Neha Patil (Editor)

Ice hockey in Scotland

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
Scotland

Governing body
  
Scottish Ice Hockey

Ice hockey in Scotland

National team
  
Men's national team; Women's national team

ice hockey in Scotland is the most popular indoor sport in Scotland, with a fairly established presence in each of the population centres and a spectator attendance lower only to football and rugby union. The term "hockey" is usually reserved for field hockey in Scotland, and "ice hockey" is normally referred to by its full form.

Contents

As with curling (a sport of Scottish origin), the game tends to be more commonly played indoors these days, due to milder winters in the past few decades. Ice hockey is thus played on indoor rinks in Scotland, with the possible exception of street hockey, which is played at an informal level within the country.

Governing body

The national governing body is Scottish Ice Hockey.

Shinty and the possible Scottish origins of ice hockey

Despite the official introduction of ice hockey into Scotland in the twentieth century, its roots in Scotland go far deeper. To this day, ice hockey is often referred to as "shinny" and "hurtling" in Canada, suggesting a tie up with shinty and Ireland's hurling. Shinty is the national stick game of Scotland, and Phil Dracket who favours an English origin for the game, in the Fens of Cambridgeshire admits:

"in the formative years of the game the dividing line between hockey, bandy and shinty was always a fine one."

However, the similarities between the two sports, post-codification are still notable:

"[in shinty] as in ice hockey, both sides of the hook [of the stick] are used to strike the ball, but there is no restriction on the height to which the stick may be raised."

References

Ice hockey in Scotland Wikipedia