Tiddlywinks

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Tiddlywinks is an indoor game played with sets of small discs called "winks" lying on a surface, usually a flat mat. Players use a larger disc called a "squidger" to pop a wink into flight by pressing down on one side of the wink. The objective of the game is to cause the winks to land either on top of opponents' winks, or ultimately inside a pot or cup.

The game began as an adult parlour game in Victorian England. Joseph Assheton Fincher filed the original patent application for the game in 1888, and obtained the trademark Tiddledy-Winks in 1889. John Jaques and Son were the exclusive distributors of the game, initially, though many other companies ultimately produced the game. It became one of the most popular crazes during the 1890s, played by adults and children alike. In its earlier years, many different varieties were produced to meet the marketplace demands, including those combining tiddledy-winks principles with tennis, basketball, croquet, golf, and other popular sports and endeavours.[1]

Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, the public perception of the game changed. To many, tiddlywinks was considered to be a simpleminded, frivolous children's game, rather than an adult game.

The modern competitive adult game (now called tiddlywinks) made a strong comeback at the University of Cambridge in 1955. The modern game utilises far more complex rules and a consistent set of high-grade equipment. The rest of this article concerns the adult game.

Contents

[edit] Overview of the rules

Tiddlywinks is in essence a game for four players playing in partnerships, though it is often played between two opponents, each playing the role of two partners. Each player controls the winks of one colour, the colours being blue, green, red and yellow. Red and blue are always partners against green and yellow. There are six winks of each colour, which begin the game in the corners of a felt mat measuring 6 feet by 3 feet. This mat is usually placed on a table, and a pot is placed at its centre.

The players take turns, and there are two basic aims: to cover (or squop) opponent winks, and to get one's own winks into the pot. As in pool or snooker, if a player pots a wink of his own colour, then he is entitled to an extra shot, and this enables a skilled player to pot all of his winks in one turn. The point of squopping, which is the key element distinguishing the adult game from the child's game (though recognized in even the earliest rules from 1890), is that a wink that is covered (even partially) may not be played by its owner. The wink on top may be played, though, and top-level play involves sophisticated shots manipulating large piles of winks.

The game ends in one of two ways; either all the winks of one colour are potted (a pot-out), or play continues up to a specified time limit (usually 25 minutes), after which each colour has a further five turns. Then a scoring system is used to rank the players, based on the numbers of potted and unsquopped winks of each colour.

[edit] National and international organisations

There are two national associations, the English Tiddlywinks Association (ETwA) and the North American Tiddlywinks Association (NATwA) (the Scottish Tiddlywinks Association disbanded in the late 1990s). These organisations are responsible for the running of tournaments and maintaining the rules of the game (which actually differ only slightly between the two organisations; the NATwA rules are based on the ETwA rules). International competition is overseen by the International Federation of Tiddlywinks Associations (IFTwA), though in practice it is rarely called upon to intervene.

[edit] Competitive play

Although tiddlywinks is a singles or pairs game, competition in the early days (the 1950s and 1960s) centred on team competition, with teams consisting of several (usually four) pairs. There were several university teams, and international matches were also played. More recently, singles and pairs tournaments have come to be the focus of competitive tiddlywinks, with only a few team matches being played each year. The four most prestigious tournaments are the National Singles and National Pairs tournaments held in England and the USA. The World Singles and World Pairs championships are run on a challenge basis; anyone winning a national tournament (or being the highest-placed home player behind a foreign winner) is entitled to challenge the current champion.

There are several other less prestigious tournaments in England and the USA throughout the year, often with a format designed to encourage inexperienced players. The results of tournaments and World Championship matches are used to calculate the World Ratings, which give a ranking of players. Typically there are about 120 players in the Ratings system.

[edit] Skill versus strategy, and comparable games

The important appeal of the game for many players is the required combination of manual dexterity and strategic thought. Tiddlywinkers often claim that the game combines physical skill (such as in snooker or golf) with the strategy of chess. What is true is that tiddlywinks is unique in the combination of skill and strategy it requires. Strategy in tiddlywinks is often rather deep, since winks can be captured. Strategic and tactical planning involves anticipating opponents' moves rather than just building a sequence of one's own moves. Another factor that complicates the game is that there is a time limit to the play of the game, rather than until some objective in the game has been met.

All in all, tiddlywinks goes beyond the purely cerebral nature of a game such as chess. The fact that shots can be made or missed, together with the continuum of possible outcomes, makes strategy much less rigid than in chess, and prevents planning more than seven or eight shots in advance.

[edit] Equipment

The winks and pot used in competitive play are standard, and are supplied by the English Tiddlywinks Association. The pots are made of moulded plastic (historically always red, though there is no known reason for this), with specified diameters at the top and the base, and specified height. The winks are made in Italy to specified measurements, and are made by slicing an extruded cylinder rather than by moulding, and then smoothing them in a tumbler. Although this leads to some minor variation in thickness, it produces a much smoother edge to the wink than seen on cheap moulded winks.

The mats are made of thick felt, usually of the type used for insulation. Mats obtained from different suppliers have different characteristics, and part of the skill of a tournament player is to adjust to different mats.

Squidgers are custom-made by their owners. As with golf clubs, a player may use as many as he likes, selecting an appropriate squidger for each shot. Top players will carry anything up to twenty different squidgers, but will not typically use all of them in one game. The rules governing squidgers are liberal; a range of dimensions are permitted, and the material is not specified, except for the condition that squidgers must not damage winks. Typically squidgers are made from different types of plastic, though glass, rubber, cork and onyx are often seen. The squidgers are usually filed or sanded to give a sharp edge and then polished.

[edit] Tiddlywinks terminology

Many of the shots from tiddlywinks have unusual names, some of which have become dictionary entries[2]. Here is a small selection.

Blitz: an attempt to pot all six winks of your own colour early in the game

Bomb: to send a wink at a pile, usually from distance, in the hope of significantly disturbing it

Boondock: to free a squopped wink by sending it a long way away, leaving the squopping wink free in the battle area

Bristol: a shot which moves a pile of two or more winks as a single unit; the shot is played by holding the squidger at right angles to its normal plane

Carnovsky(US)/Penhaligon(UK): potting a wink from the baseline (i.e. from 3 feet away)

Cracker: a simultaneous knock-off and squop, i.e. a shot which knocks one wink off the top of another while simultaneously squopping it

Crud: a forceful shot whose purpose is to destroy a pile completely

Good shot: named after John Good. The shot consists of playing a flat wink through a nearby pile in the hope of destroying it

Gromp: an attempt to jump a pile onto another wink (usually with the squidger held in a conventional rather than Bristol fashion)

John Lennon memorial shot: a simultaneous boondock and squop

Lunch: to pot a squopped wink (usually belonging to an opponent)

Scrunge: to bounce out of the pot

Squop: to play a wink so that it comes to rest above another wink

Sub: to play a wink so that it ends up under another wink

[edit] History

In January 1955, a group of Cambridge undergraduates decided that they would like to represent the University against Oxford, and settled upon the only sport at which they thought they had a chance. They formed the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club (CUTwC), drew up rules, experimented with equipment, and issued a challenge to Oxford. Oxford took up the challenge after three years, and clubs began at several more British universities. The English Tiddlywinks Association was founded in 1958. In the same year, an article appeared in The Spectator entitled "Does Prince Philip cheat at tiddlywinks?" Sensing a good publicity opportunity, CUTwC challenged Prince Philip (later to become Chancellor of the University in 1976) to a tiddlywinks match to defend his honour. The Duke of Edinburgh appointed The Goons as his Royal champions. The Duke presented a trophy, the Silver Wink, for the British Universities Championship.[3][4]

In 1962, the Oxford team toured the United States for several weeks, going undefeated against teams from the New York Giants and various American colleges and newspapers.[5] A very prominent article appeared in Life magazine in October 1962 with coverage of the Harvard team. In the next couple of years, Harvard and other colleges continued to play, though at a low ebb.

In the Fall of 1965, Severin Drix started a team at Cornell, and challenged his friend Ferd Wulkan of MIT to start a tiddlywinks team. The North American Tiddlywinks Association (NATwA) was founded in February 1966.[6]

The game has declined in popularity since the 1960s, and has never taken hold outside the UK and North America. The focus of British tiddlywinks is still at Cambridge, and CUTwC's 50th anniversary celebrations in 2005 were well attended. The Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society has recently fallen out of existence.

In the USA, the game has a firmer footing in high schools, since the children of many of the players who took up the game in the late 1960s and early 1970s are now of high school age. These players are looking to revive university tiddlywinks in the USA.

On March 1, 2008, there was a Royal Match in Cambridge to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the original Royal Match played against The Goons in 1958 (see above). CUTwC players took on HRH Prince Philip's Royal Champions, the Savage Club, with members of the original 1958 CUTwC team in attendance. Cambridge repeated their victory from 1958 by winning the match 24-18.[7]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rick Tucker, "Tiddlywinks: The Classic Victorian Pastime: On Target for the 21st Century", October 1996, American Game Collectors Association, Game Researchers' Notes, ISSN 1050-6608
  2. ^ Rick Tucker, Lexicon of Tiddlywinks, 1994 (updated 1999)
  3. ^ Guy Consterdine, On the Mat - 1954-1957 - The Origins of Modern Tiddlywinks, March 1967
  4. ^ Guy Consterdine, Winks Rampant - 1957-1958 - The Development of Modern Tiddlywinks, October 1972
  5. ^ Time, "Winking In", September 14, 1962
  6. ^ Severin Drix, "History of the North American Tiddlywinks Association, 1962 to 1969", appearing in The Missing Wink, August 1974 and February 1975
  7. ^ Royal Match of Tiddlywinks, on University of Cambridge website

[edit] External links