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Author Topic: Lane transition . . .  (Read 5640 times)

spencerwatts

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Lane transition . . .
« on: August 18, 2014, 04:04:39 PM »
Another thing I'm curious to know if there is any set theory when it comes to lane transition, particularly when bowling on sport compliant/flat patterns?  (It seems the first transition usually will be making a significant bold move left and going with a stronger ball. Then any subsequent transition(s) would involve using a weaker ball and moving right or left as needed.)

I've been in five scenarios since my return, and I think I've done it right only once: In the scenario that I made the right adjustment, I was bowling on a 42' Highway to Hell pattern, and I went from using a pin-up Beatdown to my pin-up Reax Version 2 (solid), moving an arrow left on the approach and about three boards left at the arrows. I went on to finish fifth, advancing to the stepladder final.

On the other occasions, I suffered greatly with a game from hell three times, of which twice I missed the cut by less than 20 pins; the fourth time, I believe that I had the bowling ball(s) in my bag to make the move left with a stronger ball but I never considered it. I missed the casher's round by two spots.

 
Ball speed avg. (18.25 mph)
Rev rate avg. (400-428 rpm)
Still refusing to accept AARP eligibility and membership cards

 

avabob

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #1 on: August 18, 2014, 05:22:14 PM »
No real rule of thumb that I go by.  On shorter patterns the first transition is more likely to be noticeable carrydown.  More noticeable the shorter the pattern.  All patterns will start transitioning toward the middle relatively soon.  I would suggest just the opposite on ball selection.   Use the weakest ball you have that will hook on fresh.  It will give you  a better read of the oil dispersion.  As you get either carry down, or the track starts to force you left, go stronger.  Even tournament patterns have heavier oil in the middle, and further down the lane in the middle. 

Never, never change balls to keep from moving on a lane.  Only exception I have ever seen to that rule is if I am playing 5 board or out, or if I cant get any deeper, and have to go tamer just to keep in the pocket.   

cheech

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #2 on: August 18, 2014, 05:44:04 PM »
in theory in general on medium sport patterns you start straighter and gradually move left bumping your breakpoint off the spot you burned up. as your fresh ball starts starts to be too early go to a more angular ball and continue to move left. repeat this process until yo cant go left anymore then ball down. usually your first transition ball is stronger because there is still thick fresh oil in the middles. for me its usually a strong asymetric pearl (ie. totally defiant)

i say this all in theory because in my experience most of the time not enough players in the field break the pattern down properly and end up totally trashing it and make it a mess for the rest of transition

Good Times Good Times

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #3 on: August 18, 2014, 06:03:21 PM »
........in my experience most of the time not enough players in the field break the pattern down properly and end up totally trashing it and make it a mess for the rest of transition

+1
GTx2

JustRico

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #4 on: August 18, 2014, 06:56:13 PM »
This is the problem with so-called perceived 'patterns'...too many rely on believing they know how a 'pattern' is supposed to play instead of learning ball motion and knowing how to properly adjust instead of others paving the way for their performance...
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kidlost2000

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #5 on: August 18, 2014, 08:06:23 PM »
I agree with Rico.

I subbed some in a sport league this summer, and bowled a few tournaments and sweepers on sport patterns, and advertised sport patterns.

Of course the first thing I would do is google the pattern to see how it played and gear my equipment for it. I have learned from a  previous incident of being an "advertised" sport pattern that you better bring other sh*t just in case.

I was expecting a flatter oil pattern with out of bounds and tight lines. Ended up with a very unflat and big hooking overall pattern that eliminated 90% of my equipment I brought.

I then learned to keep a full arsenal for any tournament, and have one or two of the 6 balls I take for the specific pattern and the rest for everything else in between. Obviously any of the 6 will work on any possible pattern, but I try to have the two dedicated be the surface/ball/layout I think is best for that condition.(possibly)

I also learned that preconceived ideas of lines are out the window. When you start warm ups, treat it like league or any other event. Pick a good starting ball and go to your A game shot and see what happens. Sometimes you find you can make small adjustments off of your normal line and have a great look. May require a speed adjustment or a different ball, but you are able to play a comfort zone that increases your comfort level.

Also watch others on your pair and around you to see how they are playing the lanes and if they are having better looks in one part of the lane or the other that you may be able to line up off of.

The last thing I learned is do not be afraid to get in and hook the ball. I prefer being on the outside for as long as possible as my A game and moving in deeper as my B to B+ game some days.

I found on more then a few sport patterns this shot is far more forgiving then trying to play more direct on the outside. Standing deeper and having the ball around the 10 board down lane has been a great look. I could have never imagined this with the oil and smaller margins for error when playing further right.

I enjoy getting online to get an idea of what to expect and prep some equipment for. It is when you start bowling on the actual condition and lane that you will gather the most information.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2014, 08:08:44 PM by kidlost2000 »
…… you can't  add a physics term to a bowling term and expect it to mean something.

JustRico

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #6 on: August 18, 2014, 08:27:35 PM »
Much of the time, a 'pattern' is attempted or applied, there is not a proper cleaning process applied, thus residual festers and/or memory...thus the house memory and/or shot appears...as well as the topography of not only the lane but the condition applied on a daily basis.
Part of learning requires experience which also requires failing to learn from along with succeeding...
Co-author of BowlTec's END GAMES ~ A Bowler's COMPLETE Guide to Bowling; Head Games ~ the MENTAL approach to bowling (and sports) & (r)eVolve
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BowlTEc on facebook...www.iBowlTec.com

avabob

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #7 on: August 19, 2014, 12:04:34 PM »
There is no substitute for experience.  Even with experience I am making educated guesses, but at least the emphasis is on educated. 

cheech

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #8 on: August 19, 2014, 04:46:55 PM »
+1000 i would say i started to seriously try and learn how to bowl on sport at age 17 and it took me a good 4 years of bowling almost exclusively on sport patterns (about 90%) to successfully and consistently read ball reaction and how to play transition most of the time. and thats on the left side where theres about 1/10th of the traffic thats on the right side lol. and 98% of lefties play the same part of the lane on everything lol

JustRico

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #9 on: August 19, 2014, 05:46:38 PM »
Yes but left handers generally get trapped in an area created by the right handers migrating in...more times than not too quickly
Co-author of BowlTec's END GAMES ~ A Bowler's COMPLETE Guide to Bowling; Head Games ~ the MENTAL approach to bowling (and sports) & (r)eVolve
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cheech

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Re: Lane transition . . .
« Reply #10 on: August 19, 2014, 10:15:02 PM »
thats exactly what i found Rico. i guess i would call myself a power lefty. i am able and comfortable moving into 3rd and 4th arrow and open angles so my instincts told me to move in and transition like righties. after a year or two of getting to game 4-6 and not being able to get a ball down lane i was like lets try moving the other way lol. the best lines i found on medium patterns are up the gutter and once i get to 8-10 at the arrows ball down and stay outside of 6 or so