The
simplest tactical rule is: change things when you are losing and keep things
the same when you are winning. Most game players judge winning or losing by the
score, but I think this is simplistic and leads to poorer as often as to better
tactical decisions. If we look at any run of three or four consecutive ends in
a lawn bowling match, luck as much as anything else may determine the difference
in points scored because you do not score anything unless you have the shot
bowl. Perhaps a more revealing indication of whether you are bowling better or worse
than an opponent is what proportion of the best four bowls in each end of the
series are yours! Even if the opponents score shot, if for example you have the
second, third, and fourth shots you are doing very well and with any reasonable
luck will eventually outscore your opponents.
Shifting to the opposite perspective, just because you have had the shot in
each of three consecutive ends, the opposition could have had eight of the
twelve closest bowls in those ends. If so, you are being out-bowled and ought
to change tactics. I would not want to bet on you winning the match if things continue as they
are going in this situation. As things stand when your luck changes’ those
opponents are going to have some multi-point ends. It is good tactics to try to
improve your chances now by changing some combination of mat placement and jack
length, trying to disrupt your opponents’ good bowling consistency before it
leads to a scoring spree.
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