avabob,
I never took it as slam against Valenta.
Also, I respect your opinions and your knowledge of this game. You've accomplished much more than I have in the sport and I am sure you are trying to think about what is best for this sport. I think the issue is some of the thinking you are articulating, I feel, isn't correct. I think the Badger pattern accomplished exactly what it was supposed to. It required players to play a much more direct line to the pocket. If you saw, in the match against Kent, Valenta moved right and tighted up his line to try and save what oil was left, and still had a good look. His style, allowed him to move further left than the others and allowed him to open the pocket more and created some of the breaks he got. It was a shot that played into his physical game. I think the cream did rise to the top. You saw 3 former major winners, and two of the brightest young stars in our game with two very distinct styles as your top 5. Doesn't get much better than that.
I also disagree with your statement about crowning the most deserving player when you don't reoil. How can you crown the most deserving player in this format? Where the people bowling the 2nd, 3rd, 4th squads, their shots are determined by who played the lanes in front of them. Using Badger as an example, would it be fair for some people to follow the same draw and Valenta or Belmonte, where they would be playing so far left of center from game 1, while others may follow Bill O'Neill or Marshall Kent who would play a more direct line? Is it fair that someone like Valenta, Belmonte or Robert Smith can generate more revs than most players and can loft the left gutter so much better than a Marshall Kent when they both bowl on the 4th squad? Even if you did 4 days of qualifying so everybody bowls each squad once for the week. The only squad where the bowler really controls his own destiny, where the true cream of the crop rises to the top, is the first squad, because everyone is on an equal footing at that point.