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Croquet Rules & Regulations


Many people have asked for the Rules and Regulations of Croquet.

There are a number of variations of the game including competitive and social forms. The more competitive variations are those for the North American Rules as developed by the U.S. Croquet Assocation and adopted by Croquet Canada and the International Association rules as adopted by Croquet Canada, which vary significantly in many aspects while using the same croquet equipment and court set up.

The Rules of Croquet :

See the Oxford Site link above for International Association Rules.

Hilton Head Personalized Croquet Set

Croquet Rules Overview

So you've just bought a brand-new croquet set and you've gathered your friends in the backyard on an easy summer afternoon. Sounds like a great time, but does anybody really know croquet rules? Here's a condensed version:

Prepare the croquet court. A freshly mowed lawn of short grass is preferable. The court, when space permits, should be 100 feet by 50 feet, though you can adjust accordingly.

Croquet law calls for boundaries marked by string, or stakes to mark the corners. Place the wickets firmly in the ground within the court in a double-diamond, figure-eight shape (each wicket at a point of the diamond, at an even-distance apart. Two croquet wickets, close to each other, should be placed at the very top and bottom of the figure 8. A stake is then placed behind each top and bottom croquet wicket.

For a two to four player croquet game, you'll need four croquet balls; for a six-player croquet game, croquet law calls for six croquet balls. Each team plays with different colored croquet balls. Each player takes a croquet mallet and must only use the striking end, not the side, when moving their ball through the croquet wickets.

Hitting the croquet balls with a croquet mallet, you move through the course, scoring points for each croquet wicket and stake made in the correct order. You start at the bottom of the figure 8, moving the croquet balls counterclockwise around the diamonds (making sure to hit the stake at the top of the figure 8, then moving back through the top croquet wickets). Players take turns; at the beginning of each play, the player, or "striker," has one shot, hitting only the croquet ball she/he is playing that turn. The turn ends after that shot, unless a bonus shot is earned by scoring a croquet wicket or stake or by hitting another croquet ball. The play continues until there are no more bonus shots, or until the player hits the finishing stake at the bottom of the double-diamond, where play began. It sounds rather involved, but once you get the hang of croquet rules, they'll become second nature.

To score a croquet wicket, croquet rules state that the croquet ball must go all the way through the croquet wicket and stay clear of it. (According to croquet rules, the point doesn't count if the croquet ball rolls back, and through the croquet wicket.) The team wins when it has moved all its croquet balls successfully through the double-diamond.

Now that you have croquet rules down, go enjoy a riveting game of croquet!