This is the criteria for how a sport can become officially recognised by Sport England.
Essential Purpose
The purpose of the activity must be sporting and not a means to another purpose.
The Council of Europe’s European Sports Charter 1993 definition of sport
The sporting activity must meet the definition of sport contained in the Council of Europe’s
European Sports Charter 1993, which is:
“Sport means all forms of physical activity which, through casual or organised participation
aim at expressing or improving physical fitness and mental well-being forming social
relationships or obtaining results in competition at all levels.”
Rules and Organisation
The sporting activity must have an established structure, defined by rules, and where appropriate,
organised national or international competition.
Uniqueness
The sporting activity must be physically or culturally unique, and not a variation of an already
recognised sport. Where an activity is similar or closely aligned to a sporting activity that is already
recognised, the Sports Councils reserve the right to consult with the body that manages that
sporting activity.
Sustainability
The sporting activity must demonstrate that it is here to stay, through levels of sustained
participation or a relationship to significant international participation.
Risk
The Sports Councils reserve the right to defer an application for recognition of a sporting activity
until its is made in conjunction with a governing body application, where a sporting activity involves
a level of risk requiring management by a suitably positioned National Governing Body.
Other Considerations
Political, moral, ethical and legal considerations will be taken into account when assessing the
application for recognition of a sporting activity. A sport must also demonstrate that there are no
barriers to participation that could be viewed as creating inequity of access.
For paintball, we have no recognised governing body nationally or internationally, it could easily be argued that paintball is not sustainable at the highest levels and finally there are no definitive rules that everyone plays by. There are different gun settings for different tournys, no set criteria for bunker arrangements, timings etc.
Essential Purpose
The purpose of the activity must be sporting and not a means to another purpose.
The Council of Europe’s European Sports Charter 1993 definition of sport
The sporting activity must meet the definition of sport contained in the Council of Europe’s
European Sports Charter 1993, which is:
“Sport means all forms of physical activity which, through casual or organised participation
aim at expressing or improving physical fitness and mental well-being forming social
relationships or obtaining results in competition at all levels.”
Rules and Organisation
The sporting activity must have an established structure, defined by rules, and where appropriate,
organised national or international competition.
Uniqueness
The sporting activity must be physically or culturally unique, and not a variation of an already
recognised sport. Where an activity is similar or closely aligned to a sporting activity that is already
recognised, the Sports Councils reserve the right to consult with the body that manages that
sporting activity.
Sustainability
The sporting activity must demonstrate that it is here to stay, through levels of sustained
participation or a relationship to significant international participation.
Risk
The Sports Councils reserve the right to defer an application for recognition of a sporting activity
until its is made in conjunction with a governing body application, where a sporting activity involves
a level of risk requiring management by a suitably positioned National Governing Body.
Other Considerations
Political, moral, ethical and legal considerations will be taken into account when assessing the
application for recognition of a sporting activity. A sport must also demonstrate that there are no
barriers to participation that could be viewed as creating inequity of access.
For paintball, we have no recognised governing body nationally or internationally, it could easily be argued that paintball is not sustainable at the highest levels and finally there are no definitive rules that everyone plays by. There are different gun settings for different tournys, no set criteria for bunker arrangements, timings etc.