About Lawn
Bowls
Bowls is usually played on a large, rectangular, precisely levelled
and manicured grass or synthetic surface known as a bowling green which
is divided into parallel playing strips called rinks. In the simplest
competition, singles, one of the two opponents flips a coin to see who
wins the "mat" and begins a segment of the competition (in
bowling parlance, an "end"), by placing the mat and rolling
the jack to the other end of the green to serve as a target. Once it
has come to rest, the jack is aligned to the center of the rink and
the players take turns to roll their bowls from the mat towards the
jack and thereby build up the "head".
A bowl is allowed to curve outside the rink boundary on its path, but
must come to rest within the rink boundary to remain in play. Bowls
reaching the ditch are dead and removed from play, except in the event
when one has "touched" the jack on its way. "Touchers"
are marked with chalk and remain alive in play even though they are
in the ditch. Similarly if the jack is knocked into the ditch it is
still alive unless it is out of bounds to the side resulting in a "dead"
end which is replayed though according to international rules the jack
is "respotted" to the center of the rink and the end is continued.
After each competitor has delivered all of their bowls (four each in
singles), the distance of the closest bowls to the jack is determined
(the jack may have been displaced) and points, called "shots",
are awarded for each bowl which a competitor has closer than the opponent's
nearest to the jack. For instance, if a competitor has bowled two bowls
closer to the jack than their competitor's nearest, they are awarded
two shots. The exercise is then repeated for the next end, a game of
bowls typically being of twenty one ends.