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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Desperation Shots to Win at Lawn Bowls

When your team is losing badly to a team that you feel is inferior, the tactic is often to try low percentage shots in order to come back to win. Usual all this achieves is to deepen the hole you are in and widen the margin of defeat. Comebacks are more often the result of the weaker team finally running out of luck and handing over victory; so, it is a better idea to just slow down the game, keep delivering the best percentage bowl and await developments. When the opponents see you starting even a slight comeback they can easily lose concentration and collapse. Keep the pressure on!

I do not mean by this that in the last end, when you need to remove an opposing bowl in order to get the 4 shots you need, you forgo the on-shot because you are only trained for a dead draw. Ultimately you must try to do what you need to do to win. Simply, be sure that it really is the last chance and all the more likely opportunities have been exhausted. In particular, be sure it will not be possible for the opponents to flub victory on their own.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Do You Really want Lawn Bowling to be Attractive to Younger People? The Acid Test is Respotting the Jack



Many old-school lawn bowlers affirm repeatedly that they want to encourage young people to take up lawn bowling. But, very often they are not prepared to introduce those modifications to the rules of the game that would encourage younger people to be more enthusiastic. A case in point is the rule about dead ends.

Presently in Ontario, the local rule is that each team is allowed to cause one dead end in a match and that end will be replayed, but after that one dead end, any further dead end caused by the same team gives one point to the opposition. This discourages drive shots.  The tactical merit of drive shots aside, drives are exciting, dramatic, and are practiced more by younger bowlers than by older. Thus, favoring a rule that discourages drives, encourages the view that lawn bowls is an old persons’ game-sort of shuffle board with wheels!

It is not as if there is no good alternative that would limit matches to the specified number of games while not penalizing heavy shots. Respotting the jack to a preset spot if it is driven out of bounds is already used by professional bowlers and serves well to limit game durations. The change was actually introduced to make bowls more suitable for television. It just happens to be something that would make bowls more youth friendly. The trouble is that the senior members who run local tournaments, very often, on their own initiative, just opt for the rule that penalizes the team that sends the jack out of bounds.