
Originally Posted by
Mike White
He is far from deadly accurate.
Look at the number of times he leaves a WEAK 10 pin, only to get a messenger to take it out.
The fact that he had a messenger at all indicates that he missed, because the headpin should transfer most of it's energy into the 2 pin, but since he hit light, the head pin just glanced off the 2 pin, and maintained plenty of energy to fly back across the deck.
I blame ABC/USBC for falling asleep when ball companies presented resin balls.
The change in friction between the ball and the lane has completely changed the game from one of art, into pure power. That acheivable increase in effective power is what allows Belmo to launch headpins off of the side walls, and increase his carry %.
Then to make things worse, they put even more oil on the lane to compensate for what would otherwise be an unusable ball, and ALLOW that oil to guide the ball down the lane.
High rev rate was achievable long before the thumbless style was around. It just wasn't as effective due to the lower friction between the ball and the lane. It was actually not hard to over-rev the ball so it skidded further.
What we didn't see was high revs, high speed, and significant ball reaction at the same time.
Using the equipment pre-resin, Belmo's technique (unchanged) would result in a 150-160 bowler, with trouble getting the 5 pin consistently. And that would be with the oil patterns in use pre-resin (much less volume of oil)
His rev rate in the 500's, would only be effective in the 14-15mph range, and at that speed, you can forget launching messengers. That means his weak 10 pin shots would remain weak 10 pins.
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