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
B. ERRORS IN PLAY
23. FORESTALLING PLAY
- DEFINITION
A player forestalls play when, in order to discharge his duty as a referee
of the game, he issues a request to the striker that play cease in a manner
capable of conveying the request to a striker with normal hearing.
- ADVERSARY
MUST NOT FORESTALL Unless an error under Laws 25,
26, 27(d) or 28
has already occurred, the adversary must not forestall play or warn the striker
if he suspects or becomes aware that the striker is about to:
- run a wrong
hoop; or
- play a
wrong ball; or
- purport
to take croquet from a dead ball.
- ADVERSARY
MUST FORESTALL Subject to Laws 23(b) and 23(d),
a player must forestall play immediately if he suspects or becomes aware that:
- the striker
intends to play a questionable stroke without having it specially watched;
or
- an error,
other than a fault, or an interference is about to occur; or
- an error
or an interference has occurred; or
- the striker’s
turn is about to end prematurely (see Law 35(a) and,
for handicap play, Law 37(e)); or
- a clip
is misplaced; or
- a
boundary marking has been displaced.
- WHEN TO
FORESTALL The adversary should forestall play between strokes and, unless
the issue concerns the stroke about to be played, must not forestall play
after a stroke has started and before it has been played. If he does so, Law
34(a) applies.
- STRIKER
CONTINUING TO PLAY If the striker continues to play after being forestalled
and before the issue is settled, Law 32 applies.
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