28 Apr 2014

Update 28th April 2014.

The final tournament for the 2013 – 2014 bowling season was played on Saturday.
The opportunity was taken to play the postponed G and G McKenzie mixed drawn pairs tournament. Gwen turned on the weather and it was played in warm, sunny and near windless conditions. Perfect! Thanks Gwen.
Due to a mis-match in the numbers who had entered it was necessary to have a couple of men pairs but in keeping with the winners over the last 14 years or so the winners this year were still a true mixed pair. Congratulations Sue and Ray.

Gwen was also the official photographer on the day. See below. 
(Click on the photo to make it bigger.)








31 Mar 2014

Update 31st March 2014.

Sunday saw the annual competition between Wanganui East and the Northern Club.
The weather was good and the hospitality great.

Northern was leading going into the lunch break but Wanganui East came back in the afternoon session. The result being an honourable 20 all draw.

Here are a couple of pics. Click them to make them a bit bigger.







25 Mar 2014

Update 25th March 2014.

Congratulations to Northern’s Woman’s second division interclub team in defending their New Zealand title. For the second time are New Zealand Champions. 
Commiserations to the Division A men’s team who finished a very close and very creditable second.


Comment on Bowls   by Denis Duffy.

Manawatu results at last weekend’s National Interclub finals amounted to a pretty solid follow-up to the recent successes in the Hexagonal competition. The Northern men couldn’t have gone closer to pulling off the big one with it all coming down to the last minute action witnessed by the crowd around the Palmerston North back green. They were watching Terry Johnson come agonisingly close to nailing the win over former BlackJack Jamie Hill that would have clinched the title for Northern. Terry forced a draw in his usual deliberate and unflappable style, but unfortunately a win was required to deny the popular winners from Alexandra in the far South. Meanwhile, at Northern, the local Women’s side were adding another credit to their long list of achievements by winning the B Grade Women’s title. Next weekend sees the culmination of the representative season with our Men’s and Women’s sides looking well prepared to pursue their respective National Inter-Centre titles. This event invites entries from all Centres, so no-one has pre-qualified and no-one has been eliminated, thus making form on the day and over the crucial weekend all-important.

As a former selector, I know only too well that picking the Masters team each year is a real challenge and the teams selected are often contentious. This is because the over 60 age-group for both Men and Women is an area where often the best players don’t necessarily overshadow the others, and there is considerable depth of worthy contenders. These players aren’t necessarily top performers in Centre events, and then the selector has to be aware of new arrivals into this more venerable age-group. This year Neil Gordon was such a player, and eagle-eyed Selector Terry Puklowski was able use him well as Skip of the Triples. Both Men’s and Women’s teams finished runners-up in their respective tournaments ,which is a very creditable result. Wellington and Hutt Valley field separate sides in these much anticipated events, and I know that Taranaki, Hawkes Bay and Gisborne-East Coast remain disappointed that they don’t have a starter’s spot in these events or an equivalent tournament locally.  Our runner-up results were both very much a solid team performance with outstanding contributions coming from Singles player Bev Budd for the Women and the Eric Watson/Ron Henn Pair for the Men. Eric has a long and distinguished record in this event, as has Brian Henn, who took on the challenging  Singles berth this time.

For a club to reach 125 years of existence while still strong and in good heart is a worthy achievement, and this impressive milestone has just been marked by our oldest club in Palmerston North. Neil Richardson mentioned at the excellent dinner which marked the occasion that the club has always excelled in the three key areas of quality greens, quality administration and quality competition for those so inclined, and this is very true. I know that I’m proud to be a member of this outstanding club because the really important things are always done and done well. This was exemplified by the way in which longest serving members and Life Members were paid due respect at the dinner. Bruce Heaphy is currently the longest playing member, and it was remarkable to hear him recall playing a casual game on the club greens in far-off days as a mere youth when the greens were located elsewhere in town. This game occurred in 1950, before even Centre President Phil, who was in attendance, might have sneaked in for a game at Northern when the older members weren’t looking. It’s worth recalling that in those days younger players were strongly frowned upon, with many clubs refusing members under the age of thirty.
Full marks to Philip Skoglund for his wonderful initiative in organising the centre’s first fast Fives tournament last week. This is a format that clearly satisfies the often stated need to speed the game up, and what we saw of it on TV late last year was genuinely exciting. I’m sure we’ll see more fast Fives next season, but the real challenge is to somehow encourage this sort of thing without alienating the traditional players who enjoy the longer formats. The ongoing pre-eminence of the Taranaki Open Fours is sufficient evidence of that!
Final mention must go to Barry Wynks and Mark Noble, who by all accounts performed well enough in Melbourne recently to make it clear they will be genuine medal contenders at Glasgow later in the year. This is no surprise in the Manawatu, and it was great to see Mark making a huge contribution to his Club’s fine performance last weekend, thereby overcoming the obvious difficulties of switching between greens in different countries and running at dramatically differing speeds.

Denis Duffy


Thanks Denis.

11 Mar 2014

Update 11th March 2014.



Comment on Bowls   by Denis Duffy.

The Bowls Napier greens are the scene this week of six consecutive days of regional eliminations under the ‘pathways’ concept. At time of writing, Manawatu has already had significant success. The top Men’s Interclub side from Northern and the ‘B Grade’ Women’s team from the same club both earned a spot in the National Interclub  finals weekend to be held in Palmerston North later this month. A journey to the deep South awaits Pat Horgan’s  Palmerston North Men’s Four who will try for a National Club title at the Dunedin indoor complex in June. Further aspirants for Dunedin will hopefully emerge as the week progresses. While congratulating our successful players, several background aspects of the competition are points of discussion. Firstly, our ‘pathways’ players will face major hurdles to surmount in their pursuit of national glory because match play on artificial indoor surfaces is not available locally.  The Heretaunga complex in Hastings the only one that is not located far from the Manawatu. It’s also acknowledged that the region in which Manawatu competes is not one of New Zealand’s strongest, meaning that most of their opponents will have battled through a potentially tougher field to earn their place. The ‘pathways’ concept was designed to give all players the chance to play their way to a national title without the expense of attending the traditional Nationals held in the post-Christmas period. It’s not quite that simple though, with endless debate about the costs of this system and consequently the best dates and venues to use from an economical point of view. Long gone are the halcyon days when money was poured liberally into the sport by a certain cigarette company, whose representatives would even dispense their product cost- free around the greens during top competition! The status of the ultimate champions is also under debate. From the outset, winners have earned a full national title and a point towards a potential Gold Star, but Gary Lawson and others have championed the argument that ‘pathways’ titles should not be recognised equally with the traditional tournament ones. Putting all that aside, local bowlers will be right behind our representatives who, in the Horgan team’s case anyway, sneaked through on countback by the narrowest of margins. This is not uncommon where only four teams are involved in a cut-throat competition which almost requires a mathematician on the bank to keep up with the constantly changing match differentials that often make all the difference at the end.
There was also a need for accurate maths last week in the engine room of the Palmerston North club’s 30th Golden Oldies tournament. In this case though, Centre Secretary Vern Sixtus and his trusty laptop computer ensured that results were dealt with accurately and speedily. There was a suggestion at one point that a certain former national president who was officiating at the Terrace End greens may have made an error! A speedy return journey to headquarters to locate the relevant scorecard proved that the error in fact lay with the skips, who had signed a card showing the reverse of the correct result. This incident underlined the responsibility of the players to keep accurate records in an event where often only the finest of margins separate the competitors and thus can make the difference when it comes to the prize money. This tournament is the biggest run by a club in the country, proving that there must be several keys to its ongoing success. One is the distribution of prize money, which is well stratified, avoiding the temptation to put too much emphasis on a large purse for the ‘A’ Section. Levin’s Ian Mahoney played impressively to wrap up his second title in three years, this time with a radically altered team featuring the addition of two former Manawatu players in David Walker and ‘the Lizard’, a.k.a. Trevor Tuatara.

Denis Duffy



Thanks Denis.