"Bowls", "Bowling On The
Green", "Bocce", "Lawn
Bowling": by all of these names, lawn
bowling has been around for several thousand
years. Some rules have likely
changed over that time, but the fundamentals seem
to be consistent, certainly since the game's
historic record was started in the 14th Century.
bodyOffer(25683) Historians
suggest the game made its way across Europe with
Julius Caesar's centurions. At that time, and
still today among Italians, the game was known as
"bocce". By the 13th Century,
"bowls", was entrenched in the British
Isles . At the turn of the century, 1299 AD, the
Southhampton Old Bowling Green Club was organised
in England . The club remains active today, the
oldest of record in the world.
Global politics threatened the
game for a time. In the 14th Century, it was
banned for commoners in France and England
because archery, essential for defense, was
losing popularity. The Scottish were having none
of it. In Scotland the game continued
uninterrupted, a favourite among even such
legendary notables as Sir Walter Scott and Robert
Burns. In Glasgow today 200 public bowling greens
are in operation, including some enclosed greens
for winter play.
Today's rules, the flat lawn,
and even a dress code, seem to derive from the
Scottish. Over time, the waves of Scottish
emigrants took their game with them and
established clubs in many countries, the colonies
of the Western Hemisphere among them.
One famous story, and it has
some credence, is that Sir Francis Drake and Sir
Walter Raleigh were in the middle of a game when
word reached them of the impending assault of the
Spanish Armada. The story goes that Sir Francis
insisted on finishing the game before setting
sail to engage the Spanish; noble dedication,
indeed. In fact, he had to wait for the incoming
tide to peak before he could get his ship out of
the harbour anyway.
The American Revolution and
virulent anti-British feeling in the Colonies
stifled the game for nearly a century. Luckily,
the Canadians kept it alive, spreading it from
coast to coast.
bodyOffer2() New Jersey gets
credit for lawn bowling's resurrection in the
United States , when a small private club was
started in 1879. By 1899 the game had reached the
Pacific.
With such an apparently rich
long history, for many the question still arises,
"What's it about?"
Lawn bowling is distinguished
by use of a biased ball. That is, the ball is
deliberately lop-sided so that it always curves
toward the flat side as it slows down.
The object of the game is to
obtain points by getting one's ball(s) closest to
a small white ball, the "jack", which
may be anywhere between 75 and 108 feet away. The
skill, some say "the art", is to gauge
the curve to achieve this even when an opponent
may have guard balls blocking the
"jack".
The play may seem very rigid,
perhaps because instructors suggest that
proficiency lies in being able to throw the bowl
the same way every time; in that respect, not
much different from ten-pin bowling or curling.
The art, of course, is in the judgment that
guides weight, curve, and distance.
The balls, or bowls as they
are known, vary in size, weight, and degree of
bias. Local conditions are factors in selecting
bowls. Bowlers in the British Isles tend to
prefer lighter bowls for their characteristically
wet, soft grass. The hard bowling rinks of South
Africa warrant as heavy a bowl as rules allow.
Similarly local conditions may influence choice
of bias; for example, minimum for Florida and
extra for heavier grass in Canada and on the
often moist West Coast.
bodyOffer3() Bowls are
delivered either forehand or backhand, and never
aimed straight at the jack. Which a bowler
selects is dependent on the position of other
bowls already in play. On the average bowling
green six feet of curve for every 100 feet of
distance is a reasonable expectation. However,
every bowling green has its own peculiarities.
Herein lies the challenge of the game and,
perhaps too, its fascination for players.
Rules of the game vary
somewhat from country to country. Whereas in
Canada tournament games are played to 21 points,
in the United States when the ends are completed
the leader wins, much like the end of the frames
in ten-pin bowling.
Rules of attire are among the
most interesting aspects of the game, as much a
part of tradition as baseball uniforms in the
major leagues. Canadians, for example, specify
black or brown shoes; Australians white or tan
shoes; and Americans have no specific color. For
clothing, "whites" are the order of the
day for tournaments. Australians demand a hat,
tie, blazer, shirt, long trousers, socks and
shoes, white or cream. The tie and blazer may
only be worn if officially approved beforehand.
The ostensibly leisurely pace
of a lawn bowling game suggests it may be only
appropriate for the idle rich or long retired.
This image does not hold in most countries of the
world. The pace belies the tension of
competition, the skill, and, yes, the art. As
yet, lawn bowling has no champion like Tiger
Woods, but as the game's popularity continues to
increase, a Tiger Woods may emerge someday and
bowl touchers (to the jack) as handily as Tiger
lays approach shots on the pin.
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