Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 14 of 14

Thread: Elmo's World Bowling Time - "How Do You Practice? "

  1. #11
    Ringer GeoLes's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Location
    Northern NJ
    Posts
    486
    Chats: 1

    Default

    I do focus practice about 2/3 of the game and naturally bowl the last few frames.

    I do no-step drills followed by one step drills. Then I do a couple of full approachs focusing on relaxing and doing the swing/release/whatever is the focus of the drill. I go do a couple more frames of 1 step drill to fine tune, then finish off with couple of frames of relaxed, natrual bowling to integrate the change. I make note of what happens when I relax and just bowl. Anything out o whack, I go back and do it again next practice game. As the league season is over, I have all summer do de-construct my swing.
    I live by three simples rules:

    1. Don't ever ask about my business
    2. Never discuss business at the table
    3. Don't ever side with anyone against the family

  2. #12
    Bowling God billf's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Sidney, Ohio
    Posts
    5,982
    Blog Entries
    1
    Chats: 217

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gunz1911 View Post
    Can you tell the pinsetter what to put down for you? I've sat there and thrown at nothing but 10 pins, but once I get it down the first time, I just shoot for the same spot. Other than that, I am just trying to work on my approach, aiming and slowing down.

    Not to change the subject, but while I was practicing the other day I asked about the lanes. To me it seems long and heavy oil, so I am not sure if that is why I have been having trouble. When they freshly dress the lanes (which they do every morning) it is 41' with 18 units of oil. Does anyone have any tips for shot that long? Also my summer league is at a different house (about 45min-hour drive from my house), sadly the one that is about 10 minutes from my house didn't have any that would match my schedule. Should I try to practice later in the day where other people have dried up the lanes?
    That's a standard THS, nothing special and certainly not long or heavy. Bowl whenever and wherever you can. When you're at the drier house, move inside 5 boards.
    USBC SILVER CERTIFIED COACH
    Gold Coach Candidate
    Owner/Operator of Bowlerz Score Coaching
    Tweener Rev Rate of 420, Speed 19 mph
    Key Bowling Staff Member
    Key Bowling Coaching Staff

    IBPSIA member
    Former Staff Bowler at www.BowlerX.com

  3. #13
    Pin Crusher Tampabaybob's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Seffner, FL
    Posts
    1,241
    Chats: 0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gunz1911 View Post
    Can you tell the pinsetter what to put down for you? I've sat there and thrown at nothing but 10 pins, but once I get it down the first time, I just shoot for the same spot. Other than that, I am just trying to work on my approach, aiming and slowing down.

    Not to change the subject, but while I was practicing the other day I asked about the lanes. To me it seems long and heavy oil, so I am not sure if that is why I have been having trouble. When they freshly dress the lanes (which they do every morning) it is 41' with 18 units of oil. Does anyone have any tips for shot that long? Also my summer league is at a different house (about 45min-hour drive from my house), sadly the one that is about 10 minutes from my house didn't have any that would match my schedule. Should I try to practice later in the day where other people have dried up the lanes?
    In response to your question about practicing on dried out lanes, yes by all means you should practice on lanes when it's not a fresh shot. As you know, when lanes dry out, that's when the real challenge begins. The question of where has the oil moved, what moves should I make with my feet, target, and/or ball change all come into play. I'll give you a recent example. Last Thursday, during practice I had a beautiful shot. Threw mostly strikes. Started the first frame, left a solid ten pin in the pocket. 2nd & third frame exactly the same thing. The oil had already started to move and the ball was not finishing the same as is was 20 minutes earlier. So what did I do? Went to another ball (earlier roller) and threw the new 6 strikes, won my point and shot 247. Stayed with that ball and shot 257 and 209 the third game.
    What I'm saying is bowling on a fried shot will give you knowledge that you won't necessarily get on a fresh shot. So by all means look for the tough ones along with occasional practice on fresh shots. The knowledge you gain will pay big dividends for you.
    Bob

    "There truly is such a thing as a bad night and when these doomed evenings arrive you can't avoid them. But there's a bright side to this, it's that bad nights won't kill you, and sometimes will make you a little smarter."

  4. #14
    Ringer GeoLes's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Location
    Northern NJ
    Posts
    486
    Chats: 1

    Default

    Isolation drills are excellent at "retraining" your body movements. I always integrate in the end by bowling normally, not thinking about any particular part of the technique.. Again not concerned with pinfll, but with the resultant ball reaction. I can adjust for pins when pin results is the specific focus of my practice. Even then it is something specific like specific pin leaves (like 7-pin or 10-pin), or good first ball (line 1-3 pocket without a pin leave).

    Later, when I do bowl for pins, I note my faults, marking it as the next object of a paractice session. In fact my current practice is not to record pin fall, rather I record percentage of closed framed. My goal is consistent 90%-100%. I simply count the open frames hoping to exceed 8 out of 10 frames. Say I score 70%. I note the specific spare opportunity, where I stood, where I INTENDED to roll, where I ACTUALLY rolled, and why I missed..

    Next practice session: back the drawing board based on the failure factors of that session.
    I live by three simples rules:

    1. Don't ever ask about my business
    2. Never discuss business at the table
    3. Don't ever side with anyone against the family

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •