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The bowling thread

Discussion in 'Anything goes' started by Human_Paraquat, Dec 1, 2017.

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  1. Human_Paraquat

    Human_Paraquat Well-Known Member

    I've been a one-night-a-week league bowler for the last couple of years after having only bowled a handful of times over my first 35 years.

    Had my average up to 149 this season. Finally broke a 500 series a couple of times. Took a clean game into the ninth frame. Baby steps.

    Then this past week came a breakthrough. 215-235-166. Second game set a new personal high. First two games were clean. First 600 series.

    Obviously not just posting here to brag on my minor accomplishment. For other bowlers, what were the breakthroughs that helped you get better? (A big one for me was learning the importance of left-arm balance as a right-handed bowler.)

    Any tips and tricks for more consistent spare pickups or pocket placement?

    Or hell just any fun bowling stories from your leagues or random nights with buddies?
     
    Donny in his element likes this.
  2. Donny in his element

    Donny in his element Well-Known Member

    Congrats, that's pretty cool!

    Also, have you explored the Outside Magazine archives? /crossthread
     
  3. typefitter

    typefitter Well-Known Member

  4. Slacker

    Slacker Well-Known Member

    When I was in college and bowled a lot, someone showed me how a wrist brace helps you roll with a power hook, and that improved my game (and scores) a lot. And almost overnight.

    Your mileage may vary, but figure out how to cultivate that power hook. And lift (pull up hard) as you release the ball. I went from a 157 average to hitting scores above 200 pretty fast. Topped out around 240, and a lot of fun getting there.

    EDIT: I hit 259 once. That was my best.
     
  5. RickStain

    RickStain Well-Known Member

    There was a "kids bowl free" program that we got into last summer and took the kids almost every day. (We bought them their own shoes, but they got used to having pizza every time, so it wasn't all that free. But it was well worth it).

    I got up to 180, after struggling to break 100 at the start of the summer. I wish we'd done that this year but just didn't get around to it.
     
  6. TheSportsPredictor

    TheSportsPredictor Well-Known Member

    Hey, just got home from my weekly bowling league.

    I'm not very good, but better than I was last year. I averaged 130 last year and am at 140 this year. I changed several things about my approach which has helped. I think I should be better. Have bowled a couple games in the 190s this year, but no 200s yet. Luckily two of the guys on my team are among the best in the league, so we usually finish well.
     
  7. jr/shotglass

    jr/shotglass Well-Known Member

    I bowled loads in junior high into early high school. We had a good traveling league in the area, some 12 centers involved. Probably about a 150 average. And I bowled at one time or another for each of the three centers in my hometown. (The town now has none.)

    I got back into it in my mid-twenties, because the paper had a late-morning Wednesday league at a local center. And again, I averaged around 150.

    Then I discovered lift. I was always baffled at how bowlers rolled that late-breaking, dramatic hook. And I was always taught that your release should have no left-right motion to it. Well, I befriended one of the local pros, and he taught me how to roll a fingertip ball, snap with my fingers at release, lift and turn. And I got two balls -- a high-rev reactive resin Storm, and a clear "spare" ball to take the direct route.

    I not only got up to a 200-plus average quickly, I loved the "magic" of cranking that Storm to the second board and having it make that left-hand turn in the final 15 feet. And damn, the pin action was unbelievable. The ball just exploded into the pocket.

    I spent about five years seriously into it. I found a second daytime league. And having Sundays off, I began going to the area's ranking King of the Hill tournament, the one that had all the "names" in south-central Pennsylvania, the ones who were racking up weekly honors scores that made my co-worker's column. It was a double-elimination, one-on-one deal with 40-50 bowlers, coming down to a two-person final each Sunday night.

    (Quick, funny story. The King of the Hill not only brought out the best, it brought out some of the most obsessive. There was this one skinny little guy who was all about style. He wasn't bad, but he thought he was on the edge of the PBA. One Sunday night against him, I was off a little bit, but actually crossed over to the Jersey side for three straight mid-game strikes. He was so chagrined, he called me a motherfucker, packed up his balls and left the center in mid-game.)

    At the top of my game, I was averaging 220. I flirted with a pair of perfect games. One, I left a ringing 10-pin in the ninth frame. The other, I threw 10 straight, then came up light on the 11th ball and left the 5-pin. I converted that for my all-time high, a 289. And one of my most memorable "athletic" moments came on the Sunday night when I somehow climbed through the best bowlers in that 50-mile radius and reached the finals of the King of the Hill. Once there, I ran into a guy who actually was having some success in PBA regional play. I lost that one 300-269. Matched him strike for strike for eight frames before cracking. People were leaving their post-game beers in the lounge to watch the battle. I was bowling with goosebumps. :)

    Then two things happened. First, bowling in the county tournament one March, I stuck at the foul line and pitched face-first over the line. Not only was it embarrassing as hell, I could have sworn I had broken my kneecap when I landed. That got in my head. What had been a smooth, low slide at delivery, helping me get good lift at release, turned into a choppy half-step at the line. It hurt my game.

    And then came the fire, at ABC East Lanes in Harrisburg, about 15 years ago. The place went up in flames one Thursday afternoon. My two trusty balls wound up as a puddle of chemicals somewhere along Eisenhower Boulevard. I couldn't justify the cost of buying new equipment, especially since I was working Sunday nights now and had a teen-age daughter who I wanted to see, at least occasionally. I never really got back into it.

    But when it was good, it was really, really good.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2017
    Donny in his element likes this.
  8. lakefront

    lakefront Well-Known Member

  9. playthrough

    playthrough Moderator Staff Member

    Took a bowling class in college, that was the height of my bowling prowess. The studentuUnion at Indiana still has lanes, though back then they were manual scoring. Our final exam consisted of simply scoring a game correctly. Let's see the kids do that today.
     
  10. ICanRowCanoe?

    ICanRowCanoe? Member

    Kids Bowl Free is an awesome program. It's a regular activity for us during the summer. I pay the extra $20 so I can bowl, too.

    I've always loved to bowl. Probably average about a 130, but one summer in high school the lane near me offered 50-cent games, and I bowled a ton. Was averaging about 175. Started one game with six straight strikes and finished with a 243, which I don't expect I'll ever top.

    @Human_Paraquat, when you say your games were "clean," what does that mean? I'm not familiar with the term. No open frames? No splits?

    My goal every time out is no open frames. It's embarrassing how rarely I achieve it.
     
  11. Gutter

    Gutter Well-Known Member

    A thread that's begging for the return of @Lucas Wiseman

    Congrats on the 600! 600 has been a rarity for me in recent years after some health issues, but I chalked up my second 600 of the season last night.

    If you don't already, throw a plastic ball for your corner pin spares. A trick I've applied in the past few years ... when standing on board 39 (all the way left) and throwing at the 10 pin (or 6-10), I open up my hips a bit with a slight twist to the right before returning to my set position. Same thing when throwing at 7 pin and standing right. It helps keep me from tugging on my swing, something I've always had an issue with.

    My corner pin conversion is probably at 95% this season, a marked improvement over previous seasons and I'm averaging 10 pins more than last year thus far. I've been lined up and making moves as the lanes transition, so that's part of the reason. But a big reason is making those corner pins, not being frustrated by whiffing on them and the resulting open frame.

    Now I just need to stop leaving them.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2017
  12. Gutter

    Gutter Well-Known Member

    Yep. No open frames. When you hear a bowler say "30 clean" it means they marked in every frame of a three-game series.
     
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