This weekend I had the pleasure (?) of being very humbled by a tough lane condition. It was practice, fortunately, and I was able to talk the laneman into putting out a fresh, tougher pattern for me to shoot on. Now, I am not God's gift to the lanes, but I thought (read that, past tense) THOUGHT I was a decent bowler - after all, I avg. low 190's in 2 houses last year, and am over 200 in my summer league. Then I hit the lanes. First, the pattern was one I had never been on, and it was NOT forgiving to anything. I eventually found where the oil was and wasn't, and even a couple of lines that I could get to the pocket with. This is where the trouble really begins. I knew where I needed the ball to be, but couldn't get it there consistently. I found that being able to hit a 3 board area wasn't nearly good enough.
I'm not crying a river here, although I was getting extremely frustrated with myself and this new knowledge that my avg. is apparently 30 pins exaggerated, but it got me thinking. Are the bowling centers, in their desire to keep bowlers, cheating us out of the opportunity to actually become better bowlers? I hated to quit bowling on that shot, because I was learning a lot from it, but eventually I realized that to proceed in my current tired state would be counter-productive. My point, though, is this: How can we learn to adapt to different conditions and improve our accuracy when we never need to (or have the opportunity to)? Sorry guys, but the last thing I want to do is spend hundreds of dollars donating to tournaments just for practice on tougher conditions - I feel the opportunity should be there for my practice sessions and league as well. What is your opinion on this?
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Why, WHY won't the last one just fall?? It's WIGGLING for cryin' out loud!!