I figured the miss left wasn't that severe and given it went through the nose...I figured even if I hit my target on the next shot...the line was probably starting to transition....might as well stay ahead of it.
The D.E. is a ball DOWN, not up. I know that doesn't make sense given the RG values, but the Brunswick cover is far stronger than the Columbia cover, especially with a little polish added to the D.E. My system for moving is actually quite simple. Leave a 4, 9, or 4-9 and you move 1:1 left. Through the nose is 2:1 left. Brooklyn is 3:2 left.
The problem I've had with that system is that it assumes your arsenal is perfectly designed. If it's not, which most aren't, you could move left, lose your line, ball down, and miss right even more. So, if I move left and end up missing right, that tells me the other line was working, but it was time to ball down. The new line isn't working, so obviously, it won't work with a ball that breaks even later. So the 3:2 back right, was just to get back to the last line that worked...THEN ball down.
Sometime this weekend I'm gonna go bowl with my old conventionally drilled 14lb urethane ball. I'm going to try to practice a 1-step approach bowling thumbless to see if I can simplify things a bit. I can't move up much more than I already have. Maybe going to a 3-step approach can get my speed down to 15-16mph. But the problem isn't the speed. Speed is a GREAT thing to have and the thing most of lose as we age. I hate to give away an inherent advantage. But your assessment is spot on that a 17-19mph pro speed requires a pro level release...and I don't have that.
Most of my lessons, regardless of the instructor, have focused on my footwork, approach, timing, etc... I've been patiently waiting to start working on the release. But there are just so many little things to fix in the approach and timing...it's been a long road.
What I noticed in the "diary" was:
1) When my timing felt good AND I hit my target...I almost always struck.
2) The change from the back dots to the front dots lowered the speed, but not as much as I would have hoped. I still must be putting a LOT of power into the shot with my shoulders.
3) The lanes obviously started to transition in Game 3 because even the good shots were missing.
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