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Thread: Do most of you have your "base" or starter ball you always start with on THS patterns

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    Default Do most of you have your "base" or starter ball you always start with on THS patterns

    Since most centers have THS for many leagues and open bowling do most of you generally have a starter ball you always use first. This would be the ball you know is a good base to start with. And is this usually your strongest ball and balling down as the night goes along?

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    Quote Originally Posted by NewToBowling View Post
    Since most centers have THS for many leagues and open bowling do most of you generally have a starter ball you always use first. This would be the ball you know is a good base to start with. And is this usually your strongest ball and balling down as the night goes along?
    I start with a Mastermind Genius as the 2 houses I bowl at put down fresh oil near starting times. At Red Rock I go to my UpRoar for the second 2 games on a second pair of lanes. This sounds good, but didn't work this week as the team we bowled against and followed had enough lefties that the lanes didn't break down enough for the UpRoar.
    The house and what they do and when to the lanes before league helps determine what to start with.

  3. #3

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    I generally throw the same ball to start with in practice, if the reaction isn't there or it's behaving oddly, not carrying, etc... I'll switch and use the other one to start. After buying my new ball (IQ Nano) I haven't had a need to use anything else in game 1.

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    Bowling God Aslan's Avatar
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    I used to have a chart that I'd use for each of the 3 lines I'd try to play. With that system, I'd start with my most medium of 5 balls on each line, decide on a line, then either ball up or down depending on what I was seeing.

    However, early on my coach switched me to a progression system where you determine which ball hooks SOONEST (vs MOST) and start with that one. The coach also suggested starting with a line that generally works versus my 3-line strategy…but I kept the 3-line strategy. I don't often try all 3 since my rev rate is too low and the balls are drilled for arc more so than snap, so taking advantage of much left of center is usually not an option…but I usually try at least 2 different lines…usually one around the 7-board and one around the 11-board.
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    Bowling Guru Amyers's Avatar
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    I bowl in three different house so for me it depends on where I'm at. Venture has the heaviest oil so I start and can usually finish with my virtual gravity. Dunbar I can use the asylum or the vg really just depend on how I'm throwing the ball if it's a good night for me speed wise it'll be the vg to start and switch to the asylum the third game. Galaxy older wood I start with the asylum but I'm going to have to purchase something less agressive for the transition there but haven't yet.
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  6. #6

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    I start with my Roto Grip Outcry (Medium) and adjust from there. I then go to my Roto Grip Hyper Cell Skid (Stronger) if more oil and Roto Grip Scream (Weaker) if are drier. It seems to work well for me. Steve

  7. #7

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    Lately I've been trying something a little different, and it's been working out pretty well for me. If one lane is tighter, I will often use a less aggressive ball to start, and play a little more to the right. If one is hooking more, I will use a more aggressive ball and play in deeper. The idea is to use the differences in the bowling balls to play the lanes the way that they want to be played, rather than using the differences to try to bring the lanes closer together. As the lanes begin to transition, I will often ball up as I move deeper on the tighter lane, and ball down as I move deeper on the hooking lane. My arsenal varies from center to center, but a typical mix includes two solids like the Mastermind Intellect (aggressive) and the Blue Ringer (less aggressive), and two pearls like the Melee Jab (aggressive) and the Platinum Ringer (less aggressive). This is a strategy that the higher rev players absolutley cannot understand, but it works pretty well for less powerful players who need to use what the lanes give them rather than trying to over power them.

  8. #8

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    I guess another way to put it is, is there a ball that is the old standby. One that you would feel comfortable if you could only use one ball. There are specialty balls and THE BALL. Or some of you may have all specialty balls.

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    For years bowlers have asked me which ball is my favorite. I always answer the same way, "Whatever ball is currently in my hand that will carry the corners." There's no place in bowling today for sentimentalism regarding bowling balls. The ball that you used to shoot 300 yesterday may not work at all today.

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    Quote Originally Posted by RobLV1 View Post
    This is a strategy that the higher rev players absolutley cannot understand, but it works pretty well for less powerful players who need to use what the lanes give them rather than trying to over power them.
    Is it that they really can't understand, or just that they don't think they need to understand what you're doing and how it might affect the line that they are playing?
    John

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