Queen Elizabeth IINew Zealanders have woken to the news that Queen Elizabeth II has died. Aged 96, Queen Elizabeth II was the longest-serving monarch in the history of Britain and the Commonwealth, having acceded the throne in 1952. As Queen of the UK and 14 other realms, and head of the 54-nation Commonwealth, Elizabeth II was easily one of the world’s most recognisable heads of state during an extraordinarily long reign. Coming to the throne at the age of 25, she successfully steered the monarchy through decades of turbulent change, with her personal popularity providing ballast during the institution’s more difficult times. A chapter has closed on a great woman who dedicated a life of service to so many - rest easy, Queen Elizabeth II. Image sourced NZ Herald 1-5 Year Fours3-4 September 2022 With a field of 22 teams, I was looking forward to the competition being all over in one weekend. Alas, the statistical gods had other ideas. At Epsom, after two rounds, two of the ten teams had qualified; however, all teams needed to play out their last game. As fate would have it, those that needed the win dug deep and five more teams qualified. A contrast with the 12 teams at Blockhouse Bay - with four qualifying after two rounds and another two qualifying in the final round. Game 4, in the Round of 16, saw a matchup between two Howick teams. Another key match-up in the Round of 16 was game 7. Royal Oak, skipped by Steve Fisher, up against Pt Chevalier, Skipped by Shaun Goldsbury. This was a tight affair, with both leads and seconds consistently drawing resting touchers, which enticed the 3rds and skips to run and kill the end. When the bell rang, the teams were left playing the 12th end. The score finished 11-6 in favour of Pt Chevalier. Quarter Final 1 saw Bridge Park versus Epsom in a repeat of their round 1 qualifying match, which was won by Epsom 15-10. Bridge Park started stronger in this rematch, maintaining a four-shot lead, and was 10-6 after 11 ends. Epsom piled on some pressure, after 14 ends it was 10-10. During the 15th and final end, the bell sounded. With his final bowl, Bridge Park’s #3 killed the jack. All eyes turned to the Umpire for confirmation of the new CoP - 'if there is a kill after the bell, the jack is spotted on the two-metre mark'. The re-spotting left Epsom holding two shots. Bridge Park’s Skip’s final bowl got tangled in short front bowls, resulting in Epsom taking the honours. Quarter Final 2 saw Pakuranga against Howick. This was also a repeat of the round 1 qualifying match which was won by Pakuranga 13-12. On this occasion, Howick was not to be denied, they started off strongly and kept up the pressure. After 12 ends Howick led 17-5. Pakuranga scored eight shots in the next two ends but ran out of time. Quarter Final 3 had an unfortunate outcome, with Auckland Bowling Club's Skip suffering a medical event. A replacement player could not be obtained in time, so the team had to concede the game. Quarter Final 4 saw Pt Chev against an Ellerslie & Royal Oak composite side. No quarter was given in this match and no more than two shots separated the teams at any point. After 14 ends, the score was 9- all. Both teams kept their composure - the head was tight. After all, bowls were played, and out came the tape measure; one shot and the win to Pt Chevalier. In Semi-Final 1, Warwick Catchpole’s Epsom team was up against David Weir’s Howick team. The Howick combination leaped to a 10-0 lead after five ends and maintained the pressure to lead 16-5 after 12 ends. Either the wheels fell off, or the foot came off the pedal, but Epsom picked up a four and a five to close the gap, but time had run out. Howick had the win 16-14. Semi-Final 2 saw Jim Hunter’s Blockhouse Bay team up against Shaun Goldsbury’s Pt Chevalier team. This would turn out to be the match of the day. After six ends, it was a score of the devil - 6:6:6. After 12 ends it was 10-10. On the 13th end, Blockhouse Bay picked up a three. With time up, the 14th end would be the last. The leads traded shot for shot with all four bowls within half a mat of the jack. The Seconds also played tight bowls which gave the Skips a headache as to how the thirds should play. BHB chose to cover, whereas Pt Chev’s Skye Rene’s second shot was beautifully weighted into the head, which had the desired effect of opening it up. On the turn, Pt Chev had two shots, but the jack was slightly hidden with a front bowl and a shorter bowl out to the right. BHB skip, Jim Hunter went to cover the back but came up short. Shaun went for the drive, somehow the miracle happened, his bowl went through three impossible gaps - a million-to-one let-off for BHB. With his final bowl, Jim was up and behind the head about one metre from the ditch. Shaun knew he could not miss twice – or could he? The bowl went straight and true and collected the jack. Alas, it was fractionally off centre, the bowl finished in the ditch, but the jack had ricocheted out of bounds and was placed on the 2-metre mark. Pt Chev had two and measured for the third. As intended, the cover worked, and the final BHB bowl was closer by 2cm, so the score settled at 13-12 to BHB. What a match. I look forward to the final scheduled for the weekend of 8 & 9 October at Remuera. Contributed by Gerard Hulst
David (Flash) Gordon, Kerry (KJ) Lark, Jeff Amadia, Warwick Catchpole from Epsom Karen Dewar, Sue Wilson, Teresa Cowie and Mirrie Maritz from Rocky Nook
Celebrating Tongan Language WeekSunday 4 September – Saturday 10 September 125th anniversary celebrationsMt Albert Bowls Bowls season is about to begin, and we are celebrating our 125th Anniversary. The celebrations kick off on Saturday 24th September 2022 with our Open Day, wrapping up on Saturday 17th June 2023 at the black-tie AGM & Prize Giving - check out our full calendar of events. We look forward to seeing you at MABC. Contributed by Jhana Savov North vs South is back10-11 September 2022 After a hiatus, the North vs South Challenge is back this weekend at Hopes Stadium, Dunedin. Players on both sides are top notch which makes for exciting entertainment. Players announced in July: North: South: Make sure to check out the Bowls NZ website or their Facebook for action updates. PBA NZ Pairs winners4 September 2022 PBA NZ Finals for 2022 are now complete. Congratulations to Nick Thompson and Garry Cotter who are the PBA NZ World Pairs winners.
Good luck 1-5 Year Pairs10-11 September 2022 Playing with two or three teammates in the Fours is very different from singles or pairs! They say Pairs is the simplest team format and is the most fluid of the team events. but it's also the most complex to strategise. Getting your tactics right is crucial. Each player must know their role, and how that affects the overall game plan for the team. Going by the number of entries, the Pairs event is popular among 1-5s, the tactics are just part of the challenge and competitiveness. Qualifying venues on Saturday are Blockhouse Bay, Epsom and Howick, with post-section HQ on Sunday at Epsom Bowls. Good luck to everyone. Upcoming events10-11 Sep – 1-5 Year Pairs 1-5 Year event entriesOne more discipline to go for the 1-5 Year championships, it's the Singles. Entries close at midnight on Sunday, 11 September! Women's Open
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