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Sunday, July 23, 2017
A Surprise Win
I’m not crowing. It was probably a fluke of nature; but, if
my recounting of my bowls experience is going to be complete, I must note it.
Playing mens’ pairs with the buddy who got me into bowls, we won an open
provincial tournament!
Thursday, July 6, 2017
Proper Visualization of the Course of Your Lawn Bowl: the Final Secret to Controlling Weight
Barry
Pickup says, “Study the track your bowl takes en route to the head. Learn
that track, memorize it. Learn to visualize that track before you deliver a
bowl. A properly delivered bowl will always follow the same track unless
deflected by a foreign object or uneven green. Learn that track well and you
are a long way towards bringing a bowl to rest exactly where you want it.”
Before a high-performance lawn bowler delivers a
difficult shot, you will often see him or her standing about halfway down the
rink looking at the head or walking backwards towards the mat. What is going on
in that person’s mind?
I think after examining the
head from near the forward ditch, the expert bowler has already made up his/her
mind what shot to try. This close up looking from the direction of the mat most
probably relates to the visualization of the shot. From the mat, the crucial
details of the last few meters traveling of the bowl cannot be visualized.
Often the bowl has already disappeared from view among the other bowls.
Head Reading at Lawn Bowls: The Entry Port Motif
An entry port on the right-hand side leading to the yellow jack: the rink runs from lower left to upper right |
The chances for a successful
draw to the jack are improved when the port configuration of bowls is present.
A port is a funnel-shaped passage, ideally, that leads towards the jack at the
same angle as the normal angle of draw of your bowl. The funnel shape is marked
at two or more places by bowls so that if the delivery is either wide or narrow
but a touch heavy it will be deflected back and funneled in the direction of
the jack.
Ports are not visible from
the mat. They need to be identified by the team member directing the head. Because it is the bowler who knows the bias of his own bowls
best, the bowler often needs to be called to the head to confirm the wisdom of what is
being proposed.
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