Who Invented This Sport?

By: Roger Harb and David Drews
  • Summary

  • Who Invented This Sport? is a sports time machine invented by two lifelong friends who are obsessed with the origins of sports as diverse as basketball and bobsledding and beyond. Each episode, we travel back through time and share with you a particular sport’s sources and evolution. The heroes of these treasure hunts are the sports inventors, innovators, and pioneers. And since history is not only the past but also the present and future, we interview sports experts, who will discuss their sport’s yesterday, today, and tomorrow. The Who Invented This Sport? podcast spans the sports globe and travels through time to report on gems from the fascinating and ingenious world of sports origins history.
    Copyright 2025 Roger Harb and David Drews
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Episodes
  • SHN PRESENTS: GP Soccer Podcast - SHN Trailers
    Mar 30 2025

    GP Soccer Podcast is part of the Sports History Network - The Headquarters For Sports Yesteryear.

    HIGHLIGHTED SHOW

    Giovanni Pacini is a noted expert in the game with significant expertise in the areas of player and coach development.

    He is a United Soccer Coaches Master Coach, member of its National Staff, and National Goalkeeper Staff. He is a USYS East Region Staff Coach and is the GK Coach at Regis College (MA).

    Learn more about the show on the Sports History Network.

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    2 mins
  • Who Invented American Football? Part Three: Kicking Cousins–Anglo and American Football Ties
    Mar 20 2025

    Who Invented This Sport? is part of the Sports History Network - The Headquarters For Sports Yesteryear.

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    You’re a freshman at Harvard in 1827. It’s Bloody Monday. You’re out on the commons field and the upperclassmen bellow a chant: “Football, Freshie—Football, Freshie,” and before you and your fellow first-year classmates know it, you are all standing on a field, pitted against a sea of sophomores amassed at the opposite end of the expanse. A ball is set down in the middle. Some charge like bores and others like rams while some are skittish and run with hesitant gaits. But all advance to clash at mid-field. At the point of collision, the sport of football is exchanged for the sport of may lay.

    You spot a long wiry boy who has spotted you. He charges, lowers his shoulder, and hammers you to the turf. Winded and dazed you roll to your feet. A sophomore is kicking your Boston Latin chum in the shins. He howls and crumbles to the ground. You tackle the assailant and jab his nose until it gushes crimson red.

    Along with guns and rum, British colonists brought mob football and other folk football traditions from Britain to North America.

    Yale and a few New England high schools start playing mass forms of football in the 1790s. By the second decade of the 1800s, educated young men on both sides of the pond are playing different versions of football. Some schools allow running with the ball in addition to kicking it. Some allow batting, throwing, or passing the ball. Even though rules and methods vary within England and New England there are transatlantic constancies: one, kicking a ball through goal posts or over a goal line; two, violence.

    In part three of our series, football historian Timothy Brown, a.k.a. The Football Archeologist, joins us to discuss the import-export world of early scholastic football.

    WHO INVENTED THIS SPORT? BACKGROUND

    Who Invented This Sport? is a sports time machine invented by two lifelong friends who are obsessed with the origins of sports as diverse as basketball and bobsledding and beyond. Each episode, we travel back through time and share with you a particular sport’s sources and evolution. The heroes of these treasure hunts are the sports inventors, innovators, and pioneers. And since history is not only the past but also the present and future, we interview sports experts, who will discuss their sport’s yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

    The Who Invented This Sport? podcast spans the sports globe and travels through time to report on gems from the fascinating and ingenious world of sports origins history.

    HOST BIOS (ROGER HARB AND DAVID DREWS)

    Roger Harb and David Drews are the creators and producers of Who Invented This Sport, a podcast that spans the world of sports origins stories.

    Roger and David’s life-long friendship began in college, where one summer they started their first business adventure together–a window washing partnership. Under a scorching Tennessee sun, the two washed windows and further bonded while discussing sports and other important matters.

    Later collaborating on numerous media projects, including documentaries, these two sports enthusiasts dreamed of one day finding a means to share unique, intriguing sports stories with fellow students of sports history. The advent and popularity of podcasts opened the door for Roger and David to create and launch Who Invented This Sport.

    Roger has 30 years experience in radio and television marketing, broadcasting, and production. Over the past 40 years, David has transitioned from being a commercial banker to a high school English teacher to a filmmaker and novelist. ...

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    21 mins
  • Who Invented American Football? Part Two: Victorian Football: From Mob Rule to Class Rule
    Mar 13 2025

    Who Invented This Sport? is part of the Sports History Network - The Headquarters For Sports Yesteryear.

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    Two goal lines are set hundreds of yards to a mile apart on city streets or across village greens throughout the U.K. Soon blood will puddle on the former and soak the latter. Up to a hundred a side batter, sometimes maiming and even killing each other, fighting to get a bladder filled ball over the opposing side’s goal. The battle rages for hours. Folk football was nothing but mob football and existed for centuries—perhaps a millennium. It was a sport played and passed down by commoners—the people, the folk. It was blood and circuses for the elite.

    Then, in the early 1800s, football began to morph into a sport for privileged boys at elite boarding schools like Eton, Charterhouse and Rugby. Several of these schools are in towns with long folk football histories. British football begins to slowly take a more orderly form as middle class and aristocratic young men take the past and forge a future.

    In part two of our series, football historian Timothy Brown, a.k.a. The Football Archeologist, joins us to discuss the diverse developments of British football during the first half of the 1800s. He'll also stride the pitches of that period and scout for any techniques, tactics, and even instincts that point to the birth of American football, 1874.

    WHO INVENTED THIS SPORT? BACKGROUND

    Who Invented This Sport? is a sports time machine invented by two lifelong friends who are obsessed with the origins of sports as diverse as basketball and bobsledding and beyond. Each episode, we travel back through time and share with you a particular sport’s sources and evolution. The heroes of these treasure hunts are the sports inventors, innovators, and pioneers. And since history is not only the past but also the present and future, we interview sports experts, who will discuss their sport’s yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

    The Who Invented This Sport? podcast spans the sports globe and travels through time to report on gems from the fascinating and ingenious world of sports origins history.

    HOST BIOS (ROGER HARB AND DAVID DREWS)

    Roger Harb and David Drews are the creators and producers of Who Invented This Sport, a podcast that spans the world of sports origins stories.

    Roger and David’s life-long friendship began in college, where one summer they started their first business adventure together–a window washing partnership. Under a scorching Tennessee sun, the two washed windows and further bonded while discussing sports and other important matters.

    Later collaborating on numerous media projects, including documentaries, these two sports enthusiasts dreamed of one day finding a means to share unique, intriguing sports stories with fellow students of sports history. The advent and popularity of podcasts opened the door for Roger and David to create and launch Who Invented This Sport.

    Roger has 30 years experience in radio and television marketing, broadcasting, and production. Over the past 40 years, David has transitioned from being a commercial banker to a high school English teacher to a filmmaker and novelist. David is the author of the recently released Iron Tigers–a novel inspired by the team that conquered Dixie and launched Southern football.

    Roger and David are grateful for the opportunity to explore and share a variety of sports origin stories and how each evolved.

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    29 mins

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