Reading The Head
A Guide for Skips and Thirds
Once all the bowls have been delivered, assess the head in the following order
1. Identify the Shot Bowl
- Which team is holding shot?
- How close is the bowl to the jack?
- Is it protected or exposed?
2. Count the Scoring Bowls
- How many shots are currently held?
- Are they clear measures or could they be challenged?
3. Look For Danger Bowls
- Which opposition bowls are threatening?
- Could a small movement of the jack change the result?
- Are there bowls positioned to trail the jack?
4. Identify Your Back Bowls
- Do you have bowls behind the head?
- Can they save shots if the jack is moved?
- Are they protecting against a trail or drive?
5. Identify Their Back Bowls
- What back bowls do the opposition have?
- If you attack the head, could they benefit?
6. Assess the Jack Position
- Is the jack vulnerable?
- Could a trail improve your position?
- Could moving the jack create danger?
7. Look for the Percentage Shot
Ask yourself:
- Can we draw another shot?
- Can we remove the shot bowl?
- Can we trail the jack?
- Is there a safer option?
8. Consider the Scoreboard
- The correct shot often depends on the score
- Leading comfortably? Play percentage bowls.
- Trailing late in the game? You may need to create opportunities.
- Last bowl in hand – attack may be justified
- Without last bowl – build pressure and protect the head.

The Three Questions Every Skip Should Ask
- What are we holding?
- What could hurt us?
- What is the highest percentage shot available?
If a skip or third can answer these three questions before every decision, they will make better tactical choices throughout the game.
