Bocce
Bocce is a precision sport closely related to bowls and petanque with a
common ancestry from ancient games played in the Roman Empire. Developed
into its present form in Italy, it is played around Europe and also in
overseas countries that have received Italian migrants, including the United
States and Australia, initially amongst the migrants themselves but slowly
becoming more popular with their descendants and the wider community.
Unlike bowls, bocce is played on dirt courts of approximately 20 to 30
metres in length and approximately 2.5 to 4 metres wide, and has wooden
boards surrounding the court. Bocce bowls are made of brass, and unlike lawn
bowls they are spherical and have no inbuilt bias (they will roll a straight
course). Bocce courts are also equipped with surrounding wooden boards of
approximately 15 centimetres in height.
Like bowls, a game can be contested between two players, or two teams of of
two or four. In any case, a match is started by a randomly chosen side being
given the opportunity to throw a smaller ball, the jack (also called a
pallino in some areas), into a zone near the other end of the court of about
5 metres in length (ending 2 metres from the end of the court). If they miss
twice, the other team is awarded the opportunity to place the jack anywhere
they choose within the zone. In any case, the side that places the jack is
given the opportunity to bowl the first bocce bowl. Once the first bowl has
taken place, the other side has the opportunity to bowl. From then on, the
side which does not have the ball closest to the jack has a chance to bowl,
up until one side or the other has used their four bowls. At that point, the
other side bowls its remaining bocce bowls. Like lawn bowls, the team with
the closest bowl or bowls to the jack is awarded one point for each bowl
that is has closer to the jack than the other side. The contest continues
until one team scores 13 points (though this can vary regionally).
As well as the standard rolling bowl, in which the balled is rolled all the
way along the court, players are permitted to throw the ball in the air in
an underarm action. This is generally used to knock either the jack or
another bowl into a more favourable position. Tactics can get quite complex
when players have sufficiently control over the bocce bowl to land or roll
it accurately.
As well as the traditional game, there are several variations that omit the
competitive aspect and are essentially solo accuracy contests of bowling and throwing.
Collegium Cosmicum Ad Buxeas is the international organization for the sport
of bocce, based in Rome, Italy.
At the elite level, there are world championships held regularly, and Bocce
is part of the quadrennial World Games, a multi-sport event for lesser-known sports.