I've been meaning to write this for a while, and after watching the 2/10/13 show, now is as good a time as ever. Others, if I am completely out of touch, please feel free to tell me so. These are just my concerns about the brand, and I hope that I am wrong. If not, feel free to discuss.
There are a lot of new brands coming up that is making the field almost as diversified as the sport was in the early-mid 90s:
Ebonite, Hammer, Columbia, Track, Brunswick, Storm, Roto-Grip, 900 Global, DV8, Lane #1, Motiv, Lord Field, Visionary... the names go on and on. I honestly can't remember a time when we had this many ball manufacturers in this sport (lessee.. in my time, up to 1999, I remember seeing Brunswick, Columbia, Ebonite, AMF, Fab, Nu-Line, Quantum, Storm, Track, and Lane #1, and that's it! 25 years worth from when I was born until 2000).
But while I know that each one goes through its time of being popular, the one brand here that really appears to be falling off by the wayside, is Ebonite.
All of the rest now still have a strong following, and lately, Storm is the flavour of the day. Hammer is still going strong, but to be honest, Ebonite has been struggling since the Mission Domination/250K.
Looking at the 2/10/13 show, and seeing Tommy back on TV, with the 10 balls that have come out between the Mission 250K and now (Mission X, Pursuit/Pursuit S, Elevate, Innovate, Exceed, Endure, Persevere, Challenge, Champion), it actually shocked me to see that he went back to a Gamebreaker, rather than some of the newer equipment Ebonite has (yes, he did go an Innovate later in the block, but still). The Challenge is a monster of a ball, and I know you should use the ball best suited for the condition, not what is newer (newer /= better), but seeing someone revert back to a 5 year old ball doesn't generate much confidence in the new products they are putting out, especially since Ebonite isn't seeing much air time on TV as they were 3 years ago.
Plus the videos.. As I've said before in other places, the market-speak is hurting their presentation of their gear. For example, their latest video for the Champion is barely a minute and a half, and half of that time is spent trying to stoke up the excitement as if it's a trailer for a Bond movie, with very little on the ball, and even when we see the ball, we pretty much see the same angle thrown by the same bowler, and nothing on how any of the balls used were laid out and drilled, patterns used, nothing. There's just a lot lacking there.
I also wonder if the multi-manufacturer deals are hurting them, in the fact that you aren't seeing the marquis bowlers often. Yes, you see Barnes and Fagan for Columbia and Track, but Ebonite only has 2-3 left, in Jones, Kulick, and Terrell-Kearney, and apart from the Women's series, you're not seeing either of them at all. Apart from them, O'Neill and Pluhowsky, everyone else is multi-brand: Mika, Johnson, Parkin, Blanchard, etc. While that may help to get EBI more exposure, Ebonite as a brand is really falling behind.
I wonder if this is part of the reasons why everyone and their mother is flocking to Storm, or at the least, avoiding Ebonite. All of this competition is great for the consumer, but also breeds innovation, and Ebonite may not be breeding it enough.
I only post this because I'm concerned where Ebonite is headed; I've been using their gear almost exclusively since the early 90s, and for me, their gear has been phenomenal. But now, something just isn't right.. I don't know what the answer is here for Ebonite, but what I do know is that they need to think of one and think of it fast, otherwise people will forget what Ebonite is.
BL.