IMO these things are overdue:
-Max diff at .050
-Increase bowling ball hardness by 5%
-set and enforcing a ratio rule of 10:1 for 2019
—reduce the ratio to 9:1 for 2020
—reduce the ratio to 8:1 for 2021
....go all the way to 6:1 slowly reducing the ratio over a half decade
Then, sanction leagues as recreational, challenge and sport
-Lastly, increase dues to $50 annually. This is necessary to run a governing body. Ffs people pay $50 just for the privilege to shop at Costco
I don't have a problem with the dues increase if it went 100% to member benefits (tasteful awards for the same things we gave awards for in the 80s/90s, bolster tournaments, etc.). If it goes to salaries at USBC HQ you can count me out.
As for your equipment recommendations, I like mine a whole lot better:
- Get rid of any and all static weight limitations. Load that baby up with 6 pounds of side weight if you want; I want to see you try to control that. As long as the ball weighs 16 or less and has no metal in it, put the pin on the ball's butt and the MB in grip center and have at it. I drill my own stuff and occasionally drill wacky patters on old balls just to experiment and I've yet to find the magic beanstalk.
- I almost don't care at all about durometer ratings. What was the limit back in the 80s, 68? 70? Whatever it was, that's good enough. No reason to raise it and eliminate options.
- No limit on differential. Not one bit. See my comment about 6 pounds of side weight. You've got guys thinking equipment alone can put them on TV and it can't.
Why do I take this position? Because if you keep doing the things that got you where you are now, you're going to get associated with old stodgy bowling in craptastic bowling alleys filled with cheap cigarette smoke and bad lighting. The current and next generations are tech-heads. So open the equipment up to tech head appeal. It's not going to change anything in regards to who is at the top of the sport but at least the kids may be intrigued.
When I see people wanting to tighten equipment specs, I automatically assume they're jealous of other bowlers or bitter because the game changed under their feet over the last 50 years and they wouldn't/couldn't adapt. And my mind immediately goes to this older guy I bowled with 10 years ago who liked telling the kids in the local YABA league that they had no talent, or at least not as much as he did growing up, because "the balls do everything for you today." Nice ambassador for our sport, he was.
Jess