Sport and leisure
cricket, rugby union and rugby league are considered to be the national sports of England.
Football maintains a consistent popularity across the country and is often indicative of trends across wider culture in England, such as in clothing and music. The increase in hooliganism amongst football fans in the 1970s and 1980s can be in part attributed to a parallel rise in unemployment. As England, and the United Kingdom as a whole, returned to a more affluent and stable financial position in the late 1990s, violent football culture was transformed in to a culture where families were welcome, and nationalism lost its aggressive edge.
Different sports directly represent the different social classes within England. Rugby league, for instance, is generally seen as the sport of the Northern working class, whereas cricket and rugby union have their origins in the private schools of the 18th and 19th centuries respectively.
However, since the English Rugby World Cup victory in 2003, the sport has seen a revival in widespread popularity across the class system. Likewise, after the Ashes victory of 2005, cricket has regained much of the popularity it had lost throughout the 1990s.
Tennis is also one of England's major sports. This can be seen through one of the most prestigious tournaments in tennis, Wimbledon, being held in England.
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