In what other sports/games does one get handicap of some form to make up the difference in skill levels among it's players. I've been thinking, and I cannot think of any others. Maybe golf? Or are the different levels of players just categorized and play each other? I'm not sure, as I'm an occasional golfer and never have played any leagues or tourneys.
Baseball - No
Football - No
Basketball - No
Hockey - No
Soccer - No
Boxing - No
Billiards - No
Darts - No
Horseshoes - No
Ping Pong - No
I'm curious as to why we do in bowling? Seems in anything else we do, if you want to win, you study the game and practice until you get good enough. Why not bowling? In life, if you want more money, you go to school (take lessons) and apply that lesson in your work until you get promoted (practice). Then you make more money (hopefully!) So, why is bowling a socialist society? In life that would be like saying anyone who makes less than $50,000 will get however much it takes to get them to that level, and anyone who makes more will have that money deducted to bring them down to that level. Everyone will now be equal regardless of whether you work (or practice) hard to earn the extra $ (or pins) or whether you sit on the couch and take the handout.
I am sure handicap was created to give lesser skilled bowlers a chance, but when I was on that losing little league team, we didn't get handed free runs to compete with the better teams. I guess my questions is when/why bowling decided to incorporate handicap into it's competition? And, in the long run, has it made bowling any better/worse off because of it?
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