THE LAWS OF ASSOCIATION CROQUET
Copyright ©
2000 The Croquet Association on behalf of itself and the Australian Croquet
Association, Croquet New Zealand and the United States Croquet Association
PART 2
ORDINARY SINGLES PLAY
A. GENERAL LAWS OF PLAY
13. WIRING LIFT
- LIFT
If the adversary is responsible for the position of a ball of the striker’s
side which is wired from all other balls and not in contact with another ball,
the striker may start his turn:
- by playing
as the balls lie; or
- by lifting
the wired ball and playing it from any unoccupied point on either baulk-line.
- RESPONSIBILITY
FOR POSITION
- Subject
to Law 13(b)(2), a player becomes responsible for the
position of any ball:
- that
he is deemed to have played; or
- that
he is deemed to have roqueted; or
- that
is moved or shaken or becomes a ball in hand as a consequence of his play,
including a ball replaced after rectification of an error committed by
him under Laws 25 to 28.
- A player
is not responsible for the position of any ball replaced following:
- an
interference committed by him under Laws 30 to 32;
or
- an
interference, other than one committed by him, under Law 33; or
- an
interference under Law 34
unless he was so responsible before
the interference occurred or became so responsible thereafter.
- WHEN
WIRED A ball ("the relevant ball") is wired from another ball ("the target
ball") if:
- any part
of a hoop, including the jaws, or the peg would impede the direct course
of any part of the relevant ball towards any part of the target ball; or
- any part
of a hoop, excluding the jaws, or the peg would impede the swing of the
mallet before its impact with the relevant ball; or
- any part
of the relevant ball lies within the jaws of a hoop.
- IMPEDED
SWING In Law 13(c)(2), the swing is impeded if there
is any part of an end face of the mallet that the striker used in the turn
before the relevant ball was positioned with which he would be unable to strike
the centre of the relevant ball in order to drive it freely with his normal
swing towards any part of the target ball. However, the swing is not impeded
merely because a hoop or the peg interferes with the striker's stance.
- TESTING
- A player
may ask a referee to conduct a wiring test only if he is the striker entitled
to claim a lift with the relevant ball before the first stroke of the current
turn. He must otherwise rely on an unaided ocular test to determine whether
or not one ball is wired from another.
- The striker
is entitled to the benefit of any doubt in an adjudication of whether one
ball is wired from another.
- CHANGE
OF DECISION
If the striker lifts a ball of his side under Law
13(a)(2):
- it is
thereby elected as the striker’s ball and he may not then play with the
other ball of his side. If he does so, Law 26 applies.
In addition, he is obliged to take the lift to which he is entitled and
he may not then play the lifted ball from where it lay before it was lifted
unless it already lay on a baulk-line.
- and places
it on an unoccupied point on either baulk-line, whether in contact with
another ball or not, he remains entitled to play it from any unoccupied
point on either baulk-line until he plays a stroke.
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