Are you using a fingertip bowling ball? If you are using bowlers tape you should be putting it only in the thumb hole and not in the finger holes. The ball might be coming off your hand in the backswing because your wrist might be breaking back as you swing plus you might be muscling the ball trying to help it swing back. When you swing back you want just the weight of the ball to make the ball go back into yoiur backswing.
Before you start your swing make sure you are not gripping the ball tightly with your fingers and thumb. Squeeze lightly with your fingertips and make sure that the whole length of your thumb is flat against the thumbhole and keep it that way throughout the swing.
When you start the swing the ball should be inline with your throwing shoulder. As you start your approach you push the ball straight out from the throwing shoulder and let just the weight of the ball take the ball into the backswing. When the ball swings back it should go close to your knee. As the ball is swinging you will feel some stretching in your arm because of the weight of the ball swinging.
Two things should happen on the forward swing. As soon as your ball hits the top of your backswing you should be going into your slide to make the ball come forward. As the ball is coming forward you want to keep your wrist straight or a little cupped. Actually you set your wrist like this before you start your swing. As the ball is swinging forward you want to make sure that your hand stays behind the ball until your thumb slides out of the ball which will be when your arm is pointing straight down to the floor from your shoulder and then you turn your hand just a little toward the left if you are right handed and doing this will put revs on the ball. To make sure that you put revs on the ball don't straighten your fingertips to let go of the ball. As the ball is pulling off of your hand you want to keep the fingertips bent like they were when you put them into your ball. This is what puts revs on the ball as the weight of the ball is pulling off your hand.
To get the feel of keeping your hand behind the ball put the ball on your hand with thumb and fingers inserted. If it is a fingertip ball fingers go in first and then the thumb. Next stand straight and let the ball hang straight down from your shoulder. Now bring your sliding foot forward about a foot from your other foot and lean your upper body about two or three inches toward the ball. Now letting the ball hang straight down from your shoulder swing the ball back and forth about a foot or two and make sure your wrist stays straight
or a little cupped and that it stays behind the ball the whole time. This will give you the feeling of what should happen in the actual swing. When swinging you want to keep your arm relaxed. This is what should happen in the actual swing. If you tense your whole arm from the shoulder to the hand the swing will not be able to work like it should from the backswing to the release.
You can do this drill on a smaller scale by kneeling on the floor with your sliding leg in front of you bent at a 90 degree angle and your balance leg knee on the floor behind your sliding foot, adjust for balance. Doing it this way you can actually let the ball go onto the floor
and into a pillow. This way you can make sure your hand stays behind the ball at release and your thumb comes out first and fingers last. Remember, keep those fingertips bent and let the weight of the ball pull off of your fingertips. If you straighten your fingertips to release the ball the thumb and fingers will come out at the same time and then you can forget about revs to make the ball hook. Good luck with your practice and future games. You might want to try and take at least one lesson from a qualified instructor. That would be a big help instead of trying to figure things out yourself.
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