I do understand that the environment in each house is different. I cannot change that, but there must be at least a little risk. The lanes would be taped and submitted before each block of play so that the application of oil is equal and no wood centres would be permitted as natural track areas would make them more easily playable.
Besides, it is your home centre, you should know what kind of hits carry, what the surface is like and everybody should feel that "home field advantage". I also assume that bowlers have more than one centre within driving distance so they can choose the one with the better surface or carry.
As for cheaters, everybody on the pair would have to sign the scoresheet along with the proprietor and squad director.
I would predict the cutline to the top 256 would be around +300 for the 15 games. I would predict that the majority of the touring pros would make it to that top 256. As for entries, just think of how many bowlers in the United States (and Canada) believe that they can or have averaged 220 for an event. And for those that cannot but would like to bowl we could post all of the scores online so people could compare themselves versus North America or even the world for that matter.
This would also provide reason for bowlers to practice and want to bowl on PBA shots. How do you stack up against Walter Ray and Chris Barnes? Here is a way to do it for $300 and a couple weekends. The cost of flying to, lodging, eating and participating in a PBA major or the USBCs is closer to $2000.
The last question was why would the prize fund be massive? I would point to the sheer number of entries.
According to PBA.com there are 4,250 members in the PBA
Over 12,000 teams of 5 have entered the USBC's this year.
There are also 2.6 million sanctioned league bowlers in the United States.
Say if we were to charge $300 per 15 game qualifier.
$200 going towards the nationals, $50 for lineage and $50 for prize fund within your home centre for prize fund there would be a lot of money out there.
Suppose the tournament were to get 10,000 entries. That is 1/2500 bowlers or 200 bowlers per state. That would suggest that there would be $2 million in revenue...
We must then factor in administrative costs, production for the TV, advertising and promoting, and then speculate that the prize fund going directly to those top 256 bowlers at nationals was about $1 million.
Lets break down the prize fund shall we?
Those who don't make the top 32 get $1500. This should cover the weekend expenses for any bowler that makes it to nationals.
17-32 get $5000
9-16 get $10,000
5-8 $20,000. Its like winning a PBA tour event.
3rd and 4th $40,000. Get to the dance and make a year's salary.
Second Place $100,000.
First place gets $250,000. Possibly the richest prize in bowling history.
that would pay out $1.006 million
I never mentioned the patterns used at the finals.
Round of 256 - 40' 4-1. Its the fairest way to go.
Round of 32, Round of 16, Round of 8 - randomly drawn PBA experience patterns
TV finals on House. Make it a scorefest and make it exciting. This is big bucks, the final 4 came from leagues from all over and have grinded all week. Lets put on a show for the people.
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Brandon Riley
Edited on 4/3/2008 7:25 PM