Update 7th
January 2014
Happy New
Year everyone.
Sadly, I
understand that the Centre Any Gender Triples scheduled for Anniversary weekend
has been abandoned due to a lack of entries.
Good bowling
to those of you who are taking part in the Hokowhitu Classic.
Bowling On
has a successor!
Comment on
Bowls by
Denis Duffy.
I’ve agreed to write regularly about our sport at least till the
end of this season. Most of us are only too well aware of the huge problems
Bowls now faces, primarily in the form of the seemingly unstoppable slipping
away of membership numbers and consequently tournament entries throughout the
country. My two predecessors in this role have spent time analysing these
crucial issues very accurately and searching for solutions which sadly remain
elusive. I intend to ignore that particular ‘elephant in the room’ and focus on
many of the very positive aspects of the game that we all enjoy at various
levels and for various reasons. It’s just a real shame that so many sports-
minded people haven’t yet realised the challenges available in Bowls and
continue to undervalue it.
The recently completed Men’s Open Pairs experimented with a timing
and format which worked very well. Full marks to the Centre Executive! I remain
hooked on the two-life system, but this event offered five substantial matches
to every entrant and, when the ‘nitty-gritty’ came around, a credible format
for the knockout stages. I applaud the seeding of the draw, which gave the best
performed teams a possible edge in the knockout draw. Pat Horgan, Terry
Johnson and partners may not agree, as both disappeared immediately, but it’s
that vulnerability of the top players that keeps the lesser lights out there
trying! The defending Horgan/Gilshinan combination in particular drew a real
‘banana-skin’ game against very dangerous locals Brian Looker and Scruff
Anderson who had sneaked in as bottom qualifiers. The ultimate victory to our
recently ordained Commonwealth Games reps in Barry Wynks and Mark Noble was a
fine and timely achievement. Mark is now really starting to show us why he is
one of the most decorated bowlers in the history of the Wellington centre,
while Barry brings his unique brand of cunning and intense competitiveness to
the game. No detail relative to the green, his opponents or his own performance
escapes Barry, and I’m sure he will go on to add multiple bars to his Gold Star
in the future.
Results from the Nationals become more ignored by the media every
year with the finals of Singles and Pairs not rating a mention on TV1 News and
being drowned by cricket on radio. Feona Sayles was there though, and
once again she featured in the latter stages of both Singles and Pairs. Well
done, Feona! It was great to see teenage finalists, even if both lost, in the
Men’s and Women’s Singles. Ali Forsyth’s third Singles victory, thanks to
a sensational last bowl, provides further proof that he has an all-round game
at at a high enough level to put him already somewhere amongst our best ever
players. Three Singles titles now puts him equal to Professor Maxwell Walker,
but still two adrift of our own Phil Skoglund.
That uniquely appealing tournament, the Taranaki Open Fours, is
now on the horizon, and I know the organisers are very disappointed to have
dropped another twenty teams in a year where they hoped to capitalise on hosting
last year’s Nationals. Manawatu is sending nine teams and two have a big
chance. Takaro’s Wynks and Noble, with the two Terrys, Curtis and Rossiter,
fell only at the semi-final stage last year to Brian Little’s Palmerston North
team who have reached two finals in the last three years. Both are returning
intact and with intent!
Manawatu Men’s selector Terry Puklowski, has yet to finalise his
teams for the Quadrangular at Kapiti later this month, but Viv Lozell has
announced the following Women’s teams.
A Team: Mere Fryer in Singles. Sheryn Blake and Georgie
Kahui-Rogers in Pairs, Chris Quinn, Liz Rossiter, Tina Vartha and Lynlea Rogers
in Fours.
B Team: Janeen Noble in Singles, Anna Davis and Juliette Mills in
Pairs, Sue Meyer Julie Palmer, Jacinta Cousins and Robyn McGregor in Fours.
Denis
Duffy
Thanks
Denis.
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