....about a tactful way of approaching a team member. I know I may be asking a lot for "tact" on these forums!!
Just kidding.
My Wednesday night mixed team is pretty good. It's my wife, some guy, my friend, and me. My wife is a solid 185 and makes her spares. The "some guy" can be a strike machine, but can't make spares to save his life (approx 190 average), my friend (approx 195 average) who can eat up a certain condition, but can't "find" anything when the going gets tough or "that condition" is not there, and me (the random 220 guy).
The order is: me, wife, some guy, friend.
Herein lies the problem. My friend invited us to join the team in the offseason. We agreed. He asked me if the order I mentioned above was OK with me. With this not being my team and my friend having anchored this team for several years (he's 13 years older than me), I humbly said it should be fine, not wanting to rock the boat of him and "some guy".
However, over the course of the year, my friend has demonstrated a propensity for choking in the 10th.
Now, before I get killed here, I realize that everyone opens a frame from time to time, and it never should really technically be left up to the anchor to go win a game. It just seems like every time we only need a mark in the 10th frame to win a game, he goes big four, or flags a 10-pin. Trust me, I know that pressure of the 10th and have choked myself when I've been anchor. We've all done it. But I also know when to defer to my teammates who may be hot at the time and can hold the ship afloat while I get my head out of my keister.
I know he's trying and I know that he busts his hump trying to get better, but it just seems like he doesn't have "IT" to buck up in the 10th and deliver a mark.
Have any of you ever run into this situation? And, if you have, how did you bring up that the lineup may need a little kicking around?
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If I ever saw an amputee being hanged, I'd just yell out letters. --DM