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Saturday, February 27, 2016

Matching Back Bowls



There is a tactic called ‘matching bowls’. As first explained to me, matching bowls means intentionally placing your bowl close to a bowl or group of bowls belonging to the opposition because these could all count against you should the jack be displaced. In fact, this is not an adequate explanation of the tactic. I pieced together a better understanding by watching the Indoor World Championships on Youtube.
Matching bowls may be useful towards the end of a match when your side is well in the lead. The purpose of the tactic is to limit the opponents’ possible scores in the remaining ends. The normal concern is that the opponents might trail the jack with one of their last bowls to a group of catcher bowls and thereby achieve a big score. Matching bowls correctly requires you to place a bowl between two of the opposition bowls. If your bowl ends up sitting exactly on a line between the centers of two opposing bowls, it can be proven geometrically that there will be nowhere on the rink that the jack can end up where both of the two opposing bowls can count.

This understanding should be combined with an awareness of where the jack can realistically be trailed to decide upon the best placement of the matching bowl. 

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