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Monday, October 10, 2016

My Lawn Bowls Delivery After Five Years of Trials

Recently I bowled in a pair’s tournament against my wife.  Fortuitously, because she was ’leading’ and I was ‘skipping’, we were always at opposite ends of the rink. The evening following the match, my wife told me that the particular background for the rink we were playing on enabled her to clearly see small movements of my trunk and that about 40% of the time my body position while I was taking my line differed from its position during my actual delivery; furthermore, when it did not deviate, my shots were clearly more effective.

Following from this sharp observation I have simplified my delivery so as to eliminate this difference. Subsequently, in practices, when I worked at keeping line and length constant, my bowls ended much more closely grouped than ever before.

As I have said repeatedly, one should on balance resist changing one’s delivery because unlearning routine is difficult; however, the changes in this case did not add, but removed, elements of my delivery routine while notably improving the outcomes.

What is left:

1.     Standing behind the mat: I decide on the shot; grip the bowl appropriately https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8dr5UQ6XeB0
I imagine the path of the bowl from mat to target.
2.     I step onto the mat and assume the Shooters’ Stance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3b9cKvPeWj4&t=121s .
3.     I bend forward from the waist keeping both legs straight and steady my bowl with my free hand at knee height and just beside the knee of my forward foot.
4.     With my head over the aim line, I look along this imaginary line and select and hold a stare point about 5 meters in front of the mat.

6.     I move my non-bowling hand from supporting the bowl onto the knee of the leg that will be advancing.
7.    Without straightening up I slowly draw the bowl back along the aim line like an archer drawing a bow.
8.     Just before I begin the forward pendulum swing, as I am completing my backswing, I step forward and plant my advancing foot.
9.     With my wrist still cocked, I release the bowl at the bottom of the swing.
                    I follow through but do not add rotation to the bowl either with my wrist or fingers (my bowling arm should finish at an angle of about 45 degrees to the ground).

 AAs I swing, my body weight should move forward so that I tend to take a step off the front of the mat after the bowl is released.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Clarke... I find myself in exactly the same position after the same period playing, but with my backswing. I've found taking too full a backswing appears to cause unbalance and thus divergence from the correct line. Somewhat frustratingly, I found this out in the last game of 2016. So I can't wait for APril 2017 to put the change into practice and hopefully bring greater success.

    If it was easy, we wouldn't be doing it! Regards. John

    ReplyDelete
  2. In 2023 I recognized the importance of 'walking off the mat' in order to get one's rhythm speed correct as demonstrated by Aaron Wilson.

    ReplyDelete

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