The first recorded hardball roller hockey game was played in 1878 at the
Denmark Rink in London, England. It was first known as "roller polo" due to the introduction of
polo in 1876, skaters took polo to the rinks. The sport was introduced into the
United States in 1882 with the formation of the National Roller Polo League in
Dayton,
Ohio, with teams in seven cities. Roller Hockey was played by the famous silent film stars, Stan Laurel and Charlie Chaplin, in the early 1900s. The first World Championships in roller hockey were held in 1936 in
Stuttgart,
Germany. The contest was between the Vincent Harriers and Page Street Monarchs. Another reel taken in the UK shows men competing in an outdoor enclosure and titled, "Roller Hockey at Victoria Park, London (Wasps v Wanderers)". Another is simply titled, "Roller Hockey (1950-1959)". One reel was shot in Europe in 1940 with young male players, specifically in "
Holland,
Netherlands", however the players use sticks with blades resembling
ice hockey sticks rather than
bandy sticks or curved sticks styled in the manner seen today. This particular reel is titled, "Pathetone Lightens The "Blackout" With - ROLLER HOCKEY!". The film was shot at a seaside town in southern Holland at a popular resort called
Scheveningen while crowd of people watched, "from the sea front promenade". Rink hockey was not organized by the Roller Skating Rink Operators Association (RSROA) in the United States until 1959. The
Pan American Games introduced roller skating as a sport in 1979 and debuted roller hockey the same year. The sport was a regular part of
The World Games program in
1981, 1985, 1989, 1993, and 2001. Due to the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, World Skate banned Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials from its competitions, and will not stage any events in Russia or Belarus in 2022. == Name ==