Otago Daily Times

Club has long tradition of producing top bowlers

- WAYNE PARSONS

NO strangers to national and internatio­nal competitio­n, Carolyn Crawford and Brent McEwan head a long list of past and present members who will gather to celebrate the 125th jubilee of the St Clair Bowling Club this weekend.

Establishe­d in partnershi­p with a lawn tennis club in 1892, in Beach St, the club was set up to cater for retired or active businessme­n for the purposes of recreation­al and social mixing. Wives were included only for local club and social occasions.

The menonly membership grew along with growth of the suburb over the club’s first 15 years, and the need to expand from a fourrink facility led to a move to a fullsized green in Albert St, where a group of women leased an area at the back of the green for croquet.

The club remained at the site until 1925, when the lowlying, floodprone greens prompted the club to move to its present site in Ings Ave.

A new pavilion was opened in 1927 for the princely sum of £1250. The croquet club moved to grounds of its own further down Ings Ave, where it stayed until it was wound up in the 1960s.

A women’s bowls section was establishe­d in 1929.

Crawford (26 centre titles) remains the club’s top female player . She won a singles title in 2015 at the disabled world championsh­ips, and a national pairs title in 2014, when, with Anne Muir, she defeated the Commonweal­th Games pairing of Jo Edwards and Val Smith in the final.

The CrawfordMu­ir pairing continued to their winning way against Edwards and Smith last year, knocking them out in the pairs semifinals in New Plymouth, and lost narrowly Ashleigh Jeffcoat and Dale Raynor in the final. Crawford and Muir Address: Jubilee dinner:

proved a force again at this year’s national championsh­ips, finishing third. Crawford has been strong in singles competitio­n, also.

Debuting as a 19yearold and going on to play representa­tive golf for Otago 103 times and 24 times for New Zealand, McEwan followed his wife Shannon along to the St Clair Bowling Club in 2015, swapping his golf clubs for a set of bowls.

Now 36, and in just his third year as a bowls player, he is proving just as competitiv­e on the bowling green as he was on the greens of various golf clubs around the world.

With a young family, the plan was to spend more time at home, but it hadn’t quite worked out like that, he said of becoming one of the region’s highly respected bowlers.

‘‘I got the bug and away I went.’’

McEwan has joined an impressive list of millennial bowlers dominating a very competitiv­e national scene and putting the sport of bowls in a very healthy state throughout the country.

McEwan had a golden run last year, reaching the qualifying finals of both the Scottish and Internatio­nal PBA opens, winning the centre triples title and club singles championsh­ip. He had an impact at the national championsh­ips in Dunedin over New Year, progressin­g through to the knockout stages in singles, pairs and fours. But it was his 2113 singles victory over Scottish internatio­nal Ryan Burnett that caught the attention of many.

‘‘That was quite a buzz,’’ he said of his victory over Burnett.

His run of form continues and earlier this week he finished second in the champion of champions singles.

He is now preparing for the national under8 (for bowlers with less than eight years in the game) singles championsh­ips in Auckland.

Among other notable members on the St Clair Bowling Club honours board is All Black Ray Bell, who from 1951 played nine times for the All Blacks, including three tests and scoring 29 points. Bell , who died in 2016, aged 90, was a former president of the club.

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Present generation . . . Women’s champion Carolyn Crawford and men’s champion Brent McEwan at the St Clair Bowling Club, which marks its 125th anniversar­y this weekend.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Present generation . . . Women’s champion Carolyn Crawford and men’s champion Brent McEwan at the St Clair Bowling Club, which marks its 125th anniversar­y this weekend.

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