Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: Verbal Irony: I love Senior Leagues!

  1. #1

    Default Verbal Irony: I love Senior Leagues!

    One of the most wonderful things about modern bowling is the attitude that any ball that enters the one-three pocket (for right-handers) "DESERVES" to strike. This is rediculous! It's bad enough that most any modern bowling ball can get to the one-three pocket on a house shot, but to expect a strike is just out of control. Today in a trios league we bowled against a team where two of the three would b*tch and complain about any ball that didn't carry. One bowler in particular was using a very aggressive bowling ball and playing the second arrow for all four games. There was a flaming rooster tail following the ball for every weak ten he left. At one point he gave the finger to the ten pin that was left standing. What did the pin do, jump out of the way?
    Last edited by RobLV1; 04-10-2015 at 05:24 AM.

  2. #2
    High Roller rv driver's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Location
    Missouri
    Posts
    1,574
    Chats: 0

    Default

    That thought seems to go along with the growing sense of entitlement in this country in all other aspects of life. Everybody's due; everybody gets gipped.

  3. #3
    Bowling Guru Amyers's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2014
    Location
    Charleston, WV
    Posts
    3,991
    Chats: 32

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by RobLV1 View Post
    One of the most wonderful things about modern bowling is the attitude that any ball that enters the one-three pocket (for right-handers) "DESERVES" to strike. This is rediculous! It's bad enough that most any modern bowling ball can get to the one-three pocket on a house shot, but to expect a strike is just our of control. Today in a trios league we bowled against a team where two of the three would b*tch and complain about any ball that didn't carry. One bowler in particular was using a very aggressive bowling ball and playing the second arrow for all four games. There was a flaming rooster tail following the ball for every weak ten he left. At one point he gave the finger to the ten pin that was left standing. What did the pin do, jump out of the way?
    That isn't just senior leagues I get that from my 8-12 year olds in junior league that I work with. Why that's what they see from thier parents.
    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

  4. #4
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Location
    Riverside Ca
    Posts
    2,315
    Chats: 68

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by RobLV1 View Post
    One of the most wonderful things about modern bowling is the attitude that any ball that enters the one-three pocket (for right-handers) "DESERVES" to strike. This is rediculous! It's bad enough that most any modern bowling ball can get to the one-three pocket on a house shot, but to expect a strike is just out of control. Today in a trios league we bowled against a team where two of the three would b*tch and complain about any ball that didn't carry. One bowler in particular was using a very aggressive bowling ball and playing the second arrow for all four games. There was a flaming rooster tail following the ball for every weak ten he left. At one point he gave the finger to the ten pin that was left standing. What did the pin do, jump out of the way?
    It just shows that for some, "With age, comes wisdom" isn't true.

    I have a friend who is fairly new to the game, and one day he was struggling with not carrying his "pocket hits".

    I asked him to define what the pocket was.

    He said, when the ball hits both the head pin, and the 3 pin.

    I asked him when he goes thru the nose, and leaves the 4-6-7-10, was that a pocket shot, because the ball hit the 1 and the 3.

    While he agrees that simply hitting the 1 and 3 isn't exactly the pocket, he still has a very broad idea of what is the pocket.

  5. #5
    Bowling God Aslan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Hutchinson, KS
    Posts
    7,123
    Chats: 204

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mike White View Post
    While he agrees that simply hitting the 1 and 3 isn't exactly the pocket, he still has a very broad idea of what is the pocket.
    When I used to keep track of pocket hits...it was difficult to decide on some shots whether it really hit "the pocket". At first I was very conservative about it and if it left anything or anything more than a corner pin...I figured it wasn't truly "pocket". But as time went on...I expanded it to anything that makes initial contact with the 1-pin and/or 3-pin (righty)...but I'd try to exclude shots too far left and through the nose...and I'd try to exclude shots that went into the 3-pin where the headpin barely got touched and knocked over (but did fall).

    Pocket % is harder to measure than people think. You're 60ft away and in addition to trying to bowl well and stay focused on your effort...you gotta try to squint your eyes and figure out if you left the 6-10 on a pocket hit or a non-pocket hit.
    In Bag: (: .) Zen Master Solid; (: .) Perfect Mindset; (: .) Brunswick Endeavor; (: .) Outer Limits Pearl; (: .) Ebonite Maxim
    USBC#: 8259-59071; USBC Sanctioned Average = 192; Lifetime Average = 172;
    Ball Speed: 14.7mph; Rev. Rate: 240rpm || High Game (sanc.) = 300 (268); High Series (sanc.) = 725 (720); Clean Games: 198

    Smokey this is not 'Nam', this is bowling. There are rules. Proud two-time winner of a bowlingboards.com weekly ball give-away!

  6. #6
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Location
    Riverside Ca
    Posts
    2,315
    Chats: 68

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Aslan View Post
    When I used to keep track of pocket hits...it was difficult to decide on some shots whether it really hit "the pocket". At first I was very conservative about it and if it left anything or anything more than a corner pin...I figured it wasn't truly "pocket". But as time went on...I expanded it to anything that makes initial contact with the 1-pin and/or 3-pin (righty)...but I'd try to exclude shots too far left and through the nose...and I'd try to exclude shots that went into the 3-pin where the headpin barely got touched and knocked over (but did fall).

    Pocket % is harder to measure than people think. You're 60ft away and in addition to trying to bowl well and stay focused on your effort...you gotta try to squint your eyes and figure out if you left the 6-10 on a pocket hit or a non-pocket hit.
    A loose definition of the pocket still requires the head pin to drive into the 2 pin, and the 3 pin to drive into the 6 pin.

    So simply the fact that you left the 6-10 eliminates any need to squint.

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
  •