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Players’ Rules of Engagement for the Noble Game
of Conkers at the
Ashton Conker Club World Conker Championships:
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Organised by Ashton Conker Club, the competition first
took place in 1965 and has grown year-on-year ever
since. Nowadays, teams from all over the world meet for the competition. The competitors play on eight white podiums in the playing arena and go through rounds until the winner emerges and is lead to the Conker Throne and crowned with conkers. In 2009 the Championships moved away from Ashton's tiny village green to a much larger venue less than a mile away.
serious point: to raise money for charities for the blind and the visually impaired. In 2010 the event raised £21,000, bringing the all-time grand total raised to over £400,000! This is with tremendous voluntary work by the organising committee, members of Ashton Conker Club and of course the players, stall holders, sponsors and spectators.
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All Conkers and Laces are supplied by Ashton
Conker Club. Laces must not be knotted further or
tampered with. Each player is given a new conker and lace at the start of each game. Players may not re-use conkers from earlier games. The game will commence with a toss of a coin, the winner of the toss may elect to strike or receive. A distance of no less than 8" or 20cm of lace must be between knuckle and nut. Each player then takes three alternate strikes at the opponent’s conker. Each attempted strike must be clearly aimed at the nut, no deliberate mis-hits. The game will be decided once one of the conkers is smashed. A small piece of nut or skin remaining shall be judged out, it must be enough to mount an attack.
then the match shall be replayed. Any nut being knocked
from the lace but not smashing may be re-threaded and the game continued. A player causing a knotting of the laces (a snag) will be noted, three snags will lead to disqualification. If a game lasts for more than five minutes then play will halt and the "5 minute rule" will come into effect. Each player will be allowed up to nine further strikes at their opponents nut, again alternating three strikes each. If neither conker has been smashed at the end of the nine strikes then the player who strikes the nut the most times during this period will be judged the winner.
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The History of Ashton Conker Club
It was on
Ashton village green, surrounded by horse chestnut trees, that
the World Conker Championships were conceived in 1965.
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Conker Championships Photos
Pictures from the
2010 World Conker Championships