This brings up a topic I've been wanting to address for sometime... In terms of bowlers with the high revs/speed. I'm not trying to be critical or a know-it-all, just meerly going by my observations.
This spring I went to visit a college which is known for turning out some of the best bowlers in search of landing a scholarship. I met with the coaches and had my game evaluated, and one of the things they wanted me to work on was adding more power to my game. I watched as they coached some of their other bowlers and to be honest I wasn't happy with what I saw. One girl was being encouraged to heighted her backswing which was already high, and it was obvious it was a struggle for her. To be fair they may have been looking at a different issue, but I remember being told that "We don't try to take a cookie cutter approach to our bowlers." but what I saw looked a lot like a cookie cutter approach.
What got me thinking is, I remember I think Pedersen commenting on how a lot of bowlers coming out of these bowling universities have a lot of problems adjusting to the PBA Tour, since most of them are very powerful they have to learn to tone down their game in order to match up to the conditions better. A lot of the most successful bowlers on tour obviously throw a strong ball, but they are far from what would be considered a power player.
My second observation comes on the topic of lane minipulation. At the school I visited, the guest speaker spoke at length about how to use teamwork to blow open a hole in the pattern in order to optimize scoring. This of course included using heavy sanded balls to create area so they could use a certain portion of the lane. Ya know, Brian Voss' fav tactic
Anyways, I was surprised since most philosophies seem to say that you should bowl what the lane gives you, thats what seperates the men from the boys. The ability to read and play what the lane gives you. This seems to oppose that philosophy, basically saying if the lanes don't play the way you like, fix'em.
Reading a lot of CJ's posts are insightful, and I wish more pro's were around to comment on this. Do you think that these philosophies contribte to a lot of what we see on the PBA tour, and second do you think they are beneficial or harmful in the long run, either to the bowlers or the tour? By harmful bowlerwise I mean in the sense of training people to become a powerplayer instead of optomizing their natural talent, whether power or stroker. By harmful tourwise, I mean in terms of the field being filled with lots of power players and teaching them to blow holes in lines to play the lanes, rather than playing whats out there and adjusting to it?
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D <~~~~ Used to be terrible wiffing 10 pins. Now through much practice, can wiff any single pin spare at any time.
Darrell Guzman
guzmand19 - Yahoo IM and MSN screen names
Edited on 12/10/2005 7:53 AM