Animals in sport

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Horse racing is a very popular sporting event involving animals.
Horse racing is a very popular sporting event involving animals.

The participation of animals in sport may directly or indirectly involve people and are a specific form of working animals. Many animals, at least in more commercial sports, are highly trained. Two of the most common animals in sport are horses and dogs.

Many organisations are dedicated to prevent cruelty to animals, with supporters cricising the mental or physical suffering caused to animals, the death of the animals, or the fact that they are used at all. This is particularly relevant to blood sports involving animals.

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[edit] Types of animal sporting events

There are many types of animal sporting events, with varying levels of participation from humans – some are solely between the animals while others use the animals in a lesser role. Most sports involve training, while some can also involve selective breeding.

There are some large-scale events that include animals in a variety of sports. A rodeo can comprise many different sports, ranging from bull riding to pole bending.

[edit] Racing

Greyhounds preparing for a race.
Greyhounds preparing for a race.

Racing is the most popular form of animal-related sport, particularly horse racing. Some racing events directly involve humans as riders while others see the animals race alone. In some sports the rider is not directly riding the animal(s), instead being pulled along. Examples of this include dogsled racing and popular ancient Greek and Roman sport of chariot racing.

Greyhound racing, one of the more popular forms of animal racing, dates back to the 1800s in the United States, with the dogs brought over from Europe to help control the hare population. While track racing is the most common, there are other forms of racing. Pigeon racing, for example, sees homing pigeons finding their way home from a set distance away.

Racing events are a common way to gamble, with billions spent worldwide every year. This is one reason that some countries or states have made such sports illegal.

[edit] One-on-one and team events

There are some non-racing competitive events involving animals. Polo is one of the most popular examples, with competitors hitting a ball with mallets while on horseback. Elephant polo dates back to the early 20th century when members of the British aristocracy in Nepal began playing the sport.

In the 14th to 16th centuries jousting was a popular one-on-one tournament event involving knights on horseback.

[edit] Fighting

Bullfighting is legal in some countries.
Bullfighting is legal in some countries.

In most counties the act of two or more animals fighting each other, such as cockfighting, is seen as cruel and is therefore illegal. Some legal animal fights take place around the world, including cow fighting and camel wrestling. There are also some legal forms of sport where humans fight animals, such as bullfighting which has a long history in Spanish and Portuguese tradition. Not all animals are large, however, with cricket fighting being a popular (though illegal) sport in Macau and Hong Kong [1].

There are several other blood sports in history that were intended as entertainment, many of which involved baiting by dogs. Many different types of animal have been placed into a pit, sometimes tied to a post, and set upon by dogs. This ranges from rat-baiting and badger-baiting to bear-baiting and lion-baiting. There are even some tales of human-baiting.

Animals that take part in modern fights are usually specifically bred for strength and stamina.

[edit] Hunting

Fox hunting has been a recent controversial issue, particularly in the United Kingdom.
Fox hunting has been a recent controversial issue, particularly in the United Kingdom.
Main article: Hunting

Hunting began as a crucial component of hunter-gatherer societies, being an important source of food. The domestication of animals and the development of agriculture lessened the need for hunts, with food being more readily available and hunting turned into a sport for those of a higher social class. In most parts of medieval Europe, the upper-class (aristocracy and higher clergy) obtained as proud privilege the sole rights to hunt in certain areas of a feudal territory.

Dangerous hunting, as for lions or wild boars, usually on horseback (or from a chariot, as in Pharaonic Egypt and Mesopotamia) also had function similar to tournaments and manly sports: an honourable, somewhat competitive pastime to help the aristocracy practice skills of war in times of peace. In ancient Rome the "Venatio" was a form of entertainment that pitted humans against animals in an amphitheater.

In modern times, hunting is usually legal as long as the hunter has a license, though there are some unregulated forms in some countries. Animals can be on either side of a hunt, assisting the hunters or being hunted themselves.

Fishing is somewhat different to other hunting and is most commonly a pastime or hobby. However, it can also be a competitive sport. Fox hunting has been a controversial issue, particularly in the United Kingdom, regarding the its necessity and the cruetly involved. Pigeon shooting was one of the shooting events of the 1900 Summer Olympics.

[edit] Shows of training or breeding

A Jack Russell Terrier competing in a dog agility event.
A Jack Russell Terrier competing in a dog agility event.

Shows are intended to highlight the excellence of training or breeding of the animals involved. There are a variety of horse riding sports in this category, including show jumping and dressage, both of which feature at the Olympic Games.

Dogs, being easily domesticated, are one of the most popular animals to have in shows. Sheepdog trials have been popular in many countries and are used to show how well a dog can herd sheep. Other dog sports of this category include dog agility events, whereby the dogs must tackle obstacle courses, and obedience trials, where they must execute a predefined set of tasks.

Crufts, a conformation show for dogs, has grown to be a massive event since it started in 1886. While dogs are the most common show animal, cat shows are also common. Both of these animals have a wide variety of breeds and compete in categories, comparing each individual to the breed "ideal".

Some unusual animals also take part in shows, such as the competitors in rabbit show jumping, most popular in Scandinavia.

[edit] Popular culture

Films and television series about animals in sport can be realistic or very fictional, involving animals in an activity that they cannot really perform. Seabiscuit (film) is a fairly accurate portrayal of the famous American horse of the same name, while MVP: Most Valuable Primate, a film about a hockey-playing chimpanzee, is somewhat less realistic.

The 1980 animated film Animalympics is a spoof of the Olympic Games and features anthropomorphicised animals. In the combination live action and animation film Bedknobs and Broomsticks, animated animals play a game of football.

From 1976 to 1999, the BBC broadcast One Man and His Dog, a television series about sheepdog trials. They also commissioned three series of Pets Win Prizes, a game show with contestants' pets having to perform in various tasks.

Man vs. Beast is an American television show that pitches humans against animals in a variety of unusual challenges, including competitive eating between world champion Takeru Kobayashi and a Brown Bear.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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