Bryce AldertonImagine rolling a three-pound ball you...
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Bryce Alderton
Imagine rolling a three-pound ball you know will curve, but still
have to judge its speed and direction without knowing where it will
stop.
*
Welcome to the world of lawn bowling, a game developed in
13th-century England that can be played right here in Corona del Mar
at the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club, one of only 100 clubs in the U.S. to house the game. The club is one of nine Orange County lawn
bowling facilities and among 32 Southern California bowling clubs
located between San Diego and Santa Maria.
The game -- played on a rink which measures at least 14 feet wide
-- requires players to roll their “bowls” as close to a single white
ball, called a “jack.” A team can consist of one to as many as four
players and points are awarded for whoever rolls the bowl closest to
the jack. Singles and doubles roll two bowls while each player uses
three bowls in triples. Each competitor rolls two bowls in a game of
fours. Eight rinks can fit on a green that is at least 120 square
feet.
Bowls weigh less than four pounds with one side slightly
flattened, eliciting a natural curve when it is rolled on the short
grass.
Therein lies the challenge of the game: attempting to master the
bowl’s curvature.
Mert Isaacman, who has won U.S. singles championships in 1988,
1999 and 2000 and is the only American to claim any medal in
international singles competition, said the game presents many
challenges not easily noticed by the casual observer.
“The faster the green, the longer it takes the ball to roll to the
target because you have to allow for more curvature,” Isaacman said.
“It is hard to put it on a jack each time. The closer you can get on
a consistent basis, the more you are going to win.”
A bowl can hit the jack, placed at least 69 feet from the edge of
the mat where a player stands to roll. If the jack falls short or
rolls out of bounds, the opposing team then gets two chances to roll
the jack to a new location. If the jack rolls out of bounds on the
next two tries, it is positioned 6 feet, 6 inches from the ditch,
which is behind the mat.
After each team throws its bowls, an “end” is completed and a
point is awarded to the team with the bowl closest to the jack. Each
bowl belonging to the same team that is closer to the jack than the
nearest competitors’ counts for one additional point. A person in
charge of daily games or tournaments announces -- prior to the start
of play -- how many “ends” or “points” will constitute a complete
game. The player or team with the most points after the final end is
played, or after the pre-set number of points is reached, wins the
match.
As in all sports, lawn bowling players have positions. In pairs,
triples and fours events, the “skip” is the bowler in charge of his
team. He or she is usually the most skilled team member. Other
positions are “vice skip” and “lead.”
Isaacman, 57, lost a bet lawn bowling with his father and was
determined to improve.
“I said, ‘Let us make it interesting. I will give you $100 if you
win and you only have to give me $10 if I win,’ ” Isaacman recalled
telling his father. “He was a very good player. He gave me a 15-point
start in a game to 21. I didn’t score one point and he beat me,
21-15. That made me angry ... I lost $100.”
Losing a bet is one of the only ways lawn bowling can get
expensive.
NHLBC is open to the public with green fees set at $1 per a 2
1/2-hour round. Free lessons are staged at 10 a.m. every Tuesday and
at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesdays.
A set of bowls costs about $150 and you only need to wear
flat-soled shoes. Initiation fees at the club cost $35 and an annual
membership will run $100.
“It is the most ingenious game invented by the mind of man,” Clare
Donovan, president for the last three years of the NHLBC, said.
“There is a lot of strategy and challenge to it ... the total
package.”
The “total package” includes a social aspect both Isaacman and
Donovan mentioned as why the game has begun to attract more people of
varying ages.
“Lawn bowling is the most hospitable and social sport you can
play,” Isaacman said. “You don’t have to arrange for a partner, you
just go out and play.”
Isaacman started playing in 1986 and spent 10 years in Texas
before coming to California. He trained for the sport in South
Africa.
An international flavor will invade Newport Beach Lawn Bowling
Club Oct. 11-16 for the National Open. Donovan is expecting close to
200 bowlers from places such as Hong Kong and Canada.
“It is the best of the best,” Donovan said about the players
competing in the October event. “You have to qualify for this.”
An international bowls federation, headquartered in Worthing,
England, oversees 42 countries that make up the international World
Bowling Board. It conducts the world championships every four years
and the Asia Pacific Games every two years. U.S. Lawn Bowls
Association and club invitational events are conducted nearly every
weekend in Southern California from February through December.
NHLBC includes two members who have won U.S. singles titles each
of the last three years. Bob Nunez captured the championship last
year and in 2001 while Ed Quo won it in 2000. Quo teamed with Dick
Tait to claim the national open pairs flight title in 1988. Quo has
been a member since 1986 while Nunez has been at the club for 10
years.
Just last month NHLBC hosted its first “Showcase of Lawn Bowling,”
in which the public watched international and U.S. champions compete
for awards.
“It was the all-star game of lawn bowling,” Donovan said. “Players
competing had combined for more than 100 titles.”
NHLBC will host an open house June 21 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Donovan, 68, hopes to draw more people toward a sport that he
stresses can be played by anyone at any age.
“We have had some people move from South Africa who are 10 and 11
years old with a sprinkling of English-born members who are in their
30s.”
Young or old, lawn bowling is alive and well in Newport Beach.
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