Mumzie – No, but it would seem that a fundamentally sound game should remain so. That what produced power and accuracy in the past should today. The game shouldn’t evolve so much that principals that work in one era shouldn’t work in another.
I know we are talking at the highest levels here and that the difference between being simply good and a champ is a strike or two in a 7 game match.
But bowling seems to change so much faster than other sports. Full rollers ruled for a few years, then came plastic, urethane lane finishes, soft rubber, urethane balls, 2-piece balls, resin, dynamic cores, different lane conditioners, different lane patterns, particle balls, etc, etc. Each of these seems to require a different skill set.
While I believe that if Dick Weber (or Earl Anthony, Don Johnson, Mark Roth, etc) had grown up on today’s environment that he would have developed a game that would make him great today why shouldn’t the game he developed then still be good today?
Why should Del Ballard suddenly be made insignificant? Even Pete Weber took several years to revamp his game so that he could come back to being a champion.
While other sports have changed gradually over time due to technology I can’t think of another that has changed as often and dramatically as bowling has.
It makes the sport tough to teach in that what works today might not work 5 years from now.