crown green bowls
{{short description|Code of bowls played outdoors on a grass or artificial turf surface}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox sport
| name = Crown green bowls
| image =
| alt = A crown green bowls player walks across the bowling green towards his two bowls and jack
| imagesize = 300
| caption = The aim of crown green bowls is to get your 2 larger bowls as close to the smaller jack as possible
| union = British Crown Green Bowling Association (BCGBA)
| nickname = Crown green, Crown
| firstlabel =
| region = Midlands, North of England, Isle of Man and North Wales.
| registered = 200,000
| clubs = 3,000
| contact = No
| team = Single competitors or pairs.
| mgender = Yes
| type = Outdoor, bowls
| equipment = Players use two woods each, a jack, and a portable mat.
| venue = Bowling green
| olympic = No
| paralympic = No
| IWGA = No
| obsolete =
}}
Crown green bowls (or crown green) is a code of bowls played outdoors on a grass or artificial turf surface known as a bowling green.{{cite book|last1=Tomlinson|first1=Alan|title=A dictionary of sports studies|date=2010|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=9780199213818|page=133|edition=1st}}{{cite book|last1=Mills|first1=Chris|title=Winning bowls : an introduction to crown green bowls|date=1983|publisher=Foulsham|location=London|isbn=9780572012199}} The sport's name is derived from the intentionally convex or uneven nature of the bowling green which is traditionally formed with a raised centre known as the crown.
Crown green bowls is played in the Midlands, Northern England, and North Wales.{{cite book|last1=Clapson|first1=Mark|title=A bit of a flutter : popular gambling and English society, c.1823-1961|date=1992|publisher=Manchester Univ. Press|location=Manchester|isbn=9780719034367|page=Chapter V}}{{cite book|last1=Jackson|first1=Brian|title=Working class community some general notions raised by a series of studies in northern England|date=1998|publisher=Routledge|location=London|isbn=9781136246340|page=100}}
Game
The aim of crown green bowls is to roll a set of two bowls from the hand towards a smaller target bowl known as the jack.{{cite book|last1=Barratt|first1=Harry|title=Crown green bowls : the skills of the game|date=1989|publisher=Crowood|location=Marlborough|isbn=1852232986}} Rolling the bowl or jack is known as the delivery. When delivering a bowl or jack, the player must place one foot on a mat to ensure that all bowls and jack are sent from the same spot.
A full game comprises a number of ends. An end is where the jack is rolled first. The player sending the jack can choose to deliver it wherever they like on the bowling green. This ability to bowl an end in any direction is a unique feature of crown green bowls. Players then take it in turns to roll each of their bowls towards the jack. An end finishes when all bowls have been delivered. At the amateur level it is usual for several ends to be played simultaneously on one green. If two moving woods meet, both are taken back and the shots replayed. If a moving wood strikes a stationary wood or jack from another end, it is again taken back and replayed, but the bowl struck is replaced where contact took place.
The aim of an end is for a player to finish with their own bowls closer to the jack than those of the opponent. For each bowl that is closer than those of the opponent, a player scores one point. Each player usually has two bowls allowing a maximum of two points on each end. A score of one or two is denoted to the two markers (one from each team, in a team match) by raising one or two hands. The winner of the end delivers the jack in the next end.
Competitive games are usually held between two people with the winner being the first person to accumulate 21 points. An unlimited number of ends are played until someone wins. Variations exist where players can have more than two bowls, games are played to 31 points or more, or players form teams of two or more players.
Bowling green
Crown green bowls is played on a specially prepared short-cut smooth grass surface known as a bowling green or simply the green (usually 45x45 yards). The green usually has a raised centre known as the crown which can often be as high as 30 centimetres above the edge of the green. The green has a ditch around the edge, and slopes on all sides from the crown towards the ditch. Greens are usually rectangular or square, but L-shaped and circular greens also exist. The surfaces also often feature ridges, hollows and slopes to make the game more difficult. Due to this vast array of historical differences, no rules stipulating the shape, size or height of the crown are laid down by the British Crown Green Bowls Association.{{cite book|last1=Weekes|first1=Barry|title=Bowls, crown & flat green|date=1988|publisher=Ward Lock|location=London|isbn=0706366603|page=20}}
Bowls equipment
= Bowls =
In crown green bowls, players use two bowls each. Bowls are also commonly known as woods. There are no requirement for official markings on the bowls although manufacturers branding and the weight of the bowls is common. Players often have their initials marked on one side, or use stickers to identify their bowls. One side of the bowl has an indent or dimple allowing the player to identify by touch which side of the bowl has the bias.
Crown green bowls come in a variety of bias strengths, weights, densities, sizes, materials and colours. The minimum weight is {{cvt|2|lb}} but there is no maximum weight.British Crown Green Bowls Association : Laws of the Game | http://crowngreenbowls.sharepoint.com/Pages/LawsoftheGame.aspx {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120427201720/http://crowngreenbowls.sharepoint.com/Pages/LawsoftheGame.aspx |date=2012-04-27 }}
Bowls are referred to and sold by their weight, and are available from 2 lb 0 oz to 2 lb 14 oz, in 1 oz increments. They were traditionally made from lignum vitae wood but are now manufactured from a composite plastic. Wooden bowls have a variable density throughout their core due to the nature of wood. Plastic bowls have a consistent and regular density throughout and manufacturers can produce bowls in different densities generally known as standard, low density and high density. This means that a smaller bowl with a higher density can be the same weight as a larger bowl with a lower density.
There are two ways of delivering a bowl: with or against the bias. Sending a bowl with the thumb on the biased side is known as thumb peg and sending a bowl with the thumb on the non-biased side is known as finger peg. The different pegs determine in which direction the bowl will go. A player delivering the jack is expected to declare which peg is used, but a player delivering a subsequent wood is not.
= Jack =
The jack, also commonly known as the block, is a smaller version of the bowls used by each player in a game of crown green bowls and also contains a bias. There are written specifications determining the size, weight and bias strength of jacks. To be able to be used in an official British Crown Green Bowls Association recognised league match or competition, jacks must be black, white or yellow. Other colours are available for use in practice.
Jacks have different markings on each side. On one side there is a single circle with the manufacturer's name and other official lettering. This side of the jack is the side with the bias. The other side has a single circle surrounded by three solid dots or smaller circles indicating the non-bias side. Official jacks must also be stamped with an approved date stamp every seven years to comply with the rules. Jacks measure 9.5 cm (3 & 3/4 inches) in diameter and weigh about 660 grams (1 lb 7 oz).
= Mat =
The mat is also known as the footer. It is usually black and has a textured top surface to help with grip. It a simple rubber circular mat measuring 14 cm (4.5 inches) in diameter, and around 0.5 cm (1/8th of an inch) in thickness. When delivering a jack or bowl, the player must place their non-leading foot on the mat.
Major events
The first event that gained major status was the Talbot Handicap played at the Talbot Hotel in Blackpool which was inaugurated in 1887 and continued until 1975. In 1907 the Waterloo Handicap was inaugurated and the event held at the Waterloo Hotel (also in Blackpool) eventually surpassed the importance of the Talbot Handicap. The Waterloo Hotel had its safety licence to hold big competitions withdrawn and the compitition lost some of its stature when it transferred to Fleetwood Bowling Club in 2022.{{cite book|last=Sullivan |first=Patrick |title=Guinness Bowls – The Records |year=1986 |pages=83-89 |publisher=Guinness Superlatives Ltd |isbn=0-85112-414-3}}{{cite web|url=https://www.bowls.co.uk/crown-green/the-waterloo |title=The Waterloo |publisher=Bowls.co.uk |access-date=30 January 2025 }}
More modern events include the BCGBA Senior Individual Merit and BCGBA Champion of Champions.{{cite web|url=https://www.bcgba.org.uk/coc/ |title=History of the BCGBA Champion of Champions |publisher=BCGBA |access-date=30 January 2025 }}
Past winners
= BCGBA Champion of Champions =
{{collapse top}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1974 | Jim Hadfield |
1975 | Jim Collen |
1976 | Tony Poole |
1977 | Cliff Bordley |
1978 | Noel Burrows |
1979 | Terry Turner |
1980 | Noel Burrows |
1981 | Dave Ellis |
1982 | Nigel Cranston |
1983 | Stan Frith |
1984 | Tony Poole |
1985 | Robert Hitchen |
1986 | Steve Smurthwaite |
1987 | Brian Shore |
1988 | Martin Gilpin |
1989 | Tommy Johnstone |
1990 | Ian Rigby |
1991 | Brian Duncan |
1992 | Steve Williams |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1993 | Jack Robertson |
1994 | Stuart Jones |
1995 | Ken Strutt |
1996 | Ken Strutt |
1997 | Andy Petford |
1998 | Paul Strutt |
1999 | Ian Rigby |
2000 | Chris Mordue |
2001 | Kerry Morris |
2002 | Alan Thompson |
2003 | Graeme Wilson |
2004 | Gary Ellis |
2005 | Paul Wilson |
2006 | Andrew Spragg |
2007 | John Bailey |
2008 | Graeme Wilson |
2009 | Graeme Wilson |
2010 | Chris Mordue |
2011 | Gary Ellis |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
2012 | John Finch |
2013 | Terry Glover |
2014 | Simon Coupe |
2015 | Callum Wraight |
2016 | Gary Ellis |
2017 | Michael Beer |
2018 | John Bailey |
2019 | Colin Kelly |
2020 | not held (covid) |
2021 | not held (covid) |
2022 | Chris Kelly |
2023 | Greg Smith |
2024 | Paul Dudley |
{{col-end}}
{{collapse bottom}}
= BCGBA Senior Merit =
{{collapse top}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1910 | E Peers |
1911 | J Stead |
1912 | T Dale |
1913 | J Chesters |
1914 | A Robinson |
1915 | J Charnock |
1916 | S Sackville |
1917 | J Gough |
1918 | T Burgess |
1919 | J Charnock |
1920 | W Twist |
1921 | F Dickinson |
1922 | John Gleave |
1923 | Joe Gleave |
1924 | E Blackledge |
1925 | F Bentley |
1926 | A Booth |
1927 | P Ainscough |
1928 | Joe Gleave |
1929 | J Gough |
1930 | G Fielding |
1931 | J Fort |
1932 | C Garside |
1933 | J Eyes |
1934 | Joe Gleave |
1935 | J Pickering |
1936 | G Howells |
1937 | W Garrard |
1938 | J Davies |
1939 | W Garside |
colspan=2|1940-45 not held | |
1946 | B Longbottom |
1947 | H King |
1948 | R Meyrick |
1949 | A Bebbington |
1950 | J Barnsley |
1951 | J Pilling |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1952 | A Shore |
1953 | W Slater |
1954 | N Norris |
1955 | H Burgess |
1956 | E Fish |
1957 | N Hardman |
1958 | C Littlehales |
1959 | E Ashton |
1960 | R Hodson |
1961 | R Meyrick |
1962 | R Meyrick |
1963 | F Goulden |
1964 | R Green |
1965 | W Baldwin |
1966 | R Meyrick |
1967 | A Shore |
1968 | R Oakes |
1969 | A Johnson |
1970 | A Dowley |
1971 | Tony Poole |
1972 | Dennis Mercer |
1973 | W Line |
1974 | F Whitehead |
1975 | R Wilby |
1976 | Noel Burrows |
1977 | R Edkins |
1978 | K Widdowson |
1979 | Jack Hunt |
1980 | J Hadfield |
1981 | Ian Ross |
1982 | Ian Bottomley |
1983 | Stan Frith |
1984 | Michael Leach |
1985 | T Moss |
1986 | Steve Smurthwaite |
1987 | A Dodd |
1988 | Ron Stanford |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1989 | Chris Squires |
1990 | Phil Owen |
1991 | Paul Chamberlain |
1992 | Stan Frith |
1993 | John Taylor |
1994 | Steve Ellis |
1995 | Gary Ainley |
1996 | Stephen Hirst |
1997 | Glynn Cookson |
1998 | Stuart Perry |
1999 | Lee Heaton |
2000 | Graeme Wilson |
2001 | Matt Gilmore |
2002 | Tommy Johnstone |
2003 | Gary Ellis |
2004 | Graeme Wilson |
2005 | Darren Smith |
2006 | Andrew Spragg |
2007 | Andrew Spragg |
2008 | Matt Bower |
2009 | Callum Wraight |
2010 | Noel Burrows |
2011 | Mike Riley |
2012 | Gary Ellis |
2013 | Greg Smith |
2014 | Ashley Daykin |
2015 | Tom Vickers |
2016 | Matt Gilmore |
2017 | Darren Plenderleith |
2018 | Chris Mordue |
2019 | Ryan Prosser |
2020 | not held (covid) |
2021 | Ross Dunkley |
2022 | Callum Wraight |
2023 | Simon Coupe |
2024 | Greg Smith |
{{col-end}}
{{collapse bottom}}
= The Talbot Handicap =
{{collapse top}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1887 | T Salisbury |
1888 | D Greenhalgh |
1889 | J Bowden |
1890 | D Greenhalgh |
1891 | H Rutter |
1892 | William Balmer |
1893 | John Peace |
1894 | Thomas Berry |
1895 | Gerard Hart |
1896 | R Mather |
1897 | Thomas Meadows |
1898 | Thomas Hayes |
1899 | John Peace |
1900 | Edward Barton |
1901 | James Platt |
1902 | James Ward |
1903 | W Fairhurst |
1904 | C Farrington |
1905 | M Sharples |
1906 | W Taylor |
1907 | J Bagot |
1908 | S Massey |
1909 | W H Law |
1910 | R Hart |
1911 | F Threlfall |
1912 | Richard Birchall |
1913 | H Southern |
1914 | J Bromilow |
1915 | T Richardson |
1916 | R Johnson |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1917 | G F Hampson |
1918 | Eli Yates |
1919 | Edward Whiteside |
1920 | L Banks |
1921 | F Threlfall |
1922 | W Finch |
1923 | J Farnworth |
1924 | Tom Rose |
1925 | Jack Cox |
1926 | G Beswick |
1927 | T Monks |
1928 | G Beswick |
1929 | W R Hardy |
1930 | H Walkden |
1931 | R Pendlebury |
1932 | James Heyes |
1933 | T Turner |
1934 | H Hardman |
1935 | H Bury |
1936 | W Grace |
1937 | G Lomax |
1938 | W Molyneux |
1939 | abandoned |
1940 | W J Wilcock |
1941 | J Edmondson |
1942 | George Croker |
1943 | F Gillett |
1944 | W Ashton |
1945 | J Jolly |
1946 | A Raby |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1947 | R Thomas |
1948 | J H Hill |
1949 | J Molyneux |
1950 | J Wolstencroft |
1951 | W Parr |
1952 | J Timmins |
1953 | J Molyneux |
1954 | W Parr |
1955 | W Simm |
1956 | J Rothwell |
1957 | J E Ball |
1958 | R Mercer |
1959 | W H Frost |
1960 | W Dalton |
1961 | W Turner |
1962 | W Dalton |
1963 | R Kellett |
1964 | J Kirby |
1965 | A Milnes |
1966 | S Priestley |
1967 | Billy Dawber |
1968 | F Whitehead |
1969 | R Peat |
1970 | Keith Illingworth |
1971 | G Rigby |
1972 | W Dalton |
1973 | C E Jackson |
1974 | Brian Duncan |
1975 | Stuart Buckley |
colspan=2|Discontinued |
{{col-end}}
{{collapse bottom}}
= The Fleetwood Autumn Waterloo (formerly Waterloo Handicap) =
{{collapse top}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1907 | James Rothwell |
1908 | George Beatty |
1909 | Tom Meadows |
1910 | not held |
1911 | John Peace |
1912 | Thomas Lowe |
1913 | Gerard Hart |
1914 | John Rothwell |
1915 | W Fairhurst |
1916 | J Parkinson |
1917 | Geogre Barnes |
1918 | W Simms |
1919 | Len Moss |
1920 | E Whiteside |
1921 | J Bagot |
1922 | W A Smith |
1923 | J Martin |
1924 | Rowland Hill |
1925 | Jack Cox |
1926 | T Roscoe |
1927 | H Waddecar |
1928 | T Whittle |
1929 | Charles Halpin |
1930 | J Chadwick |
1931 | A Gleave |
1932 | T E Booth |
1933 | A Ogden |
1934 | W Derbyshire |
1935 | C Roberts |
1936 | H Yates |
1937 | A King |
1938 | J W Whitter |
1939 | abandoned |
1940 | H Holden |
1941 | W J Wilcock |
1942 | Tommy Bimson |
1943 | S Ivell |
1944 | Tedber Tinker |
1945 | W Grace |
1946 | C Parkinson |
{{col-3}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |
width=50|Year
!width=150|Winner | |
---|---|
1947 | W Dalton |
1948 | Albert E Ringrose |
1949 | J Egan |
1950 | H Finch |
1951 | J Waterhouse |
1952 | L Thompson |
1953 | Bernard Kelly |
1954 | Bernard Kelly |
1955 | J Heyes |
1956 | J Sumner |
1957 | Bill Lacy |
1958 | F Salisbury |
1959 | Billy Dawber |
1960 | H Bury |
1961 | J Featherstone |
1962 | J Collier |
1963 | T Mayor |
1964 | W B Heinkey |
1965 | J Pepper |
1966 | R Collier |
1967 | Eric Ashton |
1968 | Billy Bennett |
1969 | G T Underwood |
1970 | Jack Everitt |
1971 | J Bradbury |
1972 | Noel Burrows |
1973 | Arthur Murray |
1974 | W Houghton |
1975 | Jim Collen |
1976 | Keith Illingworth |
1977 | L Barrett |
1978 | Arthur Murray |
1979 | Brian Duncan |
1980 | Vernon Lee |
1981 | Roy Nicholson |
1982 | Dennis Mercer |
1983 | Stan Frith |
1984 | S Ellis |
1985 | Tommy Johnstone |
1986 | Brian Duncan |
{{col-3}}
{{col-end}}
{{collapse bottom}}