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Author Topic: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.  (Read 4819 times)

ITZPS

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The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« on: August 25, 2015, 08:04:26 PM »
It's been a couple weeks since the women stopped here, and I thought I'd offer some comments, perspective, and some info.  I got to be involved in a lot of the behind the scenes stuff and prep work, and also got the spectator experience.  First of all, the PBA drill truck was here, so I did a lot of watching.  However, I did do a lot of little stuff, fixes, adjustments, and I did drill a few balls, will talk about that later.  I got a little tour of the drill truck, but it's not too spectacular.  It's a press, some tools, little work bench, and just rack after rack of balls.  Several hundred balls in the truck. 

It's a long couple days for the bowlers, especially the ones that make it to the end.  My wife is a part time manager at the center and took time off from her day job to be there for the whole event, and I recently quit my day job and went full time in the shop, so our days started at 5:30 am and ended at about 1am.  I can't say enough about the professionalism of the bowlers, all of them.  They were all super polite, talkative, and accommodating of fans who wanted to talk or wanted an autograph.  Kelly Kulick especially stood out, she knows she's the one of the big faces of the tour, and instead of being cocky or standoffish, she takes it the complete other direction.  She really acts as an ambassador for the women, very outgoing, friendly, etc. 

One of the center owners (also the owner of our shop group) took it upon himself to provide the women a full spread of meals every day also so they didn't have to leave the center or wait on snack bar food.  Great meals, good stuff, healthy, plenty of options, the women all REALLY appreciated that.  Several of them also hung out for a while after qualifying the first day, they grazed on the buffet, had some drinks, and while some bowled the pro ams, most of the others stuck around to watch and chat up the crowd. 

SEVERAL of the ones that didn't qualify also returned to watch match play the second day, Tish Johnson even took it upon herself to do score collection and verification for match play all day.  There were a few highlights, Liz Kuhlkin shooting 300, had the front 9 from a couple others, but it was a tough shot, a modified version of Beijing.  Going back to professionalism, we have a tough pair here, and there were a lot of low scores, the scoring pace overall was rough, but I barely saw frowns out of all the women when it wasn't going well, or even when it was embarrassing.  There was no (audible) cussing, no punching, hitting, kicking, throwing, or even lightly tossing anything.  I didn't really expect there to be, but the overwhelming absence of any negative reaction was impressive. 

From my end, it was a very awesome few days.  I've always been the part time and emergency fill in guy, and always just been here in town.  I've been the one working the shop or elsewhere when the opportunities to see stuff like this or be involved with came around.  Always get to hear a lot of stories from others about things, but this stuff has only ever existed for me on a screen.  I got to be right in the middle of everything, and I'm still buzzing about it.  I got to fix a few things for Lindsay Boomershine and Marcia Kloempken, nice to help out some of the "big wigs" for the company I'm on staff with, learned a few things, did a few interesting fixes, etc.  A couple weeks before the tournament I also got to plug/reslug and redrill several balls for Shannon Pluhowsky's wife, Megan Kelly, who is a very sweet person. 

The coolest thing by a long shot is that due to a few circumstances I won't discuss, I ended up drilling a few balls for Carolyn Dorin-Ballard.  Wow.  I'm sure you can gather she's very perfectionistic, but I nailed the few balls I drilled, and she was very complimentary and thankful.  I got to talk up Del a bit while he was laying the balls out, and it was all completely surreal.  Also have gotten to talk to Carolyn several times over the last couple weeks, she's a regional rep for Turbo, and got me all signed up and squared away with them so I'm pretty excited about that too.  I was already a huge fan before and am an even bigger one now, she's absolutely great. 

Setting up was insane.  All the tables and chairs at the back of the bowlers area had to be unbolted and removed.  We have a newish center built with Brunswick stuff, so we have the tables at the back of the bowlers area that have the racks for the house balls underneath them and the tall round tables in the back.  All had to come up and out, and we got bleachers.  Transitioning to the finals set was even more insane.  We had 45 minutes to clear the area, reposition all the bleachers, get chairs out, they had to get a couple lanes stripped to get banners out on them and the video camera on the lane all set up, and then get everyone seated and arranged and it was complete chaos.  They had two Flex machines out there, one stripping and one oiling, those were very cool. 

There's TONS more to tell, but I could ramble for several more paragraphs, probably just be easier to answer questions.  It was all too cool for words, just way too cool.  I thought I would be disappointed after they left, but the memories are good enough.  I'm really hoping this happens again next year and indefinitely.  I'm sure you got questions, fire away! 
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TonyinPortland

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #1 on: August 25, 2015, 08:28:02 PM »
Was this televised?  I have been making a big effort to start watching bowling on TV again, recently and, so far, have not seen the women. 

About 12 years ago was the last time I watched bowling regularly, and I identified more with the women, as far as a comparison to my own game.  I was really surprised when their tour went away, and I am glad it is back.


northface28

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #2 on: August 25, 2015, 09:49:52 PM »
What balls and layouts did CDB use?
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Dave81644

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #3 on: August 26, 2015, 05:50:09 AM »
all of the PWBA is live on xtra frame
well worth the $6/month for a subscription IMO

I believe some of the stepladders are on Youtube

BobOhio

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #4 on: August 26, 2015, 06:55:26 AM »
Great read, your passion is in almost every word. Xtraframe is okay, need for updated equipment, like Bowl.com.
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LookingForALeftyWall

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #5 on: August 26, 2015, 09:25:05 AM »
One of the center owners (also the owner of our shop group) took it upon himself to provide the women a full spread of meals every day also so they didn't have to leave the center or wait on snack bar food.

This is awesome!

TonyinPortland

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #6 on: August 26, 2015, 10:06:17 AM »
all of the PWBA is live on xtra frame
well worth the $6/month for a subscription IMO

I believe some of the stepladders are on Youtube

Not familiar with xtra frame.  Is that Internet only?  Anything on regular television?

CPA

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #7 on: August 26, 2015, 11:28:48 AM »
Thanks for the update.

ksucat

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #8 on: August 26, 2015, 11:45:35 AM »
I've been in that bowling center and like the layout as it has some room for bodies to roam.  Around the counter is a little tight is all. 

Nice post.  We went to pro-am in Wichita and my kids were lucky enough to have Lynda Barnes cross with them.  She is just flat crazy fun.  She was dancing to the music and had so much energy that the kids just flocked around her and joined in.  A friend of ours bought a pin to sign, but was a little shy approaching the bowlers.  Lynda grabbed the pin and our friend and dragged her around to make sure she got all the signatures she could find.  Our friend just glowed with excitement.

Kelly Kullick does take on the ambassador role and does it well.  She's very politically correct and polite and still has fun.  Her involvement during the pro-am was beyond expectations. 

Just a couple mentioned above, but many others had such positive behavior to be infectious to many shy kids.  Surprisingly, Wichita had a full house with most being adults for the pro-am. 

I hope this comment doesn't get taken the wrong way, but I almost fell off the bleachers at the number of fit and attractive ladies.  I love bowling, but I still don't think of bowlers as looking athletic.  Lynda and Kelly mentioned above are hard-bodied women that obviously workout regularly.  Then some of the college age women looked more like soccer girls than bowlers.  Nice for bowling's image for these women to look like professional athletes.

ITZPS

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #9 on: August 26, 2015, 01:00:29 PM »
The balls I drilled were a Nano, a Tour Solid, and a solid Loco.  I'm not entirely sure of the layouts, they didn't dual angle or measure anything, and I didn't find out what her axis was.  They just scribed the lines on there and told me to hit them.  I remember where the holes were at, but that doesn't really do much good without the other information.  She tried several other balls, but I never got a look at them up close. 

What balls and layouts did CDB use?
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ITZPS

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #10 on: August 26, 2015, 01:02:26 PM »
USBC's youtube channel uploads it all.  It was live on Xtra Frame and then uploaded to youtube a few days later.  It's all there if you're interested. 

Was this televised?  I have been making a big effort to start watching bowling on TV again, recently and, so far, have not seen the women. 

About 12 years ago was the last time I watched bowling regularly, and I identified more with the women, as far as a comparison to my own game.  I was really surprised when their tour went away, and I am glad it is back.
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bradl

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #11 on: August 26, 2015, 02:22:42 PM »
I've been in that bowling center and like the layout as it has some room for bodies to roam.  Around the counter is a little tight is all. 

Nice post.  We went to pro-am in Wichita and my kids were lucky enough to have Lynda Barnes cross with them.  She is just flat crazy fun.  She was dancing to the music and had so much energy that the kids just flocked around her and joined in.  A friend of ours bought a pin to sign, but was a little shy approaching the bowlers.  Lynda grabbed the pin and our friend and dragged her around to make sure she got all the signatures she could find.  Our friend just glowed with excitement.

This sounds like me in 1994, where I was the shy person, and Dana Miller-Mackie took me around to do the same thing. I remember being a sobbing mess that night because Dana was the person I idolized the most on the tour at that time.

I can see Lynda doing this quite easily (not that any of the other ladies wouldn't, as they would), because being a mother herself, she knows how shy kids can be, especially around their heroes and people as positive as the ladies are. Leanne did the same thing here in Sacramento, not just because she's the mother of a little one, but because she coached a lot of the kids here when her and Gary ran the shop at Fireside.

Quote
Kelly Kullick does take on the ambassador role and does it well.  She's very politically correct and polite and still has fun.  Her involvement during the pro-am was beyond expectations. 

Kelly has always been a standout. Not only a fun bowler, but a fun person as well.

Quote
Just a couple mentioned above, but many others had such positive behavior to be infectious to many shy kids.  Surprisingly, Wichita had a full house with most being adults for the pro-am. 

I hope this comment doesn't get taken the wrong way, but I almost fell off the bleachers at the number of fit and attractive ladies.  I love bowling, but I still don't think of bowlers as looking athletic.  Lynda and Kelly mentioned above are hard-bodied women that obviously workout regularly.  Then some of the college age women looked more like soccer girls than bowlers.  Nice for bowling's image for these women to look like professional athletes.

I think we all understand what you mean, as they have to keep in shape as well as realize that these are ladies coming up into their prime.

One thing about the negativity, or I should say, lack of. I'm sure that some of the older guys here will agree with me when I say that I don't ever recall seeing any sort of negativity or bad sportsmanship coming from any of the women on this tour, when the PWBA was in full swing, nor the LPBT. not one bit, ever. Even the lady bowling their worst set for the tournament was still giving their all and didn't let any negativity bubble up to where it could be seen.

OP, you just described a week in how the tour used to and normally should run. The big difference is the excitement from the ladies bowling and having an actual TOUR across the country, instead of setting up shop in one place and having everyone try to get there. The former method gets the fans back and interacting with their heroes, while the latter loses that, and in turn viewership. I'm glad you had the chance to experience this from beginning to end. And seeing the turnout for this, I have no doubt that this will happen again next year. We've seen how this has been truly missed.

Question though.. did they expand the tournament field at your stop (IIRC, that was Topeka)? I know they did for Wichita and Lincoln.

BL.

ITZPS

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Re: The full experience: a PWBA tournament.
« Reply #12 on: August 26, 2015, 02:27:06 PM »
Yes, the field was expanded to 80 from 64
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