You know, it’s really funny, this “human perception†thing. Depending on whatever the “popular†belief is, the perception totally changes.
I remember when urethane first hit the market. People complained almost vehemently that they hooked way too much, and “ruined†the shot. Yet, many “weaker†players now had an option that let many of them now “keep up†with people who formerly had run over them.
More people found them beneficial than not, and they soon dominated the game. People even began to think of rubber and polyester balls as being troublesome, and little more than a spare ball.
Then, along came resin, and the process started all over again, and soon, the vaunted great urethane ball soon became the “ shot wrecking and oil smearing†spare ball with little, if any, value in the eyes of most bowlers.
NEWSFLASH!
The laws of physics never changed, and rubber, polyester, and urethane bowling balls still do what they always did. It was lane conditions, and people’s perceptions that changed.
I can average (or at least have for many years) over 200 on league conditions throwing nothing but urethane. A few years back, I actually bowled an entire summer league with a white dot, and finished at 204.
Granted, I choose to throw a resin ball, not because I have to, but mainly so I don’t get branded as “that†guy. You know, the one considered an ignorant, shot wrecking, neanderthalistic luddite that simply refuses to move into the modern era, and is so self absorbed that he ruins it for everybody else. THAT guy.
I really wish that people could understand that not everyone needs, or wants, a reactive resin ball. And, on most THS shots, you don’t have to be a mega-rev, double jointed, two handed wonderboy to use urethane.