Lawn bowling for beginners
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PETER BUFFA
It’s very civilized if you ask me. And you can never have too much
civilization, especially in times like these.
Tuesday was a red-letter day at the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling
Club. A group of top tier, internationally ranked lawn bowlers from
the U.K., including world champion David Bryant, played a number of
matches at the Newport Harbor Club.
Bryant is considered the greatest lawn bowler of anytime,
anywhere, anyhow. You could say he’s the Derek Jeter of lawn bowling,
except he’d have to roll the ball to first, which wouldn’t work, so
forget that.
You probably don’t spend a lot of time thinking about lawn
bowling. To be honest, neither do I, but the story of the bowling
Brits and their Newport layover caught my eye. Having driven the
length of San Joaquin Hills Road for years, sometimes in one
direction, sometimes the other, I’ve passed the Newport Harbor Lawn
Bowling Club on the corner of Crown Drive more times than I can
count, and I can count really high. It’s always such a pretty sight,
with its well-groomed green and bowlers a-bowling, usually dressed in
white from top to bottom.
“What an attractive, civilized sport,” I say to myself, which
sounds weird when I’m the only one in the car, but I say it anyway.
The other reason I like lawn bowling, which I’ve never done, is
that it reminds me of something else I like, which I have done,
called bocce.
Please don’t say “bocce ball,” by the way. It’s just “bocce,” the
plural of “boccia,” which is Italian for “ball” or “bowl,” which is
probably much more than you wanted to know.
My grandfather had a country house on Long Island in Amityville --
yes, the same Amityville, and no I don’t remember any poltergeists --
with a nice bocce court. I was a squirt at the time but my father and
a small army of uncles and cousins would let me roll a ball now and
then, and taught me two things: how to play bocce and how to yell
things in Italian that would make my mother and my aunts smack me on
the back of the head, which taught me to keep my voice down. I guess
that’s three things.
Speaking of cousins, that’s exactly what lawn bowling and bocce
are, along with their French cousin, called “boules” or “petanque.”
They are all the descendants of a game that turns up in both ancient
Egypt and Rome, originally played with small stones, which eventually
became balls.
George Washington was an avid lawn bowler, as were most of his
over-achieving colleagues. But the game almost disappeared in the
States after the Revolutionary War, understandably enough.
In the late 1800’s, Scottish immigrants said “get over it,” and
started lawn bowling clubs in New York and New Jersey. Today, there
are about 130 lawn bowling clubs in the U.S.
Whether you take yours British, Italian or French, each version
starts much the same way. A white “target” ball, called the “pallino”
in bocce or the “jack” in lawn bowling, is tossed or rolled onto the
playing field. Bowlers then take turns rolling four balls, or bowls,
with two objectives in mind: getting their bowls closest to the
target ball, and knocking their opponents’ bowls farther away.
When that frame, called an “end” in lawn bowling, is complete, the
team with the ball closest to the target ball earns a point, which is
where the expression “touch that and I’ll kill you” comes from.
The process of trying to determine differences of a wee fraction
of an inch between balls is never dull.
In lawn bowling, being more civilized, there are careful
measurements and procedures to decide such things. In bocce, trying
to decide whose ball is the closest is like watching people trying to
perform a Greek tragedy in the stands at a Brazilian soccer match
during a hurricane.
Some players are screaming, some players are crying, and a few are
on their knees with their arms outstretched, screaming and crying.
But if you pay attention, you can learn a lot of new Italian
expressions.
I will rue the day I said this, but lawn bowling is a more highly
developed skill than bocce.
Lawn bowling is played on a manicured green with weighted balls
that a skillful bowler can control with nearly as much precision as
Phil Mickelson making a 40-foot putt with three breaks. Bocce is
played on a court of fine gravel or cinder, and physics will just not
allow you to control the ball as precisely as a lawn bowler. But it
is still a whole lot of fun.
Meanwhile, back on San Joaquin Hills Road, you should know that it
was quite an honor for the Newport Harbor club to have been picked as
one of the stops on the David Bryant tour, this being the British
bowlers’ first visit to the U.S.
The group is on a 21-day jaunt that will include a visit to that
hotbed of lawn bowling, Las Vegas.
According to Carolyn Tansey with the David Bryant Tour, “It gives
the English bowlers a chance to meet local people, really, and that’s
the main part.”
Yeah, but the Bellagio ain’t bad either. It was a major thrill for
the locals to bowl a few ends with David Bryant himself, who has been
playing since he was seven, which was 67 years ago.
“I’m very delighted to be here because I’ve never played bowls in
America,” Bryant said. Well, David we are delighted to have you and
hope you enjoy your stay in the colonies.
So there you have it. Lawn bowling. Keep one foot on the mat and
your bowl in the rink, and try for a toucher on your first roll.
I don’t know what it means either, but it sounds like good advice.
I gotta go.
* PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs
Sundays. He may be reached by e-mail at [email protected].
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