The problem:
Once or twice a year I am fequently dropping the ball over an extended period of time and games. Not a total drop, but just before am ready to put some lift on it, its slipping. Needless to say, for someone with not much "hand" to begin with, this completely messes me up.
Is PARTLY a drilling issue as the pro I used last year made a few imperfect copies of what (to me) was my perfect drilling on another ball. But even after having that corrected, still occasionally dropping those and even was dropping balls that HAVE the "perfect" drilling. --- The reason the copies were imperfect was because the span was slightly off and I had less forward pitch than desired (than source ball).
The "solution" that I stumbled onto in desperation was to put a single piece of the white (textured) bowler's tape at the back of the thumbhole. This provided just enough friction to help me maintain control of the ball throughout the delivery. And was not because the hole was smaller, because when I do this I actually remove two pieces from the front and add only one to the rear of the hole.
It works spectacularly, but I would like to know why. Maybe a slight change in pitch (more forward), but with just one piece of tape it must be very minimal, yes? And the other factor is that generally eventually ---one or two outings later--- I am having trouble hanging in the ball and thus I reverse the process and the fit is great and I wonder why I ever put the tape at the back of the hole.
Am very familiar with my thumb changing sizes, but can the texture at the back of the thumb change that drastically from outing to outing? It's as if the back of y thumb is too smooth to provide even the slightest friction, and then ...days or weeks later it's back to normal.
Anyway... just curious if anyone has either experienced the same thing and/or knows why the tape at the back works ----and then eventually needs to be removed.
I do not want to change the mainstream drilling on most of my equipment at this time.
Thanks in advance for any ideas or feedback.
Edited by Neptune66 on 1/13/2012 at 10:46 AM