I realize I'm the guy that brought his name up, but I don't want to turn this into a bash-Voss fest over any struggles, real or perceived, as he got older.
My point was about the attitude on the forums. The other thing I didn't post in my first message was that a lot of times, when amateurs (or tech-friendly pros) would disagree with Voss, et al, there would be someone to bring up, "Well, you're coming to PBA.com, this forum should be run by the pros." Well, seems to me that if you guys want a pros-only forum, you should have a pros-only private forum. As soon as you open it up to public comment, you don't get to control what those comments are going to be anymore.
What's funny about this stuff is that I'm doing some of my best bowling in years right now with tame, older equipment. Most modern houses are so dry and abrupt off the spot that it does me no good to drill the latest-and-greatest. The most aggressive ball I've drilled in the last 5 years may be a Track MX-05. And I put less than 10 games on it last year outside of tournaments. It would probably help me be more competitive if we were back to plastic or regular urethane.
But going backwards, technology-wise, universally drives down interest no matter the sport. When softball leagues started legislating bat strength, interest dropped. When golf started getting overly concerned about driver head size and/or groove shape, people got upset. Once the barn doors have opened, you can forget closing them again. You have to adapt the rest of the sport to the new reality.
That's what Voss and a lot of his cohorts never understood. And yeah, I realize it's uncomfortable to go into a league environment and see amateurs cranking the ball on par with you, but all it takes is to put down a real tournament shot on the lanes and the pros take over again. Just like you can go play your local muni from the front reds, shoot 75 and brag about it, but you're not going to win at Augusta.
Unfortunately -- and I don't know how PBA.com is today, because I left it 10 years ago and have never looked back -- there was enough damage done to relationships and potential relationships that a lot of amateurs went from looking up to these guys to starting to question their fanship. I don't know whether PBA leadership could have impacted the situation, but had I been sitting in the CEO role at the time, we would have gathered everyone with a tour card in a room and had a seminar on how we were all going to use social media going forward, and recommendations would not have been optional. If you couldn't march with the rest of the band, you either got off the site or gave up your card. Bowling's cachet with its fans is the accessibility. You lose that and you lose the biggest trump card in your deck.
Jess