardinals (formerly the Chicago Cardinals).

In 1922, the league renamed itself the National Football League. Throughout the 1920s, the league membership was erratic but eventually expanded to 25 teams.
Star Players

College football was still the predominant attraction among football fans. However, that began to change when notable college players turned professional. Red Grange (The Galloping Ghost) was one the most famous college stars to do so when he joined the Chicago Bears. He also went on a barnstorming tour in 1925 further increasing the game’s reach among sports fans.
Championships

Initially, league champions were awarded to whichever team had the best won and lost record. However, at the end of the 1932 season, the Chicago Bears and the Portsmouth Spartans both finished the season tied. In order to name a champion, the league voted to hold the first NFL playoff game ever. The weather was so cold that the game was held at the indoor Chicago Stadium where the Chicago Bears won by a score of 9-0.

That is the beginning of what would become the Super Bowl

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The Pros and Cons of Self-Defense for Kids

The gamut of martial arts as a group of sports has proved an invaluable means of crossing cultural barriers. From Brazil’s Capoeira to Korea’s taekwondo, martial arts are taught and performed all over the world, often providing kids with an insight into the culture where the specific sport originated, while simultaneously they develop self-defense tactics and get fit too!
Some of the longer established organizations promoting well-supervised martial arts training include Yang’s Martial Arts Association, or ‘YMAA’ and NAGA, the North American Grappling Association, both bodies which accredits martial arts schools. By applying strict criteria before being willing to extend endorsements to individual establishments, such organizations endeavor to keep standards high. Schools which have received this approval exist in Poland to New Zealand, Italy and the United States.
As a fount of new friends, and a place to gain leadership skills and strategies for tackling bullies, classes for kids in karate and other martial arts are often a good idea. Those who have concentration difficulties can benefit from the discipline of the drills. Self-esteem can be raised through sparring, and many adults who were sent to self-defense classes in childhood now recognize the advantages in terms of increased confidence.
Realistically, however, if a child were to contemplate using the skills taught in order to fight off a would-be abductor, they could scarcely succeed. An adult’s strength and size will virtually always overpower the attempts of any but the most well-built child. No matter how well-drilled that child may be in fight moves, the odds are stacked against him. Whilst self- defense classes are a viable option when selecting sports to take up, touting them as possible training in combating real-life adversaries could be considered irresponsible.
Issues of physical size and shape aside, kids’ involvement in martial arts often has the unlooked-for benefit of opening the mind to other philosophies, eastern or otherwise. Perhaps the time has come to make the most of these barrier-busting opportunities and to hold the first international martial arts congress for kids.

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History unfolds

Tennis sensations come and go but the match that was held two weeks ago will live on forever. In a second round match to unlikely tennis players have made it both into the record and history books. A match that lasted over 11 hours and broke record after record brought John Isner of the United States and Nicolas Mahut of France to the forefront of international sports headlines. John Isner the 23rd seed of the tournament beat Nicolas Mahut who was a qualifier.

The match began at 6:13 pm on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010 and ended on Thursday, June 24th at 4:48 PM. The final set alone was 8 hours 11 minutes long. The score of the match was 6–4, 3–6, 6–7(9–7), 7–6(7–3), 70–68. A total of 183 games. To put this into perspective the last four winners of the various grand slam tennis championships averaged around 207 games for the whole tournament. The match was unprecedented and will never likely be seen again. It now holds the record for timed match, aces served, which is held by both players and points won.

It now holds the record of longest match at 11 hours, 5 minutes as well as longest set which required 8 hours 11 minutes. Most games in a set with 138 games in the fifthe set. Most games in a match at 183 Most aces in a match by one player held by Isner at 113 and total aces in a match since Mahut had 103 aces of his own which brought up the total of aces to 216 and of course maybe the most staggering statistic of all is most consecutive service games held which stand at 84 a piece for each player the total being 168. Anyone who has walked out on a tennis court knows that this is a stagering acheivement.

A Brief History of Sports

The definition of sport is any type of activity, exercise, contest or game performed under a set of regulations. Most sports
require some skill, training and physical exertion.

Roots

Some sports have their roots in activities that have morphed from everyday life. These include fishing, hunting, running or
swimming. The origins of many sports are more difficult to trace. However, it is known that many ancient cultures performed
contests for fun, wagers and competition. The ancient Greeks, in particular, held competitive matches in flinging the javelin, running chariot races and other physical events. The ancient Egyptians played with balls, did competitive swimming, raced and wrestled.

During the Middle Ages, however, religion and other aspects of society hindered any real development of sports other those
played in tournaments by knights. So, it wasn’t until the Renaissance period that games became popular again. Inexpensive mass sports like soccer and sports that required wealth like polo gained momentum.

Sports in the Modern Age

The late nineteenth century saw a resurgence in sports as a worthy pursuit. This was marked by the resetting of the Olympics in 1896, the expanding collegiate athletic system in the United States as well as solidification of professional sports like
baseball, boxing, hockey, soccer and cricket in countries around the world. Sports that had mass appeal like softball, bowling and soccer also grew to absorb the energies of people particularly during the Depression. Simultaneously, spectator sports such as horse racing, bullfighting and baseball kept attracting crowds.

In the twentieth century, television made sports big business. A good example of this is that some 140 million viewers watch
the Super Bowl and the commercials are almost bigger than the game. Many more people than that watch the Summer Olympics and the World Cup, both staged every four years.

Also, in the twentieth century, the Commonwealth Games and the Pan-American Games, made their debut, further entrenching the growing internationalism of sports.