So kowtowing to a company and having softer equipment out there for people to take advantage of and a 2-year rolling ban on urethane because a certain bowler can't handle it symbolizes the epitome of integrity. Got it.
Whose position do you want me to argue, exactly? The professional league's summation that 70 is just as fine as 72? I personally don't care if the standard is 40. Or 20. What I do care about here is that I trust the PBA far more than the USBC to determine what's an appropriate standard, what's fair, and how to adjudicate it.
Do I think Sean Rash has anything to do with this? Not something this big -- and if so, given its his company that is suffering the most, I reject any notion that the USBC is "kowtowing" to Rash or anybody else. If anything, it would suggest the USBC is kowtowing to someone from the B7 family out of revenge.
Yet, not even that makes sense. The Purple Hammer problem has been a known issue for awhile now. And yet, it affected just two production years. There is a shelf life of usability for all bowling balls, a fact that by itself makes it even more ridiculous for the USBC to piecemeal the Storm ban in this way. I'll give my solution at the end, but I want to address the other comment first:
Spoken like someone who hasn't seen any bowling outside of the US, and I'm not just talking about bowlers you see on the PBA. If you'd seen the bowlers in the JPBA, KPBA, the WTBA (which is the world governing body, despite what people in the USA think), the European leagues, Singapore, and others, you'd see how competitive bowling is.
I know it's competitive outside the US but I also know the PBA is still the gold standard for competitiveness and prestige across the sport. It's the sport equivalent of "going to Nashville" for a country music singer. We can argue about whether economics or the lack of desire to be away from one's family for four months keeps more foreign bowlers off the PBA tour, or maybe it's the depth of the field, I don't know. The two best bowlers at the moment are international guys -- Belmonte and Barrett -- so it's not like there's some magical prohibition against international talent in the PBA.
But that's not the only thing the IOC is looking at. Take a look at baseball, a sport played worldwide, and very well in numerous countries, especially those in Latin America. It was first added in 1992 and then eliminated from the Olympics in 2005 before returning in 2020. The IOC said it was because the best players weren't playing, which was not entirely true. MLB players didn't play during that period, but minor leaguers did, and the prohibition of MLB players from playing affected all countries. I had a friend on the first team, a guy who still holds the strikeout record for Olympic baseball (B.J. Wallace) and if anyone doesn't remember the IOC politics and "concerns" about USA having an inherent edge in the sport, I'll be happy to remind you. Despite not having "access to the best talent," 16 of the 20 U.S. players in '92 made the bigs including Jason Varitek, Nomar Garciaparra and Jason Giambi. Anyone who has been around bowling can tell you that getting it through the IOC has been like pushing a rope. And that's even with the ABC/WIBC/YABA merger to USBC basically calling the IOC's bluff about a single governing agency. The WTBA thing is non sequitur; again, baseball has the MLB in America and the NPB in Japan, etc.
Now, briefly back to the balls:
The *right* way to have fixed the Jackal issue for Motiv, the Purple Hammer issue for B7 and the seven Storm balls would have been for the USBC to notify the companies quietly, audit their current production, make the changes to all future balls and move on. We simply are not a big enough sport to justify endangering the livelihood of companies (especially Motiv) with multi-million-dollar "fixes" unless the companies were found to have purposefully deceived the USBC. Given that ball performance degrades relatively quickly, within a year or two anything you'd be able to buy off the shelf would have outperformed any of these pieces. As for Nationals, the USBC's decision was especially egregious and should have gone into effect only at the conclusion of the tournament. It wouldn't have been a perfect solution, but it would at least have not come across as the USBC trying to swing its (stick) around just because it could.
If Sean Rash was able to set all of this into motion with one comment, I feel sorry for the state of our sport and its leaders.