That's a good point about sanctioning. People just join a league, and if it's sanctioned, they whine about it and pay their money, but that's as far as it goes.
And yes, your last paragraph is correct. Just like if you let a kid eat cookies and candy and cake for a solid month then try to make them start eating healthy, you're gonna have a bigger fight on your hands than if you'd just moderated it in the first place. The USBC is in a no win situation, but they put themselves there.
Yes, bowling has priced itself out. You don't just walk in and bowl, it's bowling, shoes, food, it's an event that doesn't last very long and costs a lot. A benefit though is that it IS indoors, and I think that's why open bowling is starting to pick up more. Unless it's 70-80 degrees outside, nobody wants to be out, so what do we do? We go bowling. But at the same time, we are talking about league bowling, not open bowling.
If you don't think scoring pace has anything to do with it, then you aren't very competitive, you show up to have fun, and you aren't worried about your payout at the end of the year. Scoring pace may not affect or bother you specifically, but that doesn't mean it hasn't already made people quit in droves. I'd say a 7.3 million drop in membership over 15 years qualifies as quitting in droves.
Tell people prize funds are disappearing and that will make more people quit than a tougher shot will. Everything has become so middle of the road that it's costing people money. Scratch bowlers aren't making as much as they used to because of handicap. Handicap bowlers can't make any money on their road to improvement because the big scores are too big. There was an annual tournament here years ago, 1st was 1000 bucks, and the entry fee was 80, with side pots, high game pots, brackets, etc. The last 3 years it was in existence, it took a minimum of a 258 average for NINE GAMES to take first, with a high the last year of 261. The tournament folded because they couldn't get anyone to show up any more. We also had a fairly prestigious tournament that the finals were actually shown on local tv, and it too fell by the wayside because the numbers were outrageous. We used to have 3 pretty big scratch leagues in town, and people would even come watch. The longer they went, the higher the scores got, and the people that used to come watch because they wanted to get into the leagues stopped coming to watch, and never considered joining because "I can't shoot scores like that all the time." So tell me how none of that had to do with scoring pace . .