However, that's not how this situation is playing out and that's where I take issue. The USBC, being the governing body of our sport and supposed to have the interest of all the bowlers in mind, should be much more forthcoming about why exactly they are taking away a piece of equipment bowlers paid for. We still don't know all the details outside of their "test" results, which showed a very miniscule infraction. We pay them, there should be no withholding of information.
How best is the USBC supposed to serve
ALL bowlers? By following a set of rules that benefit
EVERYONE, or by ignoring their own rules to the benefit of a few?
And the assertion that the USBC "owes" us some explanation? That's ridiculous. The USBC is the rule making/enforcing body of the sport. How much explanation do you need when they ban a piece of equipment which has been thouroughly tested, and found to now be non-compliant? USBC owes you nothing, except what you pay for, and that is for them to govern
and regulate the sport while enforcing the rules. That's exactly whar they've done.
Some infractions, as all things in life, can truly be trivial. Others, irregardless of magnitude, cannot be considered trivial.
In this case, Motiv was only slightly over the limit. Go over the speed limit, even by a little, and you are guilty. The officer stopping you may, or may not, decide to write you a ticket. IF HE DOES, it isn't his fault, it was your fault. YOU left the decision in his hands by breaking the rules, and he chose the ticket.
MOTIV left the choice in the hands of other people, the USBC. The USBC's loyalty is not to a company, nor is it to a small faction of disgruntled, it is to their ENTIRE membership
as a whole. That's exactly what they've done.
No, USBC isn't some all knowing, all seeing oracle that always does the right thing, but,
in THIS event, they have done all that is required of them, and they have done it by the rules. Rules that ALL the manufacturers are held to.
Your problem should be with Motiv, and why they let things get this point in the first place. They (Motiv) had control. They (Motiv) had already gotten approval to make this product. They (Motiv) gave up that control by either not caring enough, or not being thourough enough, to maintain that control to within acceptable limits.
I guess I just fail to understand how the USBC failed in this instance. The rules were in place, and had been so for a while. Everybody involved was well aware of them, and had bern able to stay within them on many previous products. It is unfortunate that they weren't able to do that with this one as well.
The blame falls on Motiv, as should ANY resolution of this problem. ANYTHING USBC does would only be a concession on their part, and might open themselves up for litigation by all the other manufacturers for showing "partiality" to a competitor by allowing them permission to continue to "break the rules", so to speak.