
Originally Posted by
RobLV1
It seems like the thing that threw you off was the amount of oil on your ball. The amount of oil on your ball doesn't tell you anything because you don't know where on the lane from which it comes. Let me give you an example. I bowl in an evening league where the center puts down a 25' head run of oil before league and doesn't touch the rest of the league. I often hear bowlers talking about how oily the lanes are based on the oil on their bowling balls. The problem is, of course, that the oil is coming from the first 25', and the rest of the lane is bone dry. Something else to consider is this, which doesn't affect the left side as much, but here goes: if one bowler is playing the second arrow and throwing the ball out to 8 board at 45', and another bowler is playing the third arrow and throwing the ball out to 8 board at 45', and yet another bowler is playing the fourth arrow and throwing the ball out to 8 board at 45', what part of the lane is drying up? I'll give you a hint: it's not at the arrows... it's the area down the lane where everyone is playing.
The biggest single thing that you can do to effectively adjust to changing lane conditions is to learn to watch the ball as it exits the pin deck. For you as a lefty, this means that the ball should be exiting the pin deck right between the eight pin and the nine pin. If you start to see it exiting more toward the eight pin, then this means that you need to move right to find more oil to help to retain the energy in the ball. If you start to see it exiting more toward the nine pin, then this means that the ball is still hooking as it enters the pins which means that you either need to change to an earlier rolling ball, or slow down slightly on your ball speed to get the ball to hook a little sooner.
Please note that on a typical house shot which starts out being dry on the outside and oily in the middle, there is never any reason to more more to the outside, because the oil is already gone.
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