Yorkshire Post

In the swing as croquet returns to region’s lawns

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: ruby.kitchen@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

THERE CAN be little more quintessen­tially English than a game of croquet, as players putt in pendulum swings against a backdrop of neat country lawns.

Such an idyllic image of a genteel elite, in spotless whites, was once a fashion for Victorian England, but can prove an illusion in modern times when the game can be fiercely competitiv­e.

As this week sees the start of the league season after an uncertain time for Yorkshire’s teams, it marks a glorious homecoming, they say, to be back on the lawns.

There is a calculated skill to putting and hooping and a mallet’s pendulum strike, said player Debbie James, which proves a “workout for the mind” as well as an exercise.

“It’s a very exciting prospect, like a new sense of freedom,” said Ms James, who is secretary of the Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club which returned to play yesterday for the start of the summer season.

“Croquet players are hardy folks, we play in all weathers,” she added. “But there’s nothing nicer than a lovely sunny afternoon on the lawn.

“You do forget your problems, being so absorbed in the game.”

Croquet is believed to have been brought to England in the 1850s as a gentle game to be played by the wealthy middle classes on grassy estates and country lawns.

Over a century since it first became popular there is renewed vigour as it has become increasing­ly formalised. There is the national Croquet Associatio­n, the regional Yorkshire Federation, and the 15 clubs it runs across the region from Hull to Sheffield, Huddersfie­ld, Beverley and York.

Last year, the federation was able to play from June onwards, but a delayed start to the season put paid to Yorkshire’s league ambitions. This year, there is hope it can return. Croquet, said Ms James, is the “perfect socially distanced sport”, with only one player usually seen on the lawn at any given time, and a two-mallet distance measuring exactly two metres.

There have been adaptation­s this year, but not all for the worse. In Beverley, at Rowley Manor Hotel which grants the club use its three lawns, one is now to house a marquee for guests’ afternoon teas.

“Even if you’re not playing, it’s nice just to be there, gaining the benefits of fresh air and a change of scene,” reflected Ms James.

And the game of croquet, which began as a leisure pursuit for the wealthy in Victorian country gardens, has evolved to one with rules and strategies and a rigid sense of fair play.

There are hoops and balls and points on pegs, takeoff shots and stop shots, and sticks called ‘bisques’ which mark a golf-style handicap for extra turns against an opponent.

Then there is ‘associatio­n’ croquet, which is described as a complex cross between snooker and chess on grass, or ‘golf ’ croquet with somewhat fewer shots to master.

For Ms James, who has been playing for nine years, it’s ‘plotting’ on grass, mastering breaks and strategies for turning a roquet to a croquet and running a hoop.

Nationally, she said, there is a drive to “get more people playing more croquet in more places”, and the hope is to broaden the sport’s reach.

The game has evolved over the course of a century, she said, to one which can be accessible to all.

“Once lawn mowers were introduced that changed the quality of the lawns,” said Ms James. “But the basic enjoyment hasn’t changed, it’s still mallets and hoops and balls.

“Croquet quite often has an image problem,” she added. “It’s seen as a sport for posh people, but that’s not true at all. The sport has evolved, and is altogether more profession­al.

“It appeals to anybody interested in sport or meeting people. And you don’t have to run around to play it. If you can hold a mallet you can start to play croquet.”

If you can hold a mallet you can start to play croquet. Debbie James, Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club.

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 ?? PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY ?? HOOP DREAMS: Members of Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club practising for their new season at their grounds on the lawns of Rowley Manor Hotel, Little Weighton, Cottingham, near Hull.
PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY HOOP DREAMS: Members of Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club practising for their new season at their grounds on the lawns of Rowley Manor Hotel, Little Weighton, Cottingham, near Hull.
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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY ?? GAME ON: From top, Debbie James, Club Secretary of Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club; club member Stanley Smith, practising on the lawns at Rowley Manor Hotel.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY GAME ON: From top, Debbie James, Club Secretary of Beverley and East Riding Croquet Club; club member Stanley Smith, practising on the lawns at Rowley Manor Hotel.

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