Sports & Recreation

Physical contests and recreational games have long played a part in human society. In both team and solo sports, the human body has been pushed to its limits in the name of improving athletic performance and in order to break record upon record. The ancient Olympic Games are an early example of the contests in which humans have engaged to showcase physical prowess. In modern times, sports and games have evolved into a lucrative and competitive industry, while other leisure activities, such as card and video games, can be competitive or just serve as a way to unwind or socialize.
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Featured content, December 25, 2025

golf
Golf, a cross-country game in which a player strikes a small ball with various clubs from a series of starting points (teeing...
number game
Number game, any of various puzzles and games that involve aspects of mathematics. Mathematical recreations comprise puzzles...
bridge
Bridge, card game derived from whist, through the earlier variants bridge whist and auction bridge. The essential features...
bullfighting
Bullfighting, the national spectacle of Spain and many Spanish-speaking countries, in which a bull is ceremoniously fought...
rugby
Rugby, football game played with an oval ball by two teams of 15 players (in rugby union play) or 13 players (in rugby league...
basketball
Basketball, game played between two teams, typically of five players each, on a rectangular court. Each team tries to score...
American football
American football, version of the sport of football that evolved from English rugby and soccer (association football); it...
athletics
Athletics, a variety of competitions in running, walking, jumping, and throwing events. Although these contests are called...

Sports & Recreation Quizzes

A Study of History: Fact or Fiction?
Is there a lost city under the Mediterranean Sea? In days of old, were all pirate flags black? From the Dark Ages to the...
A Study of History: Who, What, Where, and When?
When was the world’s first detective bureau founded? Where was the 1939 World’s Fair held? From Karl Marx to penicillin,...
A Study of Music
In classical music, what would you call a woman with a very high singing voice? Test your smarts in this study of music.
A Study of Music: Fact or Fiction?
Does harmony refer to how fast music is played? Does syncopation mean that an instrument is off-key? See if your mental notes...
A Study of Musicians
What kind of music was Jelly Roll Morton famous for? What was Bob Dylan’s birth name? From Woodstock to Graceland, test whether...
A Study of Poems: Fact or Fiction?
In the poem A Visit from Saint Nicholas, how many reindeer does Santa have? Is Xanadu a real place? What king does...
A Study of Poetry
If roses are red and violets blue, in poetry, what does the word "foot" refer to? Take your knowledge beyond red roses and...
A Study of Religion: Fact or Fiction?
Do Sikh texts contain many images of God? Do Muslims always face north in prayer? Sort fact from fiction in this study of...
A Study of William Shakespeare
How many sonnets did William Shakespeare publish? Where is Romeo and Juliet set? From couplets and quatrains to...
A Study of Writers
What country was William Butler Yeats from? Stephen King is generally associated with what genre? From knighthood to the...

Sports & Recreation Subcategories

Super Bowl LV champions Football
Although baseball has traditionally been seen as America’s national pastime, gridiron football has made its own indelible impact on the American sports landscape. Decades of informal, student-organized collegiate games ultimately gave rise to a thriving college football scene and to the hugely popular professional version of the game. Despite early and continued concerns about the game’s violence, gridiron football eventually became the United States’ leading spectator sport, and it has achieved a degree of international popularity through television.
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Ichiro Suzuki Baseball
Although the United States can be credited with developing several popular sports that were adopted internationally, it is baseball that Americans have traditionally recognized as the “national pastime.” Baseball’s early history was interwoven with and reflective of major social and cultural cleavages, but the sport also proved to possess great unifying power, as the experience of playing, watching, and talking about baseball became one of the nation’s great common denominators. Additionally, we have baseball to thank (or point fingers at) for the continued status of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” as one of the best-known songs among Americans.
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Stephen Curry Basketball
Basketball, game played between two teams of five players each on a rectangular court, usually indoors. Each team tries to score by tossing the ball through the opponent’s goal, an elevated horizontal hoop and net called a basket.
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Sidney Crosby; Nicklas Lidstrom Hockey
Ice hockey, game between two teams, each usually having six players, who wear skates and compete on an ice rink. The object is to propel a vulcanized rubber disk, the puck, past a goal line and into a net guarded by a goaltender, or goalie. With its speed and its frequent physical contact, ice hockey has become one of the most popular of international sports.
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La Liga action Soccer
Football, also called association football or soccer, game in which two teams of 11 players, using any part of their bodies except their hands and arms, try to maneuver the ball into the opposing team’s goal. Only the goalkeeper is permitted to handle the ball and may do so only within the penalty area surrounding the goal. The team that scores more goals wins.
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Discovering cricket: From the “Timeless Test” to T20 Cricket
Cricket, England’s national summer sport, is played throughout the world, particularly in Australia, India, Pakistan, the West Indies, and the British Isles. The advent of Twenty20 cricket and the wild success of the Indian Premier League in the first decade of the 21st century led to a period of great innovation in the game.
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Michael Phelps Olympic Sports
Olympic Games, athletic festival that originated in ancient Greece and was revived in the late 19th century. Before the 1970s the Games were officially limited to competitors with amateur status, but in the 1980s many events were opened to professional athletes. Currently, the Games are open to all, even the top professional athletes in basketball and football (soccer).
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(Top) Obverse side of a silver decadrachm showing head of the nymph  Arethusa surrounded by dolphins; (bottom) on the reverse side, quadriga (chariot) with charioteer being crowned by Nike. By the master Euainetos, c. 400 bc, struck in Syracuse, Sicily. Diameter 36 mm. Games, Hobbies & Recreational Activities
This general category includes a selection of more specific topics.
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subcategory placeholder Other Sports
This general category includes a selection of more specific topics.
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