Encourage him to join the league so he makes friends in bowling. Let him have fun.
I'd be careful about him using 14 lbs. though. Two handed is fine, but with a 14 lb ball he'll likely throw it too slow for whatever rev rate he has, making any reactive ball hard to control, which may lead to frustration rather than enjoyment.
Side note: If he loves bowling, and you love bowling you'll have that common ground when he's 14-18 years old and the "rational" part of his brain is dormant, and he'll listen to any voice as long as it doesn't belong to Mom or Dad.
My son (now 30) and I could ALWAYS go bowling during those difficult teenage years, no matter how stupid he acted, and we could bowl, talk about school, life, friends, you name it... You may not have the chance to have those conversations within the walls of your home because he'll see it as "Dad lecturing" and will probably tune you out until he's a little older.
We're now the best of friends, and he's anchor on my team. I cannot imagine a father and son any closer. Looking back, bowling was very important, and I'm certain, kept both of us out of some trouble.
Best of luck to you and your son. Enjoy whatever you can together now to lay a strong foundation for your relationship. Most teens experience some difficulties in life regardless of how great their parents are. If you're close hopefully he'll come to you with his issues instead of the 10,000 other "voices" that will pull him in any other direction.