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Underwater hockey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Underwater sport of pushing a puck into the opposing goal
Underwater hockey
Two players competing for the puck at theBritish Student Nationals inBangor, 2009.
Highestgoverning bodyCMAS
NicknamesUWH, Octopush
First played18 November 1954; 71 years ago (1954-11-18)[1]
Southsea,Portsmouth,Hampshire,England
Characteristics
ContactLimited
Team membersup to 10 (6 in play)
Mixed-sexYes
TypeAquatic
Equipment
VenueSwimming pool
Presence
OlympicNo
ParalympicNo
World GamesYes

Underwater hockey (UWH), also known asOctopush in theUnited Kingdom, is alimited-contact sport in which two teams compete to manoeuvre apuck across the bottom of aswimming pool into the opposing team'sgoal by propelling it with ahockey stick (or pusher).

A key challenge of the game is that breathing devices such as scuba gear cannot be used during play. Participants must hold their breath when completely submerged. The game originated inPortsmouth,England in 1954 when Alan Blake, a founder of the newly formedSouthsea Sub-Aqua Club, invented the game he called Octopush as a means of keeping the club's members interested and active over the cold winter months when open-water diving lost its appeal.[2][3] Underwater hockey is now played worldwide, with theConfédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques, abbreviated CMAS, as the world governing body.[4] The firstUnderwater Hockey World Championship was held inCanada in 1980.

History

[edit]
A 2014 underwater hockey tournament inCoetsenburg, South Africa

Originally called "Octopush" (and still known locally by that name in the United Kingdom), the original rules called for teams of eight players (hence "octo-"), a bat reminiscent of a tiny shuffleboard stick called a "pusher" (hence the "-push"), an uncoatedleadpuck called a "squid", and a goal known at first as a "cuttle" but soon thereafter a "gulley". Apart from 'pusher' and to a lesser extent 'Octopush' much of this original terminology is now consigned to history.

Underwater hockey was started in the United Kingdom by Alan Blake in 1954. Blake was a founder-member of the newly formedSouthsea Sub-Aqua Club (British Sub-Aqua Club No.9), he and other divers including John Ventham, Jack Willis, and Frank Lilleker first played this game in the Guildhall Baths inPortsmouth, United Kingdom.[5][6]

The first rules were tested in a 1954 two-on-two game and Alan Blake made the following announcement in the November 1954 issue of theBritish Sub-Aqua Club's then-official magazineNeptune: "Our indoor training programme is getting under way, including wet activities other than in baths, and our new underwater game "Octopush". Of which more later when we have worked out the details".[7]

The first Octopush competition was a three-waytournament between teams from Southsea,Bournemouth, andBrighton underwater hockey clubs in early 1955. Southsea won then, and they are still highly ranked at national level today winning 20 out of 52 national championships.[8]

The sport spread toDurban,South Africa in the mid/late 1950s, thanks to the spearfishermen of the Durban Undersea Club (DUC),[9] when dirty summer seas prevented the young bloods from getting their weekly exercise and excitement. The first games were played in the pool of club member Max Doveton. However it soon became so popular that weekly contests were held in a municipal pool. The UK's Octopush used a small paddle to push the puck whilst the South Africans used a mini hockey stick. Whilst the "long stick" version of underwater hockey did spread outside of South Africa, the UK's 'short stick' version ultimately prevailed and is how UWH is universally played now.[citation needed]

In theAmericas, the game first came toCanada in 1962 via Norm Leibeck, an unconventional Australianscuba diving instructor and dive shop owner, who introduced the sport to aVancouver dive club. Ten years later, the Underwater Hockey Association ofBritish Columbia (UHABC) was formed and received support from the BC government.[citation needed]

Underwater hockey has been played inAustralia since 1966, again because of Norm Leibeck, the same Australian who returned from Canada with his Canadian bride Marlene, and it now attracts players from a wide range of backgrounds there.[10] The first Australian Underwater Hockey Championships were held in Margaret River, Western Australia in 1975. A Women's division was added to the championships in 1981 and a Junior division commenced in 1990.[11]

InAsia, the game first came to thePhilippines in the late 1970s through growing awareness of Octopush within the scuba diving community.[citation needed]

Footage fromBritish Pathe of an early game atAldershot Lido in 1967,[12] and fromBritish Sub-Aqua Club archives,[13] is evidence of the evolution of the sport in terms of equipment and playing style. It can be seen that the game was much slower and the puck was not flicked at all, in contrast to the modern sport[14] where the substantial changes in equipment, team size, and other factors have helped make the game the international sport it is today, with 68 teams from 19[15] countries competing at the 18th World Championship in 2013 atEger inHungary making this the pinnacle in terms of international competition to date.

Geography

[edit]
CountryFirst PlayedArticleBodyNational Team
Great Britain[a]1954Underwater hockey in Great BritainBritish Octopush Association
(ScotlandSUWH)
(WalesUHW)
Great Britain
South Africa1957NoneSouth African Underwater Sports Federation
Canada1962
New Zealand1964Underwater Hockey New Zealand
Australia1966Underwater hockey in AustraliaUnderwater Hockey AustraliaAustralia
France1967NoneFédération Française d'Études et de Sports Sous-Marins
United States1970
The Netherlands1971
The Philippines1979Philippine Underwater Hockey Confederation
Japan1979[b]
Hong Kong1980[c]
 Switzerland1982[d]
Argentina1983
Colombia1990
Serbia1996
Germany1997
Israel1997
Italy1997
Spain1997Federación Española de Actividades Subacuáticas
Turkey1999Underwater hockey in TurkeyTurkish Underwater Sports FederationTurkey
Moldova2000None
Singapore2004
China2009
Indonesia2010
Saudi Arabia2016
Brazil2016
Malaysia2016
United Arab Emirates2007
South Korea2019
Belgium????Nelos (Flanders),[16]Lifras (Wallonia)[17]Red Piranhas (Men) & Red Mermaids (Women)[18]
Portugal????
Republic of IrelandNorthern IrelandIreland????Comhairle Fo-Thuinn

Play

[edit]
Typical dimensions of an underwater hockey pool

Two teams of up to ten players compete, with six players in each team in play at any one time.[19] The remaining four players are continually substituted into play from a substitution area, which may be either on deck or in the water outside the playing area.

Before the start of play the puck is placed in the centre of the pool, and the players wait in the water whilst touching the wall above the goal they are defending. At the start-of-play signal (usually a buzzer or a gong) members of both teams are free to swim anywhere in the play area and try to score by manoeuvring the puck into the opponents' goal using only their stick. Players hold their breath[20][21] as they dive to the bottom of the pool (a form of dynamicapnoea, as infree-diving). Play continues until either a goal is scored, when players return to their wall to start a new point, or a break in play is signalled by areferee (most commonly due to a foul or calling time for the half).

Games consist of two halves of fifteen minutes with a three-minutehalf-time, with teams switching ends at the end of the first half. Timing of games can vary by competition due to a number of reasons, most commonly organisational logistics; however, tier tournaments tend not to see any variation.

Black team defends the goal (back right of the image) from the White attack

Unlike most other sports, formations are read from front to back instead of back to front:

3-3 formation
Left ForwardCentreRight Forward
Left BackCentre BackRight Back

The typical playing formation is 3-3 consisting of three forwards and three backs. Other common formations include 2-3-1, 1-3-2, and 2-2-2. Formations are generally very fluid and are constantly evolving with different national teams being proponents of particular tweaks in formations. One example of this is New Zealand with their "box formation" (2-1-2-1).

1-3-2 formation
Centre Forward
Left ForwardCentreRight Forward
Left BackRight Back
2-3-1 formation
Left ForwardRight Forward
Left BackCentreRight Back
Centre Back

During the game, each team gets unlimitedrolling substitution with the (maximum of) four players in their sub box. Substitution strategy is imperative in underwater hockey as errors might result in a foul i.e. too many players in the play area at one time (an offence punishable by thesin bin) or a tactical blunder (e.g. an incorrect balance of forwards and backs due to an incorrect substitution).

There are a number of penalties described in the official underwater hockey rules, ranging from the use of the stick against something (or someone) other than the puck, playing or stopping the puck with something other than the stick, and "blocking" (interposing one's self between a teammate who possesses thepuck and an opponent; one is allowed to play the puck but not merely block opponents with one's body). If the penalty is minor, referees award an advantage puck: the team that committed the foul is pushed back 3 metres (9.8 ft) from the puck, while the other team gets free possession. For major penalties such as a dangerous pass (e.g. striking an opponent's head) or intentional or repeated fouls, thereferees may eject players for a specified period of time or for the remainder of the game, or even - in the case of very serious or deliberate fouls - for the remainder of a tournament. A defender committing a serious foul sufficiently close to his own goal may be penalised by the award of a penalty shot or even a penalty goal awarded to the fouled player's team.

Often players who are most successful in this game are strong swimmers, have a great ability to hold and recover their breath, and are able to produce great speed underwater while demonstrating learned skills in puck control. It is also important that they are able to work well with their team members and take full advantage of their individual skills.

Variations of play

[edit]

4-a-side

[edit]

4-a-side underwater hockey is when there is four people per team playing at a given time. The teams usually consist of up to eight players with four subs. 4-a-side competitions are less common, though notable examples are the Hamilton 4-asides, Dunedin 4's (both New Zealand), and theBOA 4s.

Classification

[edit]

There have been debates throughout the sport's history on its classification as either a breath-control sports or an extreme-apnoea sport. Though a 2023 study on submersion times in matches ranging from club friendlies to national championship matches found that the average player's submersion time was 12.1 seconds when in possession of the puck and 9.3 when without the puck, thus falling short of the 45 second breath hold requirement for clarification as an extreme-apnoea sport.[22]

Equipment

[edit]
Annotated Player
1.snorkel and mouth guard 2.hat with ear guards 3.mask 4.fins 5.stick 6.puck 7.glove

Players wear adiving mask,snorkel andfins, and carry in one (either) hand ashort stick or pusher for playing the puck. A full list of equipment is given below:

Swimwear

[edit]

There are usually no restrictions on swimwear, however baggy trunks or shorts are not recommended as they reduce speed and increase drag in the water. Typical swimwear isswim briefs orjammers for male players and athletic style racerbacktwo-piece swimsuits with drawstring bottoms orone-piece swimsuits for female players. Additionally, wetsuits are not allowed according to Rule 3.3.8 of the CMAS International Rules for Underwater Hockey, Eleventh Edition.

Mask

[edit]
Worlds Competition Grade Equipment

Adiving mask is used for several reasons:

  • Players can equalise their ears (using theValsalva manoeuvre) as the nose is covered
  • Unlikeswim goggles, a mask sits outside the eye'sorbit, reducing the effects of any impact
  • Improved underwater vision

A low-volume mask with minimal protrusion from the face reduces the likelihood of the mask being knocked causing it to leak or flood and temporarily obstruct the player's vision. The published rules require masks to have two lenses to reduce the risk and extent of possible injury from puck impact; the danger of a single lens mask is that the aperture may be large enough to allow a puck to pass through it on impact, and hence into the player's eyes. A number of webbing strap designs are available to replace the original head strap with a non-elastic strap that can reduce the possibility of the player being unmasked.

Snorkel

[edit]

Asnorkel enables players to watch the progress of the game without having to lift their head from the water to breathe. This allows them to keep their position on the surface, ready to join play once they are able. In order to maximise the efficiency of breathing and reduce drag underwater snorkels are often short with a wide bore and may include a drain valve. The published rules mandate that they must not be rigid or have any sharp edges or points.

The snorkel may accommodate an externalmouthguard which may be worn in conjunction with, or instead of, an internal mouthguard.

Fins

[edit]
Technisub Ala underwater hockey fins with fin grips
A fin grip positioned to secure a full-foot fin on the foot

Fins allow the player to swim faster through the water. A wide variety of fins are used in the sport, but large plastic/rubber composite fins or smaller, stifferfibreglass orcarbon fibre fins are commonplace at competitions. As with any of the equipment, the published rules mandate fins without sharp edges or corners. All sharp edges must be covered up by a protective film or tape to prevent injury. Players are also normally required to useclosed-heel fins (without buckles) as a further injury prevention measure.[23]

Even well-fitting full-foot fins can occasionally be pulled off during play, either because of physical contact with something in the playing area or as a result of the power the wearer is transmitting through them into the water. When this occurs, stopping to refit a lost fin takes time and reduces a team to only five players.Fin grips, also known as fin retainers or fin keepers, are triple-strap devices enabling a closed-heel fin to be held more securely on a player's foot. They are worn around the arch, the heel and the instep to try and prevent the wearer's foot from slipping out of the foot-pocket of the fin.

Stick

[edit]
Stick design constraints

Thestick (also referred to as a pusher) is relatively short and is coloured either white or black to indicate the player's team. The stick may only be held in one hand, which is usually determined by the player'shandedness, although players may swap hands during play. The shape of the stick may affect playing style and is often a very personal choice. A wide variety of stick designs are allowed within the constraints of the rules of the game, the principal rules being that the stick (including the handle) must fit into a box of 100 mm × 50 mm × 350 mm (3.9 in × 2.0 in × 13.8 in) and that the stick must not be capable of surrounding either the puck or any part of the hand. A rule concerning the minimum radius of edges tries to address the risk of injury should body contact occur. Construction materials may be of wood or plastics and current rules now supersede those that previously required sticks to behomogeneous, although they almost always are anyway. Many underwater hockey players manufacture their own sticks to their preferred shape and style, although there are increasingly more mass-produced designs to suit the majority (such as Bentfish, Britbat, CanAm, Dorsal, Stingray etc.).[23]

Puck

[edit]
Underwater Hockey puck pushed by stick

Thepuck is approximately the size of anice hockey puck but is made oflead or lead-based material - (adult size weighs 1.3–1.5 kg (2.9–3.3 lb), junior 800–850 g (1.76–1.87 lb)) - and is encapsulated or surrounded by a plastic covering which is usually performance-matched to different pool bottoms (e.g. tiles, concrete etc.) to facilitate good grip on the stick face while preventing excessive friction on the pool bottom. The puck's weight brings it to rest on the pool bottom, though it can be lofted during passes.[23]

Caps

[edit]

Safety gear includes ear protection, usually in the form of awater polo cap[24] and as a secondary indicator of the player's team (coloured black/dark or white/pale as appropriate). Water referees wear red caps.

Glove

[edit]

Aglove should be worn on the playing hand to protect against pool-bottom abrasion and, in some designs, for protection against puck impact on knuckles and other vulnerable areas, however no rigid protection is permitted. Players may choose to wear a protective glove on both hands, either as additional protection from the pool bottom or, forambidextrous players, to switch the stick between hands mid-play. A glove used in competition must be a contrasting colour to the wearer's stick, but not orange which is reserved for referees' gloves - this is so water referees might be able to better distinguish between a pusher making a legal contact with the puck and a hand making an illegal contact with the puck. It is also usually preferred that a players glove is a different colour to the puck. As the puck is usually pink or orange it means players should avoid gloves coloured black, white, red, orange, yellow and pink. A referee at any match or tournament can ask a player to use different kit before they play, hence players should be careful when choosing the colour of their gloves. Blue is often used due to the limitations on glove colours, but others have also been used.[23]

Goal

[edit]

The goals (or 'gulleys') are 3 metres (9.8 ft) wide and are sited on the pool bottom at opposite ends of the playing area in the centre of the end lines. They consist of a shallow slope leading up to a trough into which the puck may be pushed or flicked.

Goals are commonly constructed fromaluminium,galvanised steel orstainless steel. This makes them negatively buoyant and durable in thechlorinated water of swimming pools.

Referees

[edit]
Referee (back right) in yellow

Officiating the game are two (or three) waterreferees (i.e. in the pool with fullsnorkelling gear, and wearing a distinctive red cap, orange gloves and golden yellow shirt) to observe and referee play at the pool bottom, and one or more poolside deck referees to track time (both playing times and penalty times for penalised players), maintain the score, and call fouls (such as excessive number of players in play, failure to start a point from the end of the playing area, or another foul capable of being committed at or noticed from the surface). The deck (chief) referee responds to hand signals given by the water referees to start and stop play, including after an interruption such as a foul or time-out, or indeed to stop play if they themself see a rule infringement.

The Official Rules, which are available for download inPDF form without charge, define (with illustrations) a valid goal, the fouls and signals, the dimensions of the playing area, sticks, and goals, team composition and substitution procedure, and additional rules and arrangements for multi-team tournaments and championships.[25][26]

Spectators

[edit]
Octopush contest seen from the surface, at Crystal Palace Pool, London

At a club or training level, underwater hockey is not seen as particularly spectator-friendly. Very few pools have underwater viewing ports, and since the action is all below the surface, an observer would usually have to enter the water to see the skill and complexities of the game. Spectators may either put on mask, fins and snorkel and enter the pool for a view of the playing area, or possibly take advantage of the work of underwater videographers who have recorded major tournaments.[27] Such tournaments often have live footage on large screens for the spectators. The 2006 (Sheffield, England) and 2010 (Durban, South Africa)Underwater Hockey World Championships were screened poolside and simultaneouslywebcast live to spectators around the world, while the 2008 European Championship inIstanbul,Turkey had excellent video coverage but no live streaming.[28]

Filming the games is challenging even for the experienced videographer, as the players' movements are fast and there are few places on the surface or beneath it which are free from their seemingly frenzied movements.[original research?] Games are often played width-wise across a 50-metre pool to provide spaces in between simultaneous games for player substitutes, penalty boxes, coaches and camera crews. However, research and development of filming techniques is ongoing.[clarification needed]

Organisers of major tournaments are usually the point of contact for acquiring footage of underwater hockey matches. Although no official worldwide repository exists for recorded games, there are websites and instructional DVDs.[citation needed] A variety of related footage can be found on video sharing sites.[14][failed verification]

Injuries

[edit]

Although it is a limited-contact sport, there is a significant risk of injury. Many injuries are typical sports injuries such as sprains, torn muscles and light scratches. More major injuries might include deeper cuts, broken fingers, impacts to the head causing concussion or dental trauma, and there is also a minor risk of life-threatening injury from being struck on the head with the possibility of a major concussion or blackout underwater. There is an obvious risk of drowning if knocked unconscious underwater, but the players are under observation by the referees during competition, and players in any case tend to be very aware of what their teammates are doing or not doing; in practice an unconscious or seriously injured player is likely to be noticed and assisted or rescued very promptly.Personal protective equipment is available to reduce injury risks, and the published rules make items such as gloves, mouth guards and ear guards mandatory. There is a risk of pulmonary capillary stress failure (Hemoptysis) in some players.[29]

International competition

[edit]

World Championships

[edit]
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Main article:Underwater Hockey World Championships

TheUnderwater Hockey World Championships, organised by theConfédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques (CMAS),[30][31] have been held every two years since 1980. The tournament began with a men's competition only, with a women's tournament added in 1982. 1992 saw the addition of a men's master's tournament with the women's master's tournament coming in 1998. 2002 saw a youth league trialled at the tournament with a full U-19 division for both men and women coming in 2004.

In 2007, CMAS attempted to start the CMAS World Games, an Olympic-style event for all the sports CMAS governed. This ultimately failed, however, as it required all the sports to move away from their pre-established calendars, resulting in the 2007 World Games being the only one ever played. This move also caused a schism, with the World Aquachallenge Association attempting to create their own World Championships, but again just one version ultimately took place (in 2008), with CMAS asserting control again with the 2009 Championships but in the case of elite competitions only. In 2013, master's tournaments were again added and the youth tournaments became a separate event, involving U-23 divisions in addition to the U-19 division. Elite and master's competitions reverted to even years in 2016 with the youth competition remaining on odd years. This switch following the resumption of international hockey after theCOVID-19 pandemic began with the 2023 elite and master's World Championships.

At Elite level,New Zealand are the current Men's World Champions, andAustralia are the current Women's World Champions.[when?]

At Masters level,United States are the current Men's World Champions, andFrance are the current Women's World Champions.[when?]

At U-24 level,New Zealand are the current Men's World Champions, andNew Zealand are the current Women's World Champions.[when?]

At U-19 level,New Zealand are the current Men's World Champions, andAustralia are the current Women's World Champions.[when?]

European Championships

[edit]
Main article:Underwater Hockey European Championships

TheUnderwater Hockey European Championships, also ran by CMAS, are every two years on alternate years to the world championships. Unlike the world championships there are no masters or youth division.

Due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, no editions have been played since 2019 where Turkey won the men's competition and France won the women's competition.

South East Asian Games

[edit]
Main article:Underwater hockey at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games

Underwater Hockey was included as a sport for the first and only time inSouth East Asia Games in2019.[32]

Celtic Cup

[edit]

TheCeltic Cup was instituted in 2022 for the national teams ofScotland,Wales, andIreland.

Governing bodies

[edit]

Political turmoil within theCMAS Underwater Hockey Commission (Confédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques),[33] the underwater hockey world governing body, came to a head soon after the 2006Underwater Hockey World Championships, resulting in the CMAS Underwater Hockey Commission members resigning en masse and soon thereafter forming an alternative 'world governing body' solely for the sport of UWH, known as theWorld Aquachallenge Association (WAA), and which was officially ratified at the 1st WAA World Championship in April–May 2008.[34] Consequently, from this point the UWH community had two world governing bodies, CMAS and WAA.

CMAS has continued to organise international world competitions on a bi-annual basis. CMAS tried unsuccessfully to hold another World Underwater Games event in 2009 after a successful event in 2007. These were intended to be multi-disciplinary events thereby grouping UWH with other CMAS-represented sports includingfin swimming andunderwater rugby. The 1st World Games were held inBari, Italy, in 2007 while the 2nd was scheduled forTunisia in 2009 but was cancelled and rescheduled as an UWH-only event held inKranj, Slovenia, during August 2009. It was billed as a World Championship but only one non-European country competed (South Africa); France won the Open division while Great Britain took the Women's title. In the years in between World Games CMAS holds Zone Championships (e.g. the 15th European Championship inEger, Hungary, during 2017).

WAA attempted to continue with the original World Championship series on a biennial basis during years ending with an even number. The 1st WAA Championships (renumbered; it would have been the CMAS 15th) was held in 2008 inDurban, South Africa. The 2nd competition was scheduled forMedellín, Colombia, in August 2010 but it proceeded as an International Event without WAA sanctioning and became the precursor for the development of the independent America's Cup International Tournament.[35]

The European (CMAS) and the rest of the World (WAA) events following the split were held over exactly the same period in 2008 a continent apart. This dichotomy of championships coupled with the real possibility of future sanctions by CMAS on their member countries' organisations and athletes led to many countries being forced to choose which competition to send their team to. As a result, neither competition in 2008 was as well attended as had been the case in previous years, nor as competitive. Subsequently, no WAA sanctioned events have taken place since 2008. However, in Europe at least, well-organised international tournaments without CMAS or WAA influence (such as atBreda in the Netherlands,Barcelona in Spain, andČeské Budějovice in the Czech Republic) continue to be regularly attended by a range of club teams from across the continent.[36][37][38]

In 2009, a new CMAS Underwater Hockey Commission was appointed for a 4-year period to guide the sport on a technical level and gradually it has reconsolidated the sport and produced a development plan to cope with future growth. The commission continues to work to develop relationships with CMAS Board of Directors and obtain support for its development plan.

As part of this plan the Commission developed an Age Group-based International Championship incorporating Under 19, Under 23 and Masters (Men >35, Women >32) Grades. This Championship was held in July 2011 inDordrecht, Netherlands. The event was to be sanctioned by CMAS but the Dutch organising team withdrew their hosting bid and proceeded to host the event successfully with 36 teams participating. As the event was non-compliant with the CMAS Competition procedures,Scotland was able to compete as a separate country rather than within a combined entity as Great Britain.[39]

As the surviving governing body, as of August 2013 CMAS has the following countries and territories affiliated with its Underwater Hockey Commission:Australia,Belgium,Canada,Colombia,Croatia,Cyprus,Czech Republic,France,Germany,Great Britain,Hong Kong,Hungary,Indonesia,Ireland,Italy,Japan,Malaysia,Netherlands,New Zealand,Portugal,Serbia,Slovenia,South Africa,Spain,Turkey,United States.[40]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Underwater hockey is organised on anall-Ireland basis, therefore information about the sport in Northern Ireland is grouped with the Republic of Ireland.
  2. ^Suspended from 1989 to 2004
  3. ^Activities started in 1980 but almost immediately stopped, restarted 2015
  4. ^No activities between 1986 and 2007

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The Evolution of Octopush at Southsea Sub-Aqua Club".
  2. ^"The History of Underwater Hockey".Archived from the original on 2017-04-05. Retrieved2014-08-05.
  3. ^"Alan Blake - How Octopush was created".Archived from the original on 2019-06-04. Retrieved2019-06-04.
  4. ^"CMAS Underwater Hockey Commission".Archived from the original on 2014-07-24. Retrieved2014-08-05.
  5. ^Blake, A."Octopush: An original name invented on the same night as Octopush an original sport was invented".Archived from the original on 2020-08-14. Retrieved2020-10-16.
  6. ^"First Underwater Swimming Gala".Portsmouth Evening News. 1955-03-15. p. 8. Retrieved2021-10-26.
  7. ^"Round the Branches: It's Back to the Baths",Neptune Vol. 1 No. 3, November 1954. p. 10.
  8. ^"The British Octopush Association - History".Gbuwh.co.uk.Archived from the original on 2018-04-17. Retrieved2018-04-16.
  9. ^CMAS."Underwater Hockey in South Africa".Archived from the original on 2014-08-21. Retrieved2013-08-29.
  10. ^Quilford, R. (17 December 2007)."Breath-taking fun for anyone".The Age.Archived from the original on 2013-12-05. Retrieved2012-10-03.
  11. ^"The History of Underwater Hockey in Australia".BBC News. 11 September 2011.Archived from the original on 2012-09-30. Retrieved2012-10-03.
  12. ^"Underwater Hockey video newsreel film". British Pathe. December 1967. Retrieved2011-06-28.
  13. ^"BSAC Archives Footage".facebook. BSAC.Archived from the original on 2020-09-19. Retrieved2020-06-25.
  14. ^ab"Various UWH clips". YouTube. Retrieved2011-06-28.
  15. ^"2006 CMAS Underwater Hockey World Championships". August 2006.Archived from the original on 2011-08-16. Retrieved2011-06-28.
  16. ^"Nederlandstalige Liga voor Onderwateronderzoek en -Sport".Nederlandstalige Liga voor Onderwateronderzoek en -Sport (in Dutch). Retrieved2024-04-15.
  17. ^"Lifras asbl - Hockey Subaquatique".www.lifras.be. Retrieved2024-04-15.
  18. ^"BelgiumUwh.be".uwhbelgium.be. Retrieved2024-04-15.
  19. ^CMAS (September 2005)."International Rules for Underwater Hockey: Rules of Play".Confédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques.Archived from the original on 2014-08-21. Retrieved2012-08-30.
  20. ^Davis FM; Graves MP; Guy HJ; Prisk GK; Tanner TE (November 1987)."Carbon dioxide response and breath-hold times in underwater hockey players".Undersea Biomed Res.14 (6):527–34.PMID 3120387. Archived from the original on 2009-03-04. Retrieved2008-07-22.
  21. ^Lemaître F, Polin D, Joulia F, Boutry A, Le Pessot D, Chollet D, Tourny-Chollet C (December 2007)."Physiological responses to repeated apneas in underwater hockey players and controls".Undersea Hyperb Med.34 (6):407–14.ISSN 1066-2936.PMID 18251437. Archived from the original on 2012-09-28. Retrieved2011-06-28.
  22. ^L. Meisenheimer Jr., J. Meisenheimer, and J. A. Meisenheimer:Cureus. 2023 Jul; 15(7): e41816.
  23. ^abcd"INTERNATIONAL RULES FOR UNDER WATER HOCKEY"(PDF).www.gbuwh.co.uk. 2011.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2021-05-14. Retrieved2019-07-11.
  24. ^Landsberg PG (December 1976)."South African Underwater Diving Accidents, 1969-1976"(PDF).SA Medical Journal.50 (55): 2156.PMID 1013870.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2013-09-30. Retrieved2013-03-29.
  25. ^Hockey Rules Volume 1 and 2,[1]Archived 2018-04-02 at theWayback Machine &[2]Archived 2018-04-16 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 16/04/2018.
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