Well, my point was more generalised than going in any depth on the subject, but the originality of "sport" derived from the pastimes of activities such as hunting etc etc hence "he was good sport" the development of social pastimes into sport is a natural progression. Paintball fits into all of the characteristics of a sport, like many other supports. For example: Sports and there association with weekend play was due to the fitting in of working hours, football was played Saturday afternoon and Sundays because people generally worked Mon-Fri and Saturday morning, Paintball has developed in the same llight. Also to add that other rules of football and similar sports where developed through the working environment, i.e whistles, warnings, lines etc etc you can link paintball in parrallel to other sports, paintballers wear paintball related gear (t-shirts, hats etc) , 70% of people who wear sports wear is for fashion purposes, therefore commercialisation and paintball is similar to many other sports. Baseball in America and basketball used to have much longer game times and fewer points/homeruns etc, but globalisation and commercialisation wanted to see faster games with more points to attract more fans in, the same is with X-ball, this list of comparisons truly goes on....Ok... you're using Chess and Darts to justify your argument is absolutely perfect. Paintball in the UK is basically a blend of the 2. Unfit, beer-drinking men trying to get an angle on their opposition in order to "kill" them. Perfect.
As for bog diving... when was the last time you risked using a portaloo at a site or tournament?
Come off it! You'll have to use some better examples than that to justify your argument! I hope your dissertation is better than that
Now for those people saying it isnt a sport because it isnt "recognised" or has international rules etc etc well, then that seems ignorant to a culture other than the western bureaucratic establishment of sport, it is apparent that in the west sport has developed initality from a past-time activity into a sport (with the professionalisation of players E.g paid players not "gentlemen" who played for enjoyment such as cricket) now into a multi-billion commercial enterprise with the focus on global profit margins. What about those small unknown sports in villages in Indian, where 4 villages come together to participate in an ancient sport (similar to football but has hundreds of players etc) or the Mongolian horse racing but local villages, they dont have any of this international infrastructure, but do we dictate to them if it is a sport or not? we make not like it or be interested in it, but ultimately to those people who care about the competition and strive to win it is more definitely a sport.
This is what makes a sport, its the people who make it.