Who invented dugouts?

The man that introduced the dugout to football was Donald Coleman, a former Aberdeen player that managed Norway's Bergen. While in Norway, Coleman learned a variety of training methods and brought them back to Scotland in the 1930s.
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Where did dugouts come from?

Origin. The term dugout refers to the area being slightly depressed below field level, as is common in professional baseball. The prevailing theory of the origin of locating the dugouts below field level is that it allowed spectators seated behind the dugouts to see the field, specifically the home plate area.
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When did baseball start using dugouts?

When baseball first started, there were no dugouts—but by 1908, they became part of the game for an interesting reason, as Jesse Goldberg-Strassler explains in this week's Tales from The Baseball Thesaurus.
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Why is it called a dugout in football?

The place where managers sit is called 'the dugout', and for many years it was literally dug out, being a bit below ground level. This idea was thought up in the 1930s by a mad Scotsman called Donald Colman, a coach at Aberdeen.
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How are dugouts built?

The settler took his spade and dug a rectangular hole in the hillside. The floor was smoothed with a slight downward slant toward the front to allow any water to drain out. Three sides of the home were made of earth, but the front was built up to form a wall.
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WTF is a dugout?



What were dugouts like in ww1?

Dugouts were protective holes dug out of the sides of trenches. The size of dugouts varied a great deal and sometimes could house over ten men. A manual published by the British Army recommended dugouts that were between 2 ft. and 4 ft.
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What was a dugout?

A type of dwelling, shelter, or other structure that is wholly or partially below ground constitutes a dugout. Dugouts were often carved into the sides of hills, banks, or ravines and were enclosed by a front wall built of sod or logs.
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Why are football dugouts below ground?

This idea was thought up in the 1930s by a mad Scotsman called Donald Colman, a coach at Aberdeen. He wanted to study how his players used their feet, so built a place where he could watch the match at feet height.
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What are soccer dugouts called?

Players shelters, dugouts and covered benches. Ideal for the sidelines of your soccer, football, field hockey rugby or lacrosse field.
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Why do football managers stand in a box?

Some football managers will occasionally sit higher up in the stands in order to get a more all-encompassing view of the pitch, chatting to his coaches via radio in order to dish out any instructions that they want carried out.
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Why is Yankees dugout on first base side?

Others argue that since so many bang-bang plays happen at first base, home-team managers wanted the first-base dugout so they had a better view and, hence, faster access to arguments with the umpire. Some say home teams, like the Nationals, picked the dugout that was larger and plusher.
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Why is there a press box phone in dugout?

MLB is reportedly installing new phones in every dugout to curtail sign-stealing.
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Who hits first home or away?

An inning is broken up into two halves in which the away team bats in the top (first) half, and the home team bats in the bottom (second) half. In baseball, the defense always has the ball—a fact that differentiates it from most other team sports.
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How do they decide who bats first in baseball?

The manager sets up the batting order in such a manner, the four best hitters and sluggers come to the plate as often as possible. In early times of baseball, there was no set order on who came to the plate. Any player not on base could bat.
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What side is the home dugout on?

There's no MLB rule governing the matter, leaving the choice up to the team building the stadium and the architect designing it. Of the 30 MLB stadiums, 18 currently have the home team's dugout on the first-base side of the field and 12 have it on the third-base side.
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What is banana kick in football?

: a kick striking the right or left side of the ball that causes the ball to curve laterally in the air.
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What is sudden death in football?

noun Sports. an overtime period in which a tied contest is won and play is stopped immediately after one of the contestants scores, as in football, or goes ahead, as in golf.
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Are football managers allowed on the pitch?

Managers may not cross the line during play, which restricts them from approaching the pitch. In 1999, FIFA put the fourth official in charge of enforcing this rule, although substitutes may warm up along the side of the pitch.
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What do MLB players do in the dugout?

The dugout is, in fact, a serious place of business where a baseball player spends a large chunk of his career studying opponents, pondering his own game and sharing knowledge with his teammates. Compared to the clubhouse, which is full of creature comforts, it's a surprisingly spartan environment.
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Can goal is scored directly from a corner kick?

A goal may be scored directly from a corner kick, but only against the opposing team; if the ball directly enters the kicker's goal a corner kick is awarded to the opponents.
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Why is a dugout underground?

If spectators didn't like what was going on, they could scream directly behind the players and also weren't opposed to chucking objects at them. Dugouts with walls and a roof, located below ground, provide much needed separation, as well as protection from the elements.
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What were dugouts and Soddies?

What are dugouts and soddies? Dugout home - homes dug into the sides of ravines or small cliffs. A stovepipe jutting from the ground was often the only clear sin of such a dugout home. Soddies - Freestanding houses made by stacking blocks of prairie turf.
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What would you taste in the trenches?

The bulk of their diet in the trenches was bully beef (caned corned beef), bread and biscuits. By the winter of 1916 flour was in such short supply that bread was being made with dried ground turnips. The main food was now a pea-soup with a few lumps of horsemeat.
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Does shell shock still exist?

The term shell shock is still used by the United States' Department of Veterans Affairs to describe certain parts of PTSD, but mostly it has entered into memory, and it is often identified as the signature injury of the War.
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