i posted this on the PBAforums as well but i think its a good question
There was a junior "allstar" league bowling next to me as i bowled in a sweeper on sunday, and here are a few random thoughts about what i saw about some of the supposed best juniors in the region.
Now before i say what i say i did see a few bowlers who knew what they were doing and had very good form, release, leverage, arm swing, etc.
But otherwise it seemed the majority of the bowlers seemed only to care of how many boards they crossed, or how pretty they looked.
Many their shoulders flew open and/or dropped their shoulders, short arming the ball, coming around the ball trying to hook it with their hand, simple things which can be fixed with minimal work, yet major flaws in ones game.
My question is this, why is noone teaching these kids it isn't how, its how many? I know i was guilty of many of these things in juniors as well so i am not taking a holier than thou attitude.
but i watch these juniors and realize most need to change their entire mindset of bowling if they want to compete at anything higher than local sweepers.
These problems they have and i stated above are easily fixable by an even moderatly competant bowler helping them, whether it be a coach or parent/relative. my question is why haven't they?
These teams have coaches, High school teams have coaches, traveling leagues have coaches, what do they do? I know if i was coaching ANY team, my first rule would be proper mechanics, i wouldn't change anyones shot but you need to be able to have correct balance and leverage at the foul line. Why don't these coaches fix these kids, they will have more competitive teams and help these kids get a jump start on scratch bowling
I am saying this because i was one of those kids, and i have struggled thru my first 3 yrs of adults adapting my game to suit tougher more demanding conditions, my dad helped me some but even in his hey day he was in the same boat i am now, he could score on easier shots but when a tougher condition comes around my mechanics aren't repeatable enough to consistantly repeat shots to hit a breakpoint, i wish i was taught at an earlier age how not only to score on a wall, but on anything.
I have improved lightyrs since i first became an adult, and i am using myself as a model for this, because i know what 90% of them will go thru, donating in tournaments and losing money wondering why, when all it would take was a coach to make or force them to just repeat mechanics, use correct form, come thru the ball, teach them the correct way to bowl.
Why won't coaches do this, for their teams and for the juniors futures?
sorry for this long winded thing i just thought of it as i read it, i would love to discuss possible reasons for this, or even here some comments from many of the juniors on this board
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I'm left handed and i've got a ball and a wall.
The forum whore formerly known as leftycrank300/JasonBogeyLC