Nine to Six: Part 2 - Post Roquet Options

USCA Stock Photo

Probably the biggest adjustment when transitioning from nine-wicket croquet to the six-wicket game is the reduction of options after roqueting a live ball. The nine wicket game offers a range of choices for your first bonus shot:

  1. You can play your shot from a distance of one mallet head (9") or less from the roqueted ball.
  2. You can use the most famous shot in croquet. Place your ball in contact with the roqueted ball and use your foot or hand to secure your ball. It's the ultimate stop shot.
  3. A simple croquet shot where your ball is placed in contact with the roqueted ball. You can perform a split roll here, a stop shot or a simple takeoff.
  4. And the final option (unique to nine-wicket) is playing your ball where it lays.

For the six-wicket game, it is simple. Once you roquet a live ball, go ahead and pick it up because you'll be playing a shot in contact with the roqueted ball. There is no option for placing your foot or hand on your ball on your bonus stroke so forget all about that one. You can play a split roll, stop shot or simple takeoff. The key for the takeoff is that you have to hit into the roqueted ball enough so that it visibly moves. If the ball does not move, it is a fault. The balls are reset and the turn is over.

The Nine to Six Series (Highlighting Differences Between Nine-wicket and Six-wicket Croquet)

Part One -- Clearing Deadness
Part Two -- Post Roquet Options
Part Three -- Boundaries
Part Four -- Wiring
Part Five -- Rover Balls

More on this series: The series endeavors to describe changes that nine wicket players will encounter when they try out the U.S. rules six wicket game. There's a lot of quality information on six-wicket on the internet, but some of it seems pretty complex and is presented all at once. The aim here is to slice this into smaller concepts to allow players to absorb as needed. Also, I need to clarify that I have been playing the six-wicket game for just one-year and have not attended tournaments. So, more experienced players should feel welcome to chime in using the comments and clarify if I am leading people astray. I do think my inexperience is useful in that the concepts are fresh in my mind. Also, for players making the jump to six-wicket, I assume the basics of the game are understood.

Croquet News Clips: Croquet Shirt, Egyptian Open and Wine & Wickets

Designer Duncan Quinn has unleashed a "croquet shirt" on the world. Other than the one on the left being predominantly white, I'm not sure what would classify these as croquet shirts. I suppose they look comfortable, but ultimately I'd suggest a modification. You can keep the pink trim on the white, but I'd also offer four more versions with blue, red, black and yellow trim for each. Again, the mention of Adrien Grenier makes me think that some how, some way, HBO is going to come after my Entourage script based on Ari Gold being a closet, elite-level six-wicket player. Also, I better mention our own Croquet Network Store for those who like to bring a little humor to their fashion on the court.

The Egyptians once again showed their dominance in golf croquet. Sherif Nafaa claimed the 5th Egyptian Open by defeating 21-year-old Ahmed Yasser 2-7,  7-,6  7-6,   5-7,  7-5. It must have been a thrilling match, but I'd be curious to know how long this final series lasted. Nafa earned $2000 (U.S.) for the win. More details are available over several new items on the WCF website.

Wine, Wickets and Wheels, oh my. The Hayes Croquet Club continues to push the envelope for aggressive growth and marketing of the game as they are planning several croquet events to be weaved into a July 1-4 celebration at the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center near Fremont, Ohio. As it has been recently brought to the attention of the croquet world that the Presidential Center contains a massive collection of croquet books and artifacts, the Hayes Club was formed roughly one year ago to acknowledge the collection and already boasts 40 members that play weekly on the lawns at the center. Now, they are promoting this Wine, Wickets & Wheels event. It seems like a massive undertaking and the best way to understand it is to check out the details on the CroquetWorld website.

October Croquet Links: NCC, Nine-Wicket Website and Croquet Records

Clubs

Sarasota County Croquet Club -- The SCCC is located in Venice, Florida and the video above is a superb introduction to the club.

National Croquet Center -- The crown jewel of U.S. Croquet is located in West Palm Beach, Florida and features 12 full-size croquet lawns and a 19,000 square foot clubhouse.

Detroit Croquet Club -- This site has intrigued me for quite a while. Although some of the pages have never been filled with content and no updates appear, I feel the concept of what they are doing and the feel of the site is unique and possibly a promising way to organize a club. Would love to see this site be more active, but at the least, maybe by checking it out club managers can draw from the website design and format.

Associations

USCA Nine-Wicket Croquet Site -- I think this site is structured well and can be a key to developing the game across the United States. The site offers an RSS feed so you can stay up-to-date with the news section with your iGoogle or MyYahoo page or other feed reader.

Croquet New Zealand -- The association site for croquet in New Zealand which boasts nearly 4,000 members. A functional site that seems to be updated frequently. My favorite discovery here is the collection of PDF versions of their magazine -- Croquet New Zealand Update.

International

CroquetRecords.com -- This site updates the International, U.S. and North American rankings among other things. If you dig around, you'll find a good history on champions and tournament results as well.

Bowdon Croquet Club -- The club in England looks like a good model for running a large club. Of particular interest to me was the pricing scale.

Country Club Johannesburg  -- I thought this South African site had a nice look to it and some interesting statistics on membership numbers for the commonwealth countries.

All links above will now appear in the Croquet Links section on the navigation bar at the top of the site. Any links back are greatly appreciated.

Opening Game (October 2009)

Here in the Kansas City area, croquet is starting to wind down a bit as the weather cools down for fall. Behind the scenes though, we've been working feverishly on the November issue of the Croquet Network Online Magazine which will focus on the Nine-Wicket championships and kick off two new departments. The new issue will be out during the second half of the month and is already weighing in at 16 pages (first issue was 11).

In addition, the prep work for future issues is already underway, because even though croquet play here in the midwest may be ending, we all know that the next few months will be busy for the game with Selection 8's later this month and the USCA Championship and Women's Golf Championship in November. December has the USCA Golf Croquet Championship and the Solomon Trophy on deck.

Covering the Nine-Wicket Tourney in KC was a good way to get started, but the next challenge will be providing coverage for the very busy tournament schedule across the country and beyond. As I've been making contacts and requests across the croquet community, I'm already impressed at how willing players are to help out and how supportive they have been of the online magazine concept. That's great news as I'll be counting on the community for access, results and photos as we build this thing up.

Along those lines, I would like to remind everyone to feel free to utilize the forum/message board to talk croquet, pose questions, post tourney results or announce upcoming events. The link is located on the top menu and you can also check it out here:

Croquet Network Forum

Also, if you have not yet subscribed to the online magazine, you can do that by entering your name and e-mail address in the form to the upper right of the website. The magazine is still in the "Free Trial" phase right now, so you've got nothing to lose by signing up and checking out the premiere issue. Again, the November issue will be released in the second half of this month.

Enjoy the coverage and hopefully those in the midwest and north can get a few more games in before the really cold weather hits.

Croquet News Clips: John Prince Cartoon, Egyptian Open and 50

John Prince illustrationIf you follow the Nottingham Board List, the above cartoon will probably amuse you. Beyond on that you should check out this web page on the John Prince (scroll down) that has all kinds of croquet illustrations.

Sometimes it seems like Egypt is the heart of croquet. Sure, Great Britain is pretty much the dominant force, but check out this quote from the WCF site on the Egyptian Open.

Yesterday at a Press Conference Members of the Egyptian Croquet Federation Board and WCF President answered questions for about an hour on subjects ranging from the strength of Egypts players, how croquet is developing into new countries, funding for international events and development of croquet in Egypt.

I haven't heard the word press conference associated with croquet much here in the states.

If you want to impress me, put 50 years in the game. Muriel Woodward, 87, and Eileen Trenwith
from the Yorke Peninsula in Australia were honored for 52 and 50 years respectively as members of the Moonta Croquet Club.

“I love it and I just enjoyed playing," Woodward said. "I didn’t go out there expecting to win. I just wanted to enjoy the game. I used to go away to tournaments and always take a beginner as a partner. I like teaching others and passing on my love for the game.”

This certainly highlights one of the many benefits of croquet and I love the passion they show for the game.

Upcoming Tournaments / October-November 2009

OCTOBER 2009

Oct 02-03 / Mallet Mayhem 09 (9-Wicket)
Rockford, IL / www.tinkercottage.com

Oct 08-11 / Country Boys Croquet Tournament
Lexington, NC / Danny Huneycutt - (336-764-4554) huney1322@triad.rr.com

Oct 15-18 / Texas Croquet Classic (US)
Dallas, TX / Bob Knowlton - robertk@baylorhealth.edu (214.750.8722)

Oct 20-25 / Coastal Croquet Clubs Fall Invitational (US)
Hilton Head, SC / Avril Nicholson - avril@sc.rr.com (843.705.2929)

Oct 22-25 / Selection Eights (AC)
West Palm Beach, FL / Rich Lamm - richlamm@comcast.net or Jerry Stark - TPRover@aol.com

Oct 23–25 / Jekyll Island Invitational
Jekyll Island, GA / Dan Lott - lott1965@bellsouth.net (912.506.8744)

Oct 29-Nov 1 / West Indies Croquet Championship (US?)
St. Croix, VI / Les Kelley - lkelley@nnldlaw.com (340.773.9363)

Oct 30- Nov 1 / SCCC Fall Invitational (Singles Only) (US?)
Venice, FL / Jackie Jones - crokpeople@aol.com (941.484.3206)

NOVEMBER 2009

Nov 04–08 / Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club 13th Croquet Invitational
Boca Raton, FL / Norma Truman, TM - (561-368-9291) tntboca@aol.com

Nov 08–14 / USCA National Championships
Rancho Mirage, CA / Erica Sherman - (561-478-0760) tournamentusca@aol.com

Nov 17–21 / USCA Seniors & Masters Championship
West Palm Beach, FL / Erica Sherman - (561-478-0760) tournamentusca@aol.com

Nov 21–28 / WCF Womens Golf Croquet World Championship
Cairnlea, Victoria, Australia

Nov 30-Dec 02 / USCA National Golf Championship
West Palm Beach, FL / Erica Sherman - (561-478-0760) tournamentusca@aol.com

USCA Nine-Wicket Croquet Nationals Final Day Report

Nick Zink (left) and Matt Smith (right) received doubles champion trophies.
Tournament director Matt Griffith (center) presented
.

Six partner teams battled it out starting at 8:00 a.m. on the final day of the USCA Nine-Wicket Nationals, but in the end Matt Smith and Nick Zink of Warrensburg, Missouri made a comeback win to take the doubles title over Matt Griffith and Billy Bob Breeden in a 27-23 thriller (more details to come on this match later).

In the first round, John Warlick and Paula Mol were able to advance with a win over George Cochran and Howard Menzel. In the other match, defending doubles champs Matt Baird and Art Parsells defeated Don Brooks and John Nichols.

In the semi-finals, Warlick and Mol battled Smith and Zink, but lost a close one 23-20. On the other field, Griffith and Breeden survived against Baird and Parsells 30-29. It featured an interesting final turn with Parsells needing to score 14-point wicket and 15PW for the tie. Hitting the stake would have secured a win. After splitting his partner yellow ball and clearing 14PW, Baird and Parsells discussed and opted for a takeoff to 15PW. Unfortunately the takeoff was a little long and created a short angle shot that Parsells attempted but missed. That secured the one-point victory for Griffith and Breeden.

In the third place game Baird and Parsells defeated Warlick and Mol.

USCA Nine-Wicket Croquet Nationals Day Two Report

Matt Smith lines up a shot in the finals (George Cochran is to the far left)

Day two mainly consisted of cutthroat action on one court and doubles play on the five other fields. However, the big event of the day was the singles finals which capped off the day. Matt Smith took down last year's champion George Cochran in an entertaining match. I wasn't able to take notes on the game (had my two daughters with me), but Smith essentially struggled at the end of each of his breaks to set up his partner ball, which left opportunities for Cochran. It led to Smith taking two 25-foot attempts at the stake with his red ball that failed. I expect to get more details on this match and post at a later time.

From the doubles action, two teams went undefeated and have first round byes this morning. Billy Bob Breeden and Matt Griffith went undefeated in one block and Matt Smith and Nick Zink matched that with an undefeated record in the other block. Today's first round games will start at 8:00 a.m. and the matchups are George Cochran/Howard Menzel against John Warlick/Paula Mol and Matt Baird/Art Parsells against Don Brooks/Johnny Nichols. That should put the doubles final around 11:00 a.m. this morning at Mid-America Sports Complex in Shawnee, Kansas.

USCA Nine-Wicket Croquet Nationals Day One Report

John Warlick during block play

It'll be a re-match for the 2009 Nine-Wicket Singles, as both George Cochran and Matt Smith survived block play and work their way through the eight-man elimination tournament. The singles final will take place at 4:00 p.m. tomorrow -- shortly after doubles block play concludes. Cochran won last year's and this should be an entertaining match.

Singles Elimination tourney results:

Round One
#1 George Cochran defeated #8 Dylan Goodwin 32-7
#4 Matt Baird defeated #5 Billy Bob Breeden 32-3
#3 Matt Smith defeated #6 Nick Zink 32-15
#2 Matt Griffith defeated #7 Don Brooks 32-14

Semi-Finals
#1 George Cochran defeated #4 Matt Baird 32-24
#3 Matt Smith defeated #2 Matt Griffith 32-24

Finals
#1 George Cochran vs #3 Matt Smith
(4:00 p.m. Saturday, 9/26, Mid-America Sports Complex, Shawnee, Kansas)