Dmonroe,
I think this is great conversation. You posted what you saw and others have shown that you were spot on with your observations, and from there we have discussions on the actual laneplay and what is needed to improve one's scores, which is the premise of your original post, to impart knowledge from your first hand experience to help others do better. I am no contender for an Eagle. I do hold onto the dream that one day everything will come together for either me, me and partner, or my team and I might have a chance to win an Eagle. I was close to averaging 200 at Nationals for my 12 years there, until the last 2 years where I bowled some of the worst scores of my life. I attribute some of it to poor execution on my part, but some was due to our team not working together. I had 4-5 guys playing inside of me last year, as I tried to play the line Bill Hall suggested was the way to play the lanes. I told everyone that strategy, but some didn't like the look they had there and decided to move in to a more "comfortable" playing area. I had about 4-5 good frames until the oil pushed into my line and my scores started to go down. When I tried to move inside that oil, I hit the dry they had created and go overhook. And if I tried to move deeper, I didn't have the right equipment or surfaces to get a constent corner. I saw first hand what happens when teams do not work together, and I caught the brunt of it with a 450ish team set. Was it all others, no. Some was poor execution on my part as I said, but if we would have worked together, none of us would have had to have been as accurate as we would have created area. I mention this only to show that no matter what skill level you are at, or what age....working together is important for the group as a whole to allow you to bowl as good as you can. For some that is Eagles, for some that is top 100, for others that is just cashing.