Bowls: Selection by Kelly key to win

Winning fours third Andrew Kelly in action in the men's final at the Taieri Bowling Club...
Winning fours third Andrew Kelly in action in the men's final at the Taieri Bowling Club yesterday. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
Andrew Kelly has come a long way since reaching his first national fours final with the teenage Kelly Gang in 2006.

In those days, he was drive-happy and would have a crack at any opponent's bowl still on the green. He still has the powerful drive but does not employ it as much he once did.

Two years ago aged 23, Kelly was the youngest skip to win a New Zealand fours title.

He still knows how to select a winning four and where to place his men to bring the best result.

That is why he chose the driving role at third for himself and put veteran Mike Kernaghan (Kaikorai) at skip to draw the pressure shots after he had broken up the head.

Kelly knew he would have bowls on the head because Mike Nagy (Taren Point) and Tony Grantham (Birkenhead), the winners of the pairs title last week, were at the front of his four.

Kelly beat the Dunedin Composite team of Mitchell Will, Keri Rupene, Brendon Hollander and Doug Thomas 19-10 in a one-sided final in Dunedin yesterday.

It was the fourth time Kelly had skipped a team in the fours final at the national championships.

His teams have been in the final for the past three years. He won in Auckland in 2012 and this year and was runner-up last year.

''I would have been unhappy if we had lost today after being in the last three finals. Two in the hand is better than two in the bush,'' he said.

''It was a great feeling to win a national title again. We had a really good team and gelled well.''

Each man knew his role.

It was the job of Nagy and Grantham to get the early bowls close to the jack and they did so consistently, by outplaying their opponents.

It was Kelly's job to drive them out of trouble and he did it on the eighth end, to start a seven-end scoring spree.

Kernaghan displayed the talent that gained him a Commonwealth Games singles bronze medal in 2002 by putting in the covering shots and tidying up any loose ends. He displayed maturity in his decision-making and class in his delivery.

Kelly's team did not have any game plan for the final.

''It's hard to make up a game plan outdoors because the conditions are so variable,'' Kelly said. ''We just prepared the same way as earlier games.''

The game was even at 5-5 after seven of the 18 ends.

But Kelly's four then scored 14 points on the next seven ends to lead 19-5 after 14 ends.

Kelly is an experienced campaigner and he put his stamp on the game by shortening the length on the 11th end.

''They didn't adjust as well as we did,'' Kelly said.

Grantham drew the shot, Kelly added two shots and Kernaghan added the bonus shot for four points. It was the decisive act of the game. Thomas's challenge withered after that.

 

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