Крокет
Од Википедија, слободна енциклопедија
Крокет е рекреациона игра, а во последно време и спорт во кој дрвена или пластична топка се удира со посебна палка налик на чекан (mallet), со тоа протнувајќи ја низ обрачи (кои обично се кваратни) вкопани во тревно игралиште.
Крокетот е измислен во Ирска во 1830-тите и бил превземен од Англија како хоби на аристократијата во 1850-тите. Веројатно е дека играта еволуирала од постарата игра пал мал. Наскоро станува популарна во Соединетите Американски Држави, Австралија, и Франција.
Некои варијации на крокетот се Екстремен Крокет (eXtreme Croquet) и Велоспиедски Крокет.
Содржина |
[уреди] Крокет по интернационални правила
(Со нагласок на Британската варијанта)
Постојат различни варијации на крокет кои се разликуваат според системот на бодирање, редот на играње и распоредот (особено кај рекреативниот крокет во домашни услови, каде што просторот не дозволува правилно следење на правилата). Официјалната Британска варијанта се вика ("Association Croquet"), каде што играчите имаат можност да удираат повеќе пати кога е нивен ред доколку: а) ја протнат топката низ правилниот обрач ("run" a hoop) или б) погодат друга топка. Доколку играчот погоди друга топка, тој мора да го одигра следниот удар со двете топки заедно, при што тие мора да се допираат - ова е,,крокетскиот удар" ("Croquet Stroke") по кој што и самата игра е именувана . Играчот победува одкога успеал двапати да ги протне сите негови топки низ сите обрачи (по протнувањето на топката низ сите обрачи, секоја топка мора да биде удрена и во централниот колец).
Кога долго континуирано играње од страна на еден играч ("breaks") почнало да зачестува како резултат на општото подобрување на стандардот на играње, неопходно било да се воведе и,,Напредно играње" ("Advanced Play") (експертен начин на играње на,,association" крокет). Во овој начин на игра, играчите може да бидат пенализирани за играње на дадени обрачи последнователно. Така, подвизи од типот на triple peels или sextuple peels (во кој напаѓачот заедно со својата топка истовремено ги удира и топките на партнерот или противникот низ дадени обрачи последователно) имаат зачестено за да се избегнат таквите пенали.
Also played competitively in the UK is Golf Croquet, in which each player takes turns trying to hit a ball through the same hoop, the winner being the player who manages to hit the ball through the most hoops first. Golf Croquet has the advantage of being easier to learn and play, but its critics claim that the lack of croquet strokes in the game means that it is less intellectually demanding. There are other variations popular in other croquet-playing nations.
Golf Croquet is the fastest-growing version of the game, owing largely to its simplicity and fierce competitiveness. Egyptian players overwhelmingly dominate the game.
As well as club-level games, there are regular world championships and international matches between croquet-playing countries. The sport has particularly strong followings in the UK, USA, New Zealand and Australia. Many other countries also play.
The current (August 05) Association Croquet World Champion is Reginald Bamford (RSA). The UK recently won the MacRobertson Shield, the major international trophy in Croquet. The current (August 04) Golf Croquet World Champion is Ahmed Nasr (Egypt).
In the UK, the sport is run by the Croquet Association - http://www.croquet.org.uk
Some people consider croquet to be viciously competitive. However, the ability in versions other than Golf Croquet to gain extra strokes favour players who position balls with more care, rather than simply as far away from everything else as possible. At championship standard association croquet, players can often make all 26 points (13 for each ball) in two turns.
[уреди] Американски шест-обрачен крокет
"Association" croquet -- more properly called "international-rules" croquet -- is probably the most widely played version of croquet in the world. Close on its heels is the extremely simple, yet highly competitive "golf" croquet -- the fastest-growing croquet game.
The "American-rules" version of croquet -- another six-wicket-layout game -- is the dominant game in the United States and, to its fans, by far the best version of the game, because of its emphasis on strategy. Its genesis is mostly in the international game, but it differs in a number of important ways, most notably in that a ball's "deadness" on other balls is carried over from turn to turn, until the ball has been "cleared" by scoring a wicket. This leads to strategic and tactical dilemmas far too complicated to be outlined here.
Shot-making ability is relatively less important in the American game than in the international game, and top-level international-rules players are, almost invariably, vastly superior shot makers.
American-rules enthusiasts enjoy the greater mental challenge of their game, along with the somewhat leveling effect brought about by the reduction in importance of shot-making skill. It is a maxim of the game that good strategy will beat pure physical skill more often than not, and this allows players with fewer physical gifts to be competitive in the sport.
American-rules croquet owes few of its rules but a great deal of its spirit, strategy, and tactics to Kentucky croquet, a variant of croquet played with nine wickets on clay courts. The best-known star of Kentucky croquet was Archie Burchfield, who discovered American six-wicket croquet in the early 1980s, quickly became one of its best players, and introduced new strategies and tactics that enlivened the game. Burchfield died in February, 2005.
The governing body of the American-rules game is the United States Croquet Association [1].
Top American-rules players as of early 2005 include:
Doug Grimsley, Mike Jenner, Kenster Rosenberry, Brian Cumming, Jackie Jones, Leo McBride, Mik Mehas, Jeff Soo, and perhaps the American game's most notable player, John C. Osborn, the son of USCA founder Jack Osborn.
Еве две поважни публикации на тема Американски крокет: Croquet World Online [2] и the National Croquet Calendar.
[уреди] Дворски (или Ддомашен) крокет
Croquet has become a popular backyard game in America, where croquet sets are commonplace in most department stores and sports shops. Such sets typically consist of 6 wooden mallets with plastic bumpers on both striking surfaces. The mallet head and handle usually come unassembled and are joined by screwing the handle into the head. The 6 balls are either of wood or, more commonly, plastic. They are coloured blue, red, black, yellow, green and orange. Also included are 9 wire wickets and two wooden stakes. There is often a carrying case or stand with the set.
Setup is just as in standard 9-wicket rules. It is a double-diamond pattern formed by 7 wickets, with the middle wicket serving as a shared point for both diamonds. Beyond the wickets at either end are one additional wicket and one stake. The diagram included with the set indicates that there is to be a 6 foot distance separating the wickets at the outer end of each diamond, and 6 more feet between the outermost wickets and the starting and turning stakes. In practice, however, this part of the diagram is typically disregarded, and a mere "mallets-head-length" (about 10 inches) separates one wicket from the other, and the outermost wicket from the stake. This allows the ball to more easily be hit through both wickets in one stroke.
The standard game is "cut-throat," with each player trying to beat all the others through the course to the final stake. A player's score is disregarded. Instead, the game is considered a race. The game is sometimes considered over as soon as the first player strikes the final stake. Alternatively, players continue playing for second place, third place, etc., until only one player's ball remains.
Play order is determined by the order of the stripes painted from top to bottom on the stakes. The mallets are sometimes also painted in multicolored stripes to remind players of the playing order. The usual order is blue, red, black, yellow, green, and finally orange. After orange is done, play continues with blue again. This order sometimes varies, depending on the set being used.
The first player begins by setting his or her ball beside or in front of the first stake. The player then attempts to strike the ball through the first two wickets. Though disallowed in some yards, players might sometimes use the technique of striking the ball not with the end of the mallet, but with the side, or even shoving it with the side, rather than striking it. Another technique disallowed in some yards, but tolerated in others, is to set the ball in direct contact with the stake, and to propel it by striking the stake, rather than the ball itself.
A bonus stroke is granted for each wicket the ball goes through. At the starting and turning stakes, two bonus strokes would be granted for getting the ball through both wickets in one stroke.
Two bonus strokes are also granted for hitting another ball. Hitting a ball cancels out all bonus strokes accumulated from wickets, and going through a wicket cancels all bonus strokes accumulated from hitting a ball. A player can therefore acquire no more than 2 bonus strokes at a time. If a player hits another ball, that player is considered "dead on" that ball, and can acquire no more bonus strokes from hitting that ball until he or she has gone through the next wicket (or struck the next stake) in the course.
After hitting another ball and gaining bonus strokes from it, a player has three choices as to ball placement. The player may play the ball where it lies, pick up the ball and place it right next to the struck ball, or pick up the ball and place it one mallets-head-length away from the struck ball.
If the ball is placed right next to the struck ball, the player may "send" the other ball by placing a foot on his or her own ball and then striking it so as to send the other ball away. Care must be taken not to unintentionally send one's own ball during this manoeuvre, and not to injure one's own foot with an overzealous and poorly aimed swing. Holding the ball in place with a hand, rather than a foot, is also acceptable in some yards. A "send" counts as one stroke, and the player has one more stroke after performing it.
Players must play their balls through the wickets in a certain order. From the starting stake and the first two wickets, they proceed forward and right to the third wicket, then forward and left to the fourth, middle wicket, then forward and right to the fifth wicket, then forward and left to the sixth and seventh wickets, and then to the turning stake. After striking the turning stake, the player may pick up the ball and place it again in the same manner as with the starting stake, or else play it where it lies. The player then proceeds back through wickets 7 and 6, in that order, then forward and right to the eighth wicket, then forward and left to the fourth, middle wicket (going through the other direction, this time), then forward and right through the ninth wicket, then forward and left through wickets 2 and 1 in that order, and finally striking the starting stake to win the game. Players do not get bonus strokes for going through a wicket backwards, or out of the proper order.
There are as many variations on these rules as there are yards in which the game is played, and care must be taken to make the "house rules" clear before the start of the game.
One popular variation is "Poison" or "Snake" rules. In this game, a ball that goes through the final wicket is considered a Snake, or Poison. This ball "kills" or eliminates other non-poisonous balls from play if it strikes them, or is struck by them. If a Snake hits another Snake, the struck Snake is killed. If a Snake hits a stake or goes through a wicket in any direction, it is killed. The last player on the course wins the game. Just as with regular balls, a Snake gains 2 bonus strokes for hitting another ball.
Another variation is team play, where pairs or trios of players compete against other teams to be the first with all members completing the course. Teams are typically blue, black and green versus red, yellow and orange. In couples play, it is blue and black versus red and yellow, or blue and yellow versus red and green versus black and orange.
Yet another variation is "Obstacle" or "Golf" rules, in which players must go through a unique course of wickets that has been designed to be long and difficult. Wickets are often placed in inconvenient spots, such as under bushes or on the sides of hills. The idea here is to maximize originality and absurdity, and there are often numerous additional rules toward this aim, such as the rule that you may not take a stroke without a drink (preferably alcoholic) in your hand.
The United States Croquet Association (USCA) is the governing body of croquet in the United States. The Official USCA 9 Wicket Croquet Webiste is http://www.9wicketcroquet.com
[уреди] Крокет-варијанти
[уреди] Екстремен (eXtreme) крокет
Taking the principles of backyard croquet to the next level results in the phenomenon of eXtreme Croquet. This variant shuns the serene settings of traditional croquet for more challenging terrain including those that contain trees, roots, hills, sand, mud, or moving or still water. Екстремниот Крокет uses the traditional English figure-eight standard layout, but several additional rules, rules that vary from location to location, are also employed.
[уреди] Велосипедски Крокет
Based on the rules of conventional croquet "Bicycle Croquet" probably came about in and around Graz/Austria in the beginning of the 20th century. The modern variation of Bicycle Croquet(from German "Fahrradkrocket") has been played since 1997, when Mike Fugeman (England) and Wolfgang Wendlinger (Austria) reinvented the Sport in Aigen im Ennstal/Austria. The homepage of BCCGraz (Bicycle Croquet Club Graz) gives the following description of the sport:
Велосипедски крокет - играта
In addition to a high level of fairness BC demands strict control over a player's body and soul. The correct control over ones bicycle is essential for an exciting and stimulating BC-game. The Rund (the ball) is played through the gates by the Holz (mallet). A time limit of 10 seconds has to be met for every individual play. The players alternate strokes and are not allowed to touch the ground with any part of their body. He or she who manages first to hit the peak at the end of the course with their runds wins the game.