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THE SPORT OF BOWLS
Bowls is a vibrant, dynamic and exciting leisure activity that can be played and enjoyed by all ages, both indoors and outdoors.

Outdoor Bowls is usually played on a 35-40 metre flat grassed (or artificial grassed) surface called the green. The green is divided into playing areas called rinks which are about 5 metres wide and the length of the green. (Bowls played indoors is usually played on a flat carpeted surface similarly set out and divided as the outdoor green.)
Surrounding the green is a ditch, and a bank upon which markers indicate the boundaries and centre‑ lines of each rink.
Players deliver their bowls alternately from a mat at one end on the centerline of the rink, towards a small white ball called the jack at the other end placed on the centerline. Bowls (which weigh about 1.5 kg each) are shaped so that they do not run in a straight line, but take a curved path (bias) towards the jack. Therefore, a bowl can be delivered either forehand or backhand.
The aim of the game is to get one or more bowls closer to the jack than those (the closest bowl) of the opposition ‑ one point is scored for each counting bowl. After playing all the bowls in one direction, and agreeing the score, the direction of play is reversed ‑ the next end is played back down the rink in the opposite direction. Every game consists of a series of ends and the winner can either be the one who has scored the most shots after a specified number of ends or the first to reach a designated score.
The art of this game is to be able to deliver bowls consistently close to the jack or the aiming point which is usually over a distance of 23 ‑ 35 metres from the mat.
The game can be played as singles, or in teams of pairs (2 players per side), triples (3 players), or fours (a team of four is also known as a rink). In the team games each member has a particular role to play, such as in fours: |