Just some thoughts random thoughts here....
Bowling has never been a big money sport. The payouts have always paled in comparison to sports such as basketball, golf, football, etc. So to say that payouts are not much is not news. Even in bowling's heyday this wasn't a surprise.
The exemption was I think one of the best things to happen to the sport. What is does is prevent Joe Gomer bowler who thinks he may be hot stuff in league one night a week from competing on a level he doesn't belong in. It, to an extent, preserves the integrity of the game. Everybody in every city knows who the house bowlers are if you are in the loop. You know who the guys are who if you take them out of House A to House B, they can't do squat. They can feed their egos there but on the PBA, it's a whole different ball game.
Nothing in life that has any value is just given to you. These pros, make no mistake, chose to be on the PBA despite the payscale that it has. They dedicate themselves to the sport to be at the level they are at. They love this sport and there are people all over this darn globe that have a burning white passion for this sport. They keep coming despite the money. How do you explain all these young kids aspiring to be pros and making the shift from amatuer to professional?
The program shift was also genius. What the PBA is doing is giving this sport what it needs to grow. It is giving it a new face. The lights, the music, giving the players personalities so that the fans can relate. If the fans cannot see themselves in these pros, if they cannot relate on some level then the sport will fail. Basketball though suffering a tad now was made great by people being able to relate and associate to the greats like Jordan, Bird, Marovich, Jabar and the like. People who had a massive commitment to their profession. And their achievements are mere moments in time compared to the sacrifices they made for those moments. We didn't just see Bird and Jordan playing basketball, they had interviews on and off the court, we heard about them on and off season.
Before the program shift, I knew very little about a lot of pros. But tell one person who is either a pro or aspiring to be one that doesn't look at a champion winning a title and visualizes himself in that moment? That is one of the moments I (and I am sure I am not the only) ... so we play for and we dedicate ourselves for. Look at Tiger Woods. Why is he so popular? He's humanized. We can relate to him on some level and like him or not, he's made massive commitments and dedication to be where he is at. This sport will always have a following as long as the PBA keeps the standard of competition high and they let us see the players more than just on the lanes.
If exemptions, flashing lights, off stage interviews and odd ball tournaments are the way to keep it going, then so be it. Progress is progress. How many people initially balked at the baseball strike and interleague play and thought the sport was doomed? How many look at the salary cap issue and still believe it is doomed? Baseball keeps going. Football went through the same things. The sports will never be the same but they are still here. Bowling is the most popular participatory sport in the country. It isn't going anywhere and neither for that matter is the PBA.
Matthew P. Klein
Visionary Test Staff Member
http://www.visionarybowling.com