23 Sept 2015

Update 23rd  September  2015.



Comment on Bowls   by Denis Duffy.

Two recently confirmed moves by top players will  make a significant impact on relative club strength in the new season. The big one is the move by Philip Skoglund to the  strong and famously cashed-up Eastbourne club, competing in the Wellington Centre’s Interclub. Eastbourne has previously imported national legend Gary Lawson and former NZ Singles champion Justin Goodwin in their quest for the kudos of being the top club in the country. Former top Manawatu player Ray Lovie also plays there, and Philip’s arrival will further add to their strength. The Wellington Interclub season is much longer than the Manawatu one, and this extended competition at a good level will appeal to Philip. Locals will surely wish him well in the light of his long and dedicated service to Manawatu. Philip’s illustrious father, the late Phil Skoglund, also trod the Wellington greens for a couple of seasons when in his prime in the early 1960’s . This was when he had just the first of his National Singles titles in his CV, and before he became established as an all-time great in the game. Just how the move will affect Philip’s representative status remains to be clarified. Northern’s ace Singles player, Terry Johnson, already a full Palmerston North member, has now made himself available to represent the Centre’s most numerous club in this season’s Interclub. These moves leave a gaping hole in the top echelon of players at Northern, and will make it a real challenge for the traditionally strong North St club to repeat last season’s success. Johnson’s shift must further position Palmerston North as favourites this season.

The recent opening of the Manawatu Centre’s season at Johnston Park was favoured by idyllic weather conditions and was greatly enjoyed by all participants. So well were the Johnston Park greens running that many of the early deliveries ended up in the ditch, and their superb condition so early in the season earned many plaudits. Johnston Park will be the venue on 18th October for an Under 8yrs representative match involving the Wairarapa, Kapiti and Manawatu Centres. This fixture will be an important part of the build-up to the national Under 8yrs event which Manawatu bypassed last season but are preparing for in earnest this time. The winners on the day were the Takaro trio of Ian Johnson, Kevin Dustin and Brian Jarvis.


Thanks Denis.

11 Sept 2015

Update 11th September  2015.

Notes of interest from the Club Captain

Opening Day

Keep fingers crossed for a fine day for our opening which is on Saturday September 19. We will be playing for the Herbert Plate with games to begin at 1:00pm. Club colours please. We plan to have the new club booklet available for you on Opening Day.

Te Raki Cup

This is to be held on Saturday September 26 at Takaro with a 10:00am start. Names on the board please or return email to me.

Men’s Pants and Shorts.

A reminder that samples of these are in the clubrooms for you to try. Please read the notes on the board carefully as they relate to the different sizing of the pants and shorts. A reminder also that the final product will be the same green as our shirts, with a back pocket on the pants as well as a permanent crease. Order form on the board.


Comment on Bowls   by Denis Duffy.

As a new season arrives with a menacing chill still in the air, the recipe for stemming the rapid leakage of players from our game remains as elusive as ever, but there’s no lack of positivity among the many keen bowlers looking forward to  what lies ahead in the coming months. There have been successful outcomes for locals from events played during the Winter at Hawkes Bay’s Heretaunga indoor facility and in pre-season tournaments held in the Kapiti region. Shane Rogers started last season with a run of top results, and going into the last round of the Keith Elliott VC Invitation Fours held annually at Raumati South he was right on track for something similar. Shane had a powerful line-up in front of him in the form of Scotty McGavin, Darryl Johnson and Adam Johnston, but a slip-up in the final round saw the main prize go to a side paying long odds with the bookies. This was the Terrace End combo of Scruff Anderson ,Wally Parker, Dave Gibb and Ted Hodgson – a great win for them, but then any astute Bowls watcher knows that a team with ‘Tip-Top’ at Lead will always be dangerous. In times past the Webber Shield Open Fours was a prestigious extended event not dissimilar to the Taranaki Open, and run annually by the Heretaunga Club in Hastings on its now vanished outdoor set-up. These days it’s a three day indoor event still run by Heretaunga on its new site, where Takaro’s Barry Wynks has featured in several recent finals with various combinations. This time Barry was denied by a fine performance from the Johnston Park combo of of Tony Jensen, Stephen Love, Bruce Mudgway and Bruce Harris. Later on, at the same Hastings venue, the Palmerston North Triple of Phil Austin, Dean Gilshnan and Brial Looker took out a Classic Triples event. Then, just last weekend, Dean combined with Terry Johnson to win the Plate event at the Paraparaumu Beach Club’s Invitation 2x4x2 three day Pairs tournament.
The Palmerston North club recently farewelled its long-term greenkeeper, Ken Murray, into a well-earned retirement. Having the benefit of Ken’s undoubted expertise, shrewdness and experience for so long has been a priceless asset for the Centre’s oldest club, and Ken’s replacement, Matt Van Rysewyk, will be well positioned to follow many of the guidelines left behind by Ken.
The Takaro Club is nothing if not innovative, and a current initiative there may well see a series of evening tournaments contested under floodlights during the Summer. The lighting involved will be at a level sufficient for Bowls, but not of enough brightness to create a nuisance for neighbours.
This season’s Centre programme reveals a discernible move to   hold important events later than previously, hopefully avoiding as much as possible of the wild Spring weather, but the first event of significance will again be the Pathways Mixed 2x4x2 Pairs held over Labour Weekend.


Thanks Denis.

12 May 2015

Philip Charles (Phil) Skoglund – 

Obituary – Denis Duffy.

Philip Charles (Phil)  Skoglund, who died at his home in Palmerston North recently, displayed a high level of aptitude in many sports, but it was in Bowls that he became an icon. In the history of his chosen game, he occupies a place in the stratosphere probably shared only by former World Singles Champion Peter Belliss. His mana and charisma were such that many, including his biographer, were quite simply in awe of him, and, even in his declining years, ordinary players would regard it a personal highlight to simply play with, against or somewhere adjacent to the local legend.
Phil created his greatest legacy by being first to break down the barriers preventing younger and fitter people from playing Bowls. When he sensationally won the 1958 National Singles title after an unbeaten run of sixteen matches, his father told him to give his age to the press as twenty-one, rather than the correct twenty.  The difference was significant then, and he was already in enough trouble for arriving at the green in his father’s ministerial car. Many clubs then enforced a minimum age for members and resented the intrusion of youth, but that mindset was henceforth on the way out. Phil was the stand-out member of a remarkable Bowls dynasty that originated with his great-grandfather  and grandfather in Greymouth and Stratford respectively. However, the family flair for the sport really appeared in the next generation. His uncle, T.T. Skoglund was a Gold Star holder, twice an Empire Games representative and the standout player nationally in the 1940’s and 50’s, while his father Phil Snr (P.O.). Skoglund won thirteen  Manawatu titles and was also well respected nationally. This was the man who ultimately became Minister of Education and source of the aforementioned black ministerial car. With wife Carol, who survives him, Phil produced sons Raymond and Philip, who together won the National Pairs title in 1999. Philip (P.J.) also followed his father into the National team on several occasions, and remains today a respected presence at top level.
Phil always cared deeply for the game of Bowls, and its sharp decline more recently in numbers and popularity, though shared with other major sports, troubled him deeply. He tirelessly threw possible solutions into the public arena via a local newspaper column and then very latterly he offered his services as President of Bowls Manawatu, for the second time, in 2013/14. During his peak years, he found time to spend several terms as a  member of the former N.Z.B.A Council, and also as a National Selector.
Phil Skoglund was noted for a high backlift and silky delivery which concealed till the last second the pace of the impending shot. Once having found his line, he would use it time after time with metronomic precision. This was allied to a razor-sharp tactical brain and ice-cool temperament. These qualities were good enough to win his Northern club’s Senior Singles only months before his death, and a host of honours earlier. That first National Singles at Christchurch was followed by four more. Between 1970 and 1972 he won an amazing treble of three Singles titles in a row, the third bringing with it a Gold Star. This was in a period when ‘The Dominion’ drew huge fields, and he was never seriously troubled in a final, often annihilating his opponents in the closing rounds. There was also a hard fought Pairs victory for his Northern club in 1972 with highly talented former jockey Vic Sellars. In 1976 at Dunedin Phil astounded the pundits by taking out both the Pairs and Fours titles with a group of club players who were largely unknown and unrated at a higher level. He later pointed out that this became possible because “we were very, very compatible and this got us through under pressure.” This closed the Skoglund tally of National titles at eight, but as late as 1991 he finished second in the Fours with sons Philip and Raymond, as he had done twice with earlier teams.
The National Selectors would have seriously contravened the current prejudice against youth if they had sent Phil to the Empire Games in 1958,  and he was again overlooked for the Perth event in 1962.  It wasn’t till the inaugural World Bowls event at Sydney’s  Kyeemagh  greens in 1966 that he finally got the nod to play for New Zealand, in Singles and Pairs.  For the next quarter of a century he was selected on a regular basis for a  series of major events, but most were contested on Northern Hemisphere greens. These were  longer, lush in growth, frequently plagued by strange irregularities, and invariably much heavier than the speed expected in New Zealand. Then there was the expectation that play would continue to a rigorous schedule through often abysmal weather conditions. More recent New Zealand representatives have found ways to at least prepare soundly for these differences and so have found fewer nasty surprises in store, but throughout Phil’s era, most international play brought with it very challenging conditions.
Despite this, Phil won a Gold, two Silver and two Bronze medals at World Championships. The Gold that finally crowned his Bowls career finally came at the Auckland event of 1988, when he won the Triples with Morgan Moffat and Ian Dickison.This represented a rare success for him in the north of the country, and was supplemented with the winning of one of his two World  Silver medals  in the Fours. Participation in five Commonwealth Games events brought a relatively lean return of two Bronze medals and a solitary Silver in the Fours at Edmonton, Canada, in 1978. Phil always insisted that his most memorable international outing was an extended Tour of South Africa in 1968. The locals were far too good at home, and the three Tests all 0-3 defeats, but Phil rated the total ‘package’ of the playing and touring experience on the High Veldt as an unforgettable one. His most bitter disappointment was being dropped from the team for the World Bowls back in South Africa in 1976 – a team that Vic Sellars was included in. At a local level, Phil won twenty-one Manawatu    Centre titles, and also three in Wellington while domiciled there in the early 1960’s. He was the driving force behind the creation of the Lion Masters’ Singles, an iconic and unique event which brought a dazzling array of national and overseas talent to the Manawatu and to the nation’s TV screens in the late 1970’s and early ‘80’s.
Phil Skoglund was honoured with the O.B.E. in 1988. He was a member of several National Sports Halls of Fame, including the one established quite recently by his own sport of Bowls. He has been named as an all-time Manawatu Legend of Sport, and was four times Manawatu Sportsman of the Year. His biography, written by Denis Duffy and published by Rugby Press, appeared in 1983. Phil’s passing removes a colossus from the sporting scene, both locally in Manawatu and also nationally.

A funeral service for Phil will be held in Palmerston North on Saturday 16 May 2015 at 2pm.

RIP Skog!

28 Apr 2015

Update 28th April  2015.



Comment on Bowls   by Denis Duffy.

As usual, the balmy days of Autumn have arrived with the Bowls season virtually over. Hopefully, this won’t be the case next season though, with the excellent initiative to play all Champion of Champion events in April. This will significantly ease any pressure on Clubs to complete Championships when the wild Spring winds are in full force and greens not at their best. Tony Woodley’s Manawatu Centre executive has built wisely on the solid foundation left by those who preceded them. Where things have gone slightly awry in terms of playing conditions, they have listened to the players and made sound adjustments for next season. Entries are showing an upward trend and the Under Five Years Singles was an outstanding event, showcasing the talents of a large group of newer players who are keen to get involved.

I’m going to copy an idea From Wisden’s and the NZ Rugby Almanac by naming some Players of the Year and also one Promising Player. On the Women’s side, the seven players who travelled to the Christchurch Inter-Centre together with Selector Eric Watson deserve congratulations. Mere Fryer turned her Singles record around in spectacular fashion and the whole team performed above expectations. The power-packed Nelson side had to really front up to deny them a chance of a famous victory. Among the Men, the Horgan/Gilshnan Pair excelled both in Christchurch and at the Tauranga Club Nationals. Despite being cruelly denied first place in the latter only on differential, they proved themselves the equal of any Pair in the country. It’s intriguing to wonder what chance Dean Gilshnan might have of attracting the eye of the National selectors, as he has already done many times indoors. He may need to earn the Inter-Centre Singles spot and show his class there to clinch the deal. Despite finding little form in Christchurch, Ross Ellery earns a slot for turning things around in Tauranga, where his Club Singles victory gives him a third point towards a National Silver Star. Ross coped successfully with foul weather forcing players to transfer to an indoor venue in Hamilton where play continued into the small hours. Philip Skoglund has to be a Player of the Year, not for anything special this season, but for continuing to provide the glue of skill and experience that holds the Inter- Centre side together year after year. Philip has been doing the business for Manawatu at top level across all three disciplines for a very long time. My last Player of the Year is Shane Rogers, mainly for his spectacular early season form when he plundered two Centre titles from under the noses of the top Wanganui bowlers. The Wanganui performance at Christchurch showed that winning in the River City  is a big ask for an outsider. I continue to hope that somehow Shane can be brought inside the selectorial tent in future years. He’s simply too good to not be involved.  My Promising player of 2014/15 will make his mark in the big-time before very long. Phil Austin, ex-Dunedin and now at Palmerston North, won two Centre Underage Singles events this year without a loss. He comes highly recommended by Dunedin’s Ken  ‘Stalker’ Walker,  and is playing P.B.A. events through the Winter to gain invaluable further experience.

Brian Gemmell was ‘fizzing’ after running fifth nationally in the Corner to Corner finals held recently at Birkenhead. This is a novelty event which is great value for both clubs and individuals, being open to non-bowlers to have a go.

Final results from the Skoglund Triples provided by Stan Goston show both Northern teams occupying the top places in the main event. Foxton and Beach takes out the Jack Griggs Cup for Division 2, and Ashhurst the MacKenzie Cup for Division 3. It’s unusual to see the strong and usually well performed Palmerston North Club in the bottom half of all three events.


 Thanks Denis.