Scoring Shuffleboard is as Easy as One, Two, Three!
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Time to read 2 min
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Time to read 2 min
Scoring shuffleboard is a straightforward process in which each of the player's shuffleboard weights are assigned a specific value based on the position on the board. It is also based on the position of the opponent's weights at the end of each round relative to the other player's discs. Scoring is similar to that of curling, only with the end of the playing area being the highest value versus that of curling which uses more of a bull's eye approach to scoring. The scoring area is at each end of the playing surface, and made up of three zones.
The zone closest to the point from which the weights are shuffled is worth one point, the next furthest zone is worth two points, and the furthest zone away from the players is worth three points. If a puck travels to the end of the playing surface and hangs over the edge, the scoring value is four points. Once all the shuffleboard pucks have been played, the points are tabulated based on which player's pucks are closest to the far end without going beyond the scoring area.
The only points awarded are based on the furthest puck of an individual player and any subsequent puck shuffled by the same player that goes beyond all the other pucks played by the opponent. Therefore, only one player can score points in any particular round. For example, if Player "A" has two of their four weights that have landed in the three-point zone and two in the one-point zone. Player "B" has three pucks in the two-point zone that are not as close to the end as the first player's and one in the one-point zone. Player "A" receives six points for the round, and Player "B" receives zero. Determining which player's puck went further is based on drawing an imaginary line perpendicular to the playing surface and agreeing on which puck is indeed closer to the end. In the unlikely event of a tie, neither puck is counted toward the point value. The winner of the game is the first one to reach either fifteen or twenty-one points. This is determined before play begins. Some games can be handicapped using a different scoring system in which a lower-skilled player is given an additional point for each zone and hanger beyond the foul line. This makes the game more fun for novice players and more competitive for more proficient players.