What city was it in?
I am a proud member of Bowlingboards.com bowling forums and ball contest winner
Current arsenal
900 Global Badger Claw - Radical Ridiculous Pearl - Spare Ball Ebonite T Zone
THIS! Adapting to whatever you are throwing is key. Whether it be moving your mark, changing balls, flattening your wrist to get more carry, whatever... one style will always work better for a certain condition than another style. Adjusting is KEY. I'm not saying I'm great at it - look at my score thread from tonight, first game was a disaster and it took a full 10+ frames to figure out the lanes. That's what separates great (or even good) bowlers from a lot of us.
Are we still talking about arc balls or hockey stick movement type balls? If we are from the stuff I read about a balls movement towards the
pocket an arcing movement is easier to controll on most lane conditions especiually on conditions other then the THS patterns. Once you get into the sport patterns and upwards an arcing ball would seem to be able to handle those conditions better. An arcing ball would be able to be fine tuned easier. I don't know if I am right on this or not but it seems that the pros mostly have arcing shots. Does anyone here know of a pro with a hockey stick type movement ball? The bowling balls that I have used have always been the arcing type balls. The hockey stick type movement would have to have a consistent breakpoint area to have a good outcome whereas an arcing ball would have more miss area at the breakpoint. What do you folks think, agree or not?
Arsenal: Raw Hammer Orange/Black Hybrid 14lbs, Blue Hammer urethane 14lbs, Columbia 300 Lava Ball Plastic 14lbs, Highest scratch series 710 Bowling 38 years Never hit that 300 game. Highest game 276, had 11 strikes and one spare in the middle of that game.
You are correct hammer. The tougher the condition normally you will see guys trying to achieve that smooth motion like on the us open pattern. On any pattern though when those guys think they can create area they will try to open up those angles to create better carry. The difference between them and most of us is that it's something they can see alot quicker.
I agree. I don't hear the pros talking much about "a great skid/flip motion out of the ball." I hear them talking about consistency and control. The skid/flip hockey stick looks hot. In the eighties, everybody tried to dress like Madonna or Michael Jackson. And every bowler tried to emulate Mark Roth (who had the hard break into the pocket). It looked cool and seemed to work well. It made a god out of someone who sorta looked like a hound dog on Xanax.
Problem is, we no longer mostly bowl on older wooden lanes, with old-school oil, with first-gen polyester balls, against people who are crazy-accurate, genius strokers using rubber. And, most importantly, we're not Mark Roth, who was accurate and very, very consistent.
I said earlier that adaptability is key for the great players, and it seems to me that a smooth-arcing ball lends itself really well to adaptability, accuracy and consistency.
Why not both? You are allowed to use more than one ball
Just like different coverstocks....different ball motions/shapes will work better on different patterns.
Company League Average: 198.1
City League Average: 186.5
WTBA Sport pattern League Average: 172.9
Current Arsenal: Roto Grip Nomad Pearl, Wrecker, and Hyper Cell; Track 920A and 505A; Storm Tropical Breeze; Plastic Spare Ball
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