Power has nothing to do with being superior. Look at the top guys in all time wins and not many are high rev rate guys.
Walter Ray
Earl Anthony
Norm Duke
Pete Weber
Parker Bohn III
Mark Roth
Dick Weber
Mike Aulby
Don Johnson and Belmo tied
Brian Voss
Marshall Holman
You take Belmo out of the list and the highest rev rate is Parker?
The competition of today's era, simply didn't exist when many of the above won their titles. Both in the 2 handed fashion, as well as the reactive era. Urethane dictated a different set of strengths to optimize than reactive in my opinion. Not diminishing either skillset, but Urethane never really promoted and minimally benefited from the massive amounts of revs, and board covered, that 2 handed opens up. So it's no coincidence that the rise of 2 handed bowling in the PBA, came after the reactive evolution of the sport. We're now watching in real time, as the oil patterns are evolving, reverting pros back to urethane, because they've used oil to punish overreaction of resin. The irony is humorous.
I'm not taking anything away from any of the above bowlers and their feats, but it's like saying that because Ben Hogan won so many awards in the 30's, that the new era of golfers aren't superior to him. If Ben Hogan had to compete against Tiger Woods he would have been absolutely humiliated. Not just because of the advancements in club technology, or ball aerodynamics, nor that today's courses are 1-2000 yards longer, but because Tiger Woods revolutionized the game, by being a physically superior player, who ALSO had the accuracy and finesse of the best players that proceeded him. Tiger's introduction to golf, was much like Belmonte's, in that he shared the accuracy, consistency, and finesse/touch of all the best in the sport, but it was combined with more power than any other bowler or golfer could create at the time. They both dominated so often and so quickly, that the entire landscape around them had to adapt to try and keep up. Jimmie Johnson did the same thing in NASCAR, the entire landscape started fitness regimens to keep up, and his dominance faded with time. Every sport goes through these cycles, in which someone finds a better, more efficient way to do something, and the world tries to catch up, until the next evolution pops up.
Look at how many 2 handers are on PBA now. Look at how many golfers are actual athletes now. Hell, look at Bryson Dechambeau, who is AGAIN moving the goal posts, of what pure, raw strength can accomplish in golf, when combined with the same accuracy as the best players. It's just a superior player. That's not a knock to 1 handers, or older generations, it's just the reality that everything in life is constantly evolving to find a competitive edge, and that when it is found, the associations will try to find a way to combat it. Bowling does it with oil, golf does it with course length, both have put caps on equipment limits, it's never ending.
In bowling, and in golf, the ball does not know anything other than physics, and will follow the laws of motion. The bowler has to put the ball in the right place, but after that, the ball is simply a vessel of transferring of energy imparted by the bowler, into the pins. Assuming accuracy is relatively constant, more energy transferred will result in a higher strike percentage. (Probably to a certain point, but I can't find that answer at the moment, I wonder what the highest EARL can accomplish is?)
It's a simple question really. If you have multiple rev/speed matched players with the exact same accuracy, which player will have the highest probability of higher scores/strike percentage? Which one has a wider area of miss room?
15mph/200rpm
16mph/250rpm
17mph/300rpm
18mph/350rpm
19mph/400rpm
20mph/450rpm
We all know the answer, because we all know why many casual bowlers are frustrated with 2 handed bowling. That's why this conversation exists.