Driving a car isn't the only thing for which you need a license in France.
When one wants to, say, run a road race in the US one need simply show up at the appropriate time and place, pay a small fee, pin a number to ones shirt and sign a little piece of paper suggesting that race organizers are not liable in the event of accidental injury. The rest is obvious.
In the case of activities like distance running'a solitary sport if there ever was one'it is possible to participate in some events without a license and/or medical certificate, but it comes with a price: you can't be timed! You have to register as a randonneur, or 'walker/jogger,' and your name does not appear in the official results...idea being, I suppose, that you're less likely to have a heart attack if you're not gunning for an impressive place in the final standings. What fun is that?
If you want to play a team sport in any sort of regular fashion, you pretty much need to join a club and get licensed. Same for any sport involving a field, court or other infrastructure: there are, for example, relatively few public-access tennis courts in France, and almost no golf courses that will grant tee times to unlicensed folk.
The bottom line is that you're not going to get very far without a license, and you're not going to get a license ·É¾±³Ù³ó´Ç³Ü³Ù'¦
I try and look at it as an excuse to go see my doctor once a year. Sometimes he makes me do something sporty right there in the office to see if he can make my heart explode. When I turn 40 next year, he says I have to get a stress test in order to get my annual pile of certificates (remember, one for each sport...). While I find the whole idea mildly irritating, it can't hurt to see your doctor once a year, can it?
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Finding The Club That You (probably) Have to Join
French sportifs are pretty into their clubs. One look at the results of a road race (cours à pied) or competitive cycling event (cyclosportif) reveals that about 75% of the finishers (and virtually all of the good ones) log their club affiliation. They often wear matching club uniforms (logical in cycling, perhaps not so much for running?). Although many clubs are omnisport'i.e. affiliations of several sports who share administrative apparatus and some facilities'most people are involved with only one activity: nobody here seems to understand why I want to do more than one sport. What's more, many see their clubs as an important aspect of their social lives: if I spent as much time at the tennis club as some of my fellow members, I wouldn't have the time to do anything else.
2) Tennis (tennis): 1,125,201 The number of tennis clubs in France is astounding. What's more, many of them are affordable and decidedly not country-club in character.
5) Basketball (basket): 449,263 It's not just Tony Parker anymore: a growing number of French players are leaving their mark on perhaps the only American game to go 100% international.
6) Golf (golf): 410,377 Golf people in France have taken great pains to undo their sport's snobby image, and it's starting to bear fruit: this number represents a 30% increase from just a few years ago. Still, golf courses (terrains de golf) are rare, and the casual players that keep most American courses in business are almost non-existent here. I miss playing the occasional round of golf, but not badly enough to join yet another club.
7) Handball (handball, commonly abbreviated hand): 392,761 The greatest sport that nobody in the States plays! Handball is worth a look for people who like team sports but don't go in for soccer, basketball or...
8) Rugby (rugby): 322,231 France is one of the world's great rugby nations. More popular than soccer in the southwestern part of the country, rugby offers fantastic camaraderie, whole-body fitness and, at the pro level, one of the greatest stadium experiences around. If I were only built for it...
10) Swimming (natation): 286,392 Proximity to large bodies of water must have something to do with it. Indeed, if this list went to eleven like Nigel Tufnel's amplifier we would next find sailing, with over 250,000 members.
*All numbers taken from the 2009 official report of the Minister of Sport, which can be downloaded here:
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