My partners are in this picture from another club and another day |
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Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Good Habits that haven’t become Second Nature can Break Down under Pressure
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
The Advantage of Winning the Toss in Lawn Bowls
At the start of a lawn bowls match there is a coin flip or some other random means to select the team that has the right to take the mat first, roll the jack, and grass the first bowl. At my club in Canada, James Gardens, there is a widespread opinion that playing first is judged a disadvantage, and winning the toss invariably results in a request for the other side to lead off first. That is, very often, even in tournament play, the team winning the toss chooses to bowl second. It seems to me this is an immediate admission that your lead does not have good control of the jack. Winning the toss should be an advantage, so long as the lead is skilled enough to use it. Bowling the jack followed expeditiously by grassing the first bowl is the only time in an end that one bowler has the opportunity to bowl twice in immediate succession. But it is an advantage only if the jack is bowled with exactly the same motion that you use for your bowls. This allows the lead to get a reading of the weight that will be needed and to apply that information immediately.
Suppose that the opposition has won the toss but elects to bowl second. This gives your side an immediate opportunity to play, for example, a short end with the jack close to the ditch. Your lead should already have practiced to bring the mat forward to the 14-meter line and to bowl the jack to within two meters of the ditch. If the placement of the jack succeeds, your lead gets to grass his first bowl at a target (s)he has just placed. The opposing lead, usually also a less experienced player, is faced with the task of not bowling short because this is strategically inferior and not bowling into the ditch where the shot would be lost completely. Moreover, the opposing lead has had no more than the practice ends to determine the aiming angles and the proper weight. Isn’t this just the kind of pressure situation you want to create quickly for an opponent?
Now suppose the least favorable situation plays out and your lead ditches the jack when trying to place it. The consequence is nothing more than that the other lead gets the chance to set the length for the end which (s)he could have chosen when the toss was first won, but (s)he still losses the opportunity to bowl immediately afterward delivering the jack. Your side still gets to grass the first bowl and has had the opportunity to work with the jack to get a better idea of the appropriate weight.
This is only one set play strategy; others are possible. Another opening strategy is simply to set up the longest end possible with the mat as close to the back ditch and the jack as close as possible to the front ditch. Having to bowl long is the most stressful for bowlers with poor style and imperfect balance. Having to bowl long increases the tendency to bowl narrowly on the forehand and too wide on the backhand, because there is a tendency to hold onto the bowl longer and the arm may start to be pulled across one’s body just as the bowl is released.
Whatever the case, the team provided the first roll of the jack should most often have a preferred position of the mat that is not the standard 6 feet from the back gutter, and a preferred length, which might be, for example, a long jack from a position more forward than 2 meters. Your lead may have a length of jack that s(he) is most comfortable with. This 'natural length' can be determined by using the standard bowling motion as for a delivery to a long jack. Measure this length of travel for the jack, add two meters to it, and count this length back from the forward ditch. This is the preferred mat position for your lead. Now measure the mat’s distance from the back ditch. This is how much your lead should bring the mat forward if your side wins the toss or is ceded it.
If a team has practiced using these parameters and the opposition has not, this can be a distinct advantage. I noticed this when I played last year in a regular game wherein the opposing lead always moved the mat about 18 feet out from the back gutter. It led to me wrongly estimate my length.
Every time that your team wins the mat the jack can be placed at your preferred ‘practice position and length’. The opposition may soon choose to take the mat rather than give it away.
Whatever one does; whether one takes the mat when one wins the toss or ceded it to the opposition, what you choose should be part of a pre-established strategy. That is, it should be worked out beforehand, understood by all the team, practiced, and executed without any discussion. In this way, no team member will be flustered, while all the opponents will be surprised. This is an excellent way to start a match! You are clearly in control of the action.
It is important to start briskly. For example, the lead can immediately bring the mat forward and center it with the help of the skip. Mark the center-front of the mat with chalk so you can easily find the place again. If the jack is successfully placed near the ditch, the second carries the lead’s, and then the rest of the team’s bowls up to close behind the mat. The opponents can be left to move their own bowls. The skip quickly centers the jack with the help of the rink markers and gets minor adjustments from the lead. Then the lead smartly grasses that first bowl. The other lead now has the mat but is unlikely to be set to play.
If you are going to try this, your lead needs to practice for it. In Canada, the springtime is a good time to practice it. Do it before everyone gets their bowling season started because it is easier to get hold of a half-dozen jacks to practice with when the green is not busy.
This is an opportunity to emphasize again that that between two bad choices it is better if that first bowl is ditched rather than having it substantially short; err on the side of length. With a short jack near the ditch, the probability is highest that the jack will end up in the ditch before all the bowls have been played. Short bowls will not score. Back bowls will be precious.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
The Tyro Lead Bowler in Triples
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Lawn Bowling Strategies for Competition
Strategy is invoked for serious competitions where winning is the overriding purpose. In bowls, both strategy and tactics are decided by the skip and executed by the team. Never apply strategies such as proposed here in friendly games. Strategies can embarrass opponents. It draws attention to and belabors their shortcomings. This of course causes bad feelings. Similarly, being a stickler for the rules, which often is part of a strategy, is bad form in a social game. When playing for fun, the uncontested unanimous purpose is for everyone to have an enjoyable experience; so be friendly, helpful, and accommodating to teammates and opponents alike.
Yes- a skip should still take advantage of opponents’ weaknesses during a social game in a tactical way, but he or she should not share this estimation of opposing individual weaknesses with other team members, as one does with a strategy, because that insight is a criticism of another person’s game. Similarly in ‘friendlies’, the skip should not pound away at the opponent’s weaknesses, end after end, but only use that advantage at critical points in the game. Even in a casual game someone must win and it might as well be your side.
So that being said here are some Battle Strategies for Cutthroat Competition
Against Less Well Conditioned Opponents.
Competition here should be like war. Take advantage of the terrain. If it is hot and sunny, take a sun umbrella so your representative at the head is shaded. Wear hats, sun glasses, and wear sun screen as needed. Play steadily but not quickly. If it is within the house rules insist upon the two practice ends. Do not agree to shorten the required number of ends in a match if the tournament director proposes taking a vote on this. Take time to measure. Move the mat up and back regularly. Do not get discouraged if down at first but just try to remain close. Wait for the opponents to tire, sicken, or get angry.
Against a Generally Weaker Team.
Play long jacks almost exclusively. Having to bowl with more force exaggerates defects in a bowler’s delivery. If a bowler is off balance at the end of the delivery, long jacks will exaggerate the damage. Jacks near the ditch frighten inexperienced players who do not want to lose their bowl in the ditch. They do not sufficiently appreciate the weakness of bowling short.
Against a Frail Skip.
Bowlers are promoted from lead to second to vice to skip as they become experienced, but, out of courtesy, (which thankfully lawn bowling is full of at the social level) they are not demoted as they age. Often a person continues to play skip even after frailty has reduced performance. Their tactical insight may still be strong but the actual bowling has weakened. Again play long jacks. More pressure will be on the skip to save when bowling long. Requiring more force in the delivery exaggerates delivery defects.
Against a Relatively Weak/Inexperienced Lead.
Bring up the mat to about 2 meters short of the first hog line so that your own lead can easily and reproducibly place the jack near the ditch. Fear of the ditch will result in short bowls from an inexperienced lead. A strong head may be built before their skip comes to the mat. Your more experienced lead should recognize the importance of positional play generally and its added importance when it is easier to move the jack into the ditch.
Against a Team of Technically Better Players.
If within the house rules, insist upon the two practice ends. If you exceed the time limit for the game it will usually be to your advantage. The more ends played, the more likely your opponents are to win. Good luck can get you ahead but given enough time it will not keep you ahead. Let it be the opponents who must play faster to speed up the game. Watch for foot faulting and call the umpire. Taking a picture of the foot faulting on your cell phone camera could be unnerving! This can really throw off the concentration of an opponent or create friction within that team. Call the umpire if the opponents disturb bowls or otherwise misplay. Don’t try shots beyond your skill level trying to draw even. Just aim to stay close and look for a lucky break or that situation where their concentration is lost. Give the opposing side the impression that you think they should win easily. Be friendly and respectful but do not be bullied. Know the rules down pat because you are going to be a stickler about them. Express surprise and attribute your good shots to luck. The further the match proceeds before the other side realizes it could lose the better for you.
Against Evenly Matched Opponents
Don’t beat yourself. Don’t disturb the head when you are shot and have the last bowl particularly when you are ahead. If ahead only try to add safely to the count. If you have shot with two bowls remaining but they have last bowl, put a safe shot at the back. Force them to make the shot that beats you, don’t do it for them. If you have one of the other specific advantages named here apply that strategy as well.
Against Less Skilled Opponents
In a tournament, the margin of all your victories often determines the overall winners. Also, there are prizes for high game etc.. Do not be casual, relaxed, over-friendly with those you overmatch. The time to mentor is during friendly social games. In competition concentrate and pile up the score. Beginners play more slowly, so you may need to speed up to be sure you finish in the required time and have the opportunity to score in all the ends.
Against Older Players with Joint Problems
Call for a measure when competing bowls are close. Usually the other side will invite you to go right ahead with it. With longer measurements, however, you will need to ask for the assistance of the opposing second, which necessarily involves that player getting down on the playing surface. I have seen situations where it seems the other side concedes the point, rather than have to take the trouble to measure! I do not encourage you to do this in a seniors event. That seems too cruel; but in an open competition, it is the best competitors in every respect that should win.
Playing Away against a Home Team
Arrive early to take practice at right angles to the direction of play in the competition to get a feel for the weight needed to deliver bowls to both short and long jacks. Know in advance the tournament director’s ruling about practice ends before starting play. If within the house rules, insist upon the two practice ends. You will be unfamiliar both with the speed of the greens and which is the narrow and which the wide side for your draw shots. Your opponents know this. You could fall quickly and irrevocably behind if you don’t use every opportunity to learn quickly in practice.
Playing at Home Against a Visiting Team
All the opposite of the suggests above apply. Try to get the game started immediately.
Lawn Bowling to very short Jacks at the Hog Line on very fast Greens
The James Garden surface is a curly synthetic plastic material that is sand packed and very fast. Some of Canada’s best competitive bowlers (Fred Wallbank, Steve McKerihen) belong here because the surface is said to be very similar in running qualities to the short dry grass in Australia. The same surface is installed at the Likas Bowling complex in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia where I spent this last winter.
The problem I was struggling with is that it is very difficult to deliver a bowl slow enough here to just reach a jack that is within a meter of the hog line. I found that I must use no backswing whatever; the bowling motion needs to start with my bowling arm hanging limp downward and then I must take a very small step forward; furthermore, the forward motion of my delivery arm must not start until my forward foot is well planted. If the forward arm motion began while my body weight was still shifting forward the bowl was several meters too long.
Those who are accustomed to bowling on natural grass in Canada would have to qualitatively change their delivery for such a fast surface and this can be an advantage at the outset of play against them.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Median of Medians as a Measure of Improvement for Lawn Bowls Practice
http://www.suncitylawnbowls.com/files/judson_accuracy.pdf
What do you do if two bowls collide? Nothing -it is just as likely that the collision improves your median length as deteriorates it. If you can improve your scoring by promoting your bowls this should be measured as an improvement.
You might ask what do I do with my fourth bowl when performing this test. I direct mine at one of the alternate targets after I have thrown my three test bowls. Choose this new target to minimize any possibility of colliding with your test bowls.
Over time this measure should give a pretty good indication of whether you are improving or just maintaining the status quo.
Friday, April 19, 2013
The Delivery at Lawn Bowls: Plant that Forward Stepping Foot
The other day I was working on my draw shot as a good novice lead bowler should.
My left-right accuracy was not as good
as it had been the day before. It wasn’t because I did not have as good a stare
point . Both days I had laid down a 3-4
meter long string on the surface of the rink from the mat towards the head and
was attempting to lay my bowl right down the length of that string. The problem
was that the previous day I was for some reason just more consistently right on top of that
line. If there had been no string I would not have noticed that the two days
differed by how close I was coming to my aim line because that difference was often
no more than two centimeters. Some experimentation, focusing on different
aspects of my deliver, identified the key difference: I was not firmly planting
the foot with which I stepped forward before starting the forward pendulum motion
of my delivery arm. When I made sure that my stepping forward was complete
before the forward swing began it made that slight difference in accuracy
following the aim line and the bowls returned to being more consistently close
to the target.
From now on making sure my forward foot is well planted will be the first thing
I check when things start to go wrong
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Thanks to the Likas Lawn Bowling Complex in Sabah, Malaysia
To avoid the winter ice and snow of Canada, I spent January through March of 2013 in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. This is in the tropics on the island of Borneo in what we westerners used to call the East Indies. Malaysia has a big program teaching lawn bowling to young people and I witnessed the skill of these students while playing at the Likas Lawn Bowling Complex in Kota Kinabalu. I was welcomed enthusiastically to play at this facility and for this I would like to particularly thank the President, Ladislaus Maluda, who answered my questions in advance by e-mail and facilitated my introductions to players once there.
The Likas facility has two greens. They were both damaged by flooding. One green has been completely replaced and newly it reopened in February while I was there. To my surprise the surface is a sand-packed synthetic plastic material exactly like that at my Canadian home club, James Gardens, in West Toronto.
There are differences in the greens. At Likas, the center lines of the rinks are permanently marked. This has the advantage that it speeds up the placement of the mat and the jack. The disadvantage is that as the rinks wear with heavy use some depressions may form along the center line where there will be more foot traffic. When the rinks are not marked, they can be moved from side-to-side by shifting the rink boundary markers to give more even wear.
A difference in the progress of play is that in all my time at Likas I never saw a rake. Players pick up their bowls or kick them back preparatory to playing the next end.
I also noticed a difference in the social aspect of the game. In friendly play, even when there are unused rinks available, it seems tobe standard for a singles game to morph into a pairs game and then to morph again into a triples contest as new players arrive at the club. This emphasizes the casual friendly nature of play and gives a new player a chance to meet everyone faster.
I
t seems that everywhere in the world, lawn bowlers are the most welcoming people around!