Fetus
07-27-2012, 05:36 PM
So a friend talked me into joining a bowling league in April and I've definitely made some progress. My big worry is that I'm doing things wrong that will eventually hurt further progress in my game or that there's simple things I can do now that can help me get to the next level.
Started throwing a straight ball like most people and it took a good month of working with my friend and another team mate to get a hook down. Then my consistency on hitting marks was terrible, so for a month after that I'd bowl at least one game a day(the league I'm on gives you 2 free practice games a day) not worrying about the pins and just working on hitting from this dot to that arrow and eventually down to individual boards. Since then I've just been working on things like controlling speed and rotation. I've gone from a 90 pin average with a straight ball to a 190 average with a hook. Officially I have 136 average, but I'm still fighting those first 2 months of terrible bowling. The low average and high handicap has played well into our rank on the league along with a few accusations of sandbagging.
Now for my worries. Once I find a line that takes me into the pocket I stick to it almost religiously. When I start leaving 7 and 10 pins I'm more likely to rotate my wrist and adjust my speed to get a better angle on the head pin instead of changing my marks. I've had mixed success with this, about 2/3 of the time it works, but that other third my game really falls apart and I just do my best to pick up spares and get on with it. I've thought a bit about this and I've just come to realize that I really don't know how to adjust my marks in this situation. Do I widen or tighten my line? Do I move my marks left to take advantage of the oil or right and try to get less? Or some combination of both?
I've also had a few comment on how I approach left side spares. I find I'm most consistent when I just start straight on the right side of the lane and just slow the ball way down. I get at least one comment a week about how "weird" it is. Is there really any problem with what I'm doing here?
Anyways, thanks for reading. I hope to get to know people here and maybe even learn a bit from you guys.
Started throwing a straight ball like most people and it took a good month of working with my friend and another team mate to get a hook down. Then my consistency on hitting marks was terrible, so for a month after that I'd bowl at least one game a day(the league I'm on gives you 2 free practice games a day) not worrying about the pins and just working on hitting from this dot to that arrow and eventually down to individual boards. Since then I've just been working on things like controlling speed and rotation. I've gone from a 90 pin average with a straight ball to a 190 average with a hook. Officially I have 136 average, but I'm still fighting those first 2 months of terrible bowling. The low average and high handicap has played well into our rank on the league along with a few accusations of sandbagging.
Now for my worries. Once I find a line that takes me into the pocket I stick to it almost religiously. When I start leaving 7 and 10 pins I'm more likely to rotate my wrist and adjust my speed to get a better angle on the head pin instead of changing my marks. I've had mixed success with this, about 2/3 of the time it works, but that other third my game really falls apart and I just do my best to pick up spares and get on with it. I've thought a bit about this and I've just come to realize that I really don't know how to adjust my marks in this situation. Do I widen or tighten my line? Do I move my marks left to take advantage of the oil or right and try to get less? Or some combination of both?
I've also had a few comment on how I approach left side spares. I find I'm most consistent when I just start straight on the right side of the lane and just slow the ball way down. I get at least one comment a week about how "weird" it is. Is there really any problem with what I'm doing here?
Anyways, thanks for reading. I hope to get to know people here and maybe even learn a bit from you guys.