This ball just punched my ticket into the District finals in the Open division of AMF's $700,000 National In-League Tournament. Yes, the tournament is POA, but with my being 107 over using this ball last night, I have nothing but praise for this ball. Funnily enough, I seem to be the only one throwing this ball on my shift the entire night. In fact, this ball has slipped in well under the radar here in NorCal, since everyone here has jumped on the Storm bandwagon.
Anyway, this ball is an absolute beast, especially in heavy conditions. I was able to stay with it for the entire block, adjusting maybe 4 boards for the carry-down, and make my own track, while everyone else struggled as they were throwing the same line. I would have had to be 5 right of the Challenge with my Mission Domination to throw a similar line, but that would have run into everyone else's track 35ft down the lane, giving me a huge over-under reaction. The Challenge took all of that out of the picture.
Tommy and Ed were right in the video: The ball does not lose energy when the lanes break down, causing other balls to bog down, face up early, making you ball down. You could definitely punch up another one the exact same way, polish it, and get the same reaction in later stages; in fact, I'm thinking of doing the same, and comparing the polished version would stack up against the Domination/250K.
I've been throwing Ebonite equipment since 1992, with the Turbo/X, through about 1996 with the Nitro/R and Nitro/R2. Went back and forth between them and Hammer, but came to be throwing exclusively Ebonite gear since 2000. Ebonite has had solid solid products put out, until my confidence was shaken by the Mission X and Pursuit-S. I *almost* went back to Hammer because of those alone. The Challenge restored my faith in Ebonite, and if they keep doing this right, they'll be back on top once again.
BL.