Hard to say. We know very little about his personal life because he did not keep a diary and nobody during his lifetime thought that such things were important. The plays refer to a number of sports including tennis (Henry V), bowling (Richard II, Cymbeline), Wrestling (As You Like It), Archery, hunting and hawking, but it is highly unlikely that Shakespeare himself engaged in any of them except perhaps bowling, which was a very common pastime back then.
The sport most alluded to in Shakespeare's work is bowls. Shakespeare was a bowler.
There is no evidence that William Shakespeare engaged in any sports. He might have done, but there is no reason to say so.
Any way you like.
Shakespeare did not leave any indications of what his personal likes and dislikes were.
We have no records at all of what Shakespeare did or didn't like at any point in his life. That part of hislife is completely unknown.
The sport most alluded to in Shakespeare's work is bowls. Shakespeare was a bowler.
There is no evidence that William Shakespeare engaged in any sports. He might have done, but there is no reason to say so.
Any way you like.
Shakespeare did not leave any indications of what his personal likes and dislikes were.
The role of children, in Shakespeare's time and at any other time, is to learn how to be adults.
They like Shakespeare's poetry for the same reasons they like any poetry: it makes them think, it inspires passion, and it uses language in a beautiful way.
yes he did because he did not like any do it for him
We have no records at all of what Shakespeare did or didn't like at any point in his life. That part of hislife is completely unknown.
Unique sports like potato sack races or just any sports like, baseball and football and such?
no
We can't answer this because we don't know which was Shakespeare's first play, or what he liked about anything, including any of his plays.
jousting, archery, and hunting with falcons...