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Author Topic: VICTORY ROAD review by Storm Staffer Jeff Richgels  (Read 7602 times)

riggs

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VICTORY ROAD review by Storm Staffer Jeff Richgels
« on: January 21, 2011, 09:41:10 AM »

Here is the data on the VICTORY ROAD from Storm:



http://stormbowling.com/products/balls/victoryroad



The VICTORY ROAD features the popular and highly successful R2S pearl coverstock – used in balls like the T-ROAD PEARL – over the re-engineered Fe3 weight block, which is the HY-ROAD core inverted. Storm says it was "looking for a versatile piece with a strong motion down lane." The box finish is 1500-grit polish.



The HY-ROAD was a ball that frustrated the heck out of me. When it worked, it was a world beater, such as in the minor events at the 2009 USBC Open Championships where I averaged 245 the last 5 games. But I lost track of how many times it got nothing but 9-counts for me – solid 9, ring 10, etc. Meanwhile, everyone I knew using it seemingly was striking all the time. I drilled three HY-ROADs and tricked up the surface.



I e-mailed Storm tour rep Chris Schlemer for suggestions on drilling my VICTORY ROAD with an eye to something that went long and made a strong move without being "squirty."



Per Schlem's advice, my VICTORY ROAD has the pin about 2 inches above my bridge, with the CG kicked right of my ring finger and a weight hole 4 1/2 inches on a line from my grip center through my CG. The idea is a ball that controls the midlane and makes a strong move on the back-end. He said that is a common drilling on Tour for control.



I ended up with a pin to PAP distance of 5 1/4 inches. The unmarked "mass bias" (it's a symmetrical ball) to PAP is 2 1/2 inches. The pin buffer is 3 3/8  inches.   



A picture of my VICTORY ROAD is in my blog here.



http://host.madison.com/sports/recreation/bowling/article_bf33dff0-1ffe-11e0-b5a4-001cc4c002e0.html



I've used the VICTORY ROAD in our Sport league on the PBA Earl Anthony pattern at a center with very hooking synthetics; in a singles tournament on the 2010 USBC Open Championships pattern at the same center; and in our City Tournament team event on the USBC White 1 pattern at a center with middling synthetics.  



So far, all I have to say about the VICTORY ROAD is OH MY! It does exactly what Schlem said it would do and then some – it gets to the break point consistently and makes an amazingly hard turn. It definitely needs some oil to get to the breakpoint but the reaction is consistent and strong – not crazy flippy.



I used it the most on the light oil (17 mls, 39 feet) USBC White 1 pattern and found myself moving too slowly and not enough, afraid that the VICTORY ROAD would skid too much in the oil as we turned that pattern into a tricky wet-dry condition. The VICTORY ROAD never once 2-10'd where my REIGN would do that. And it got to the spot a lot cleaner than my REIGN SUPREME, which is hybrid R2S and needs more oil for a clean skid than the VICTORY ROAD.



If you're looking for that ball to stand inside on a broken down pattern and send to the right knowing it will turn the corner and return, the VICTORY ROAD is your ball.



It is amazingly strong – much more than the T-ROAD PEARL and somewhat more than the REIGN – and predictable – more so than the HY-ROAD. Plus it is cleaner to the spot than either the REIGN SUPREME or HY-ROAD.



It reminds me of a stronger RAPID FIRE PEARL.



The No. 1 source for bowling news, analysis and opinion is my blog, The 11th Frame, which is here:
http://host.madison.com/sports/recreation/bowling/

 
Edited by riggs on 1/22/2011 at 3:59 AM

 

Trudell

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Re: VICTORY ROAD review by Storm Staffer Jeff Richgels
« Reply #16 on: February 04, 2011, 05:38:18 AM »

 
riggs wrote on 2/3/2011 7:15 AM:
VICTORY ROAD definitely is not ideal for fresh unless volume is low. So a HY-ROAD or MARVEL would be a better choice.


The No. 1 source for bowling news, analysis and opinion is my blog, The 11th Frame, which is here:
http://host.madison.com/sports/recreation/bowling/
  I haven't drilled mine yet, so I was wondering why you don't see it readable on the fresh?  Does it just squirt to much and not recover?  Or is it extremely sideways off the friction and hard to control?  Do you need to get the ball to burn a bit in the mid part of the lane?

Billy Trudell
Storm PBA regional staff
Drilling Tech Next Level Proshop

riggs

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Re: VICTORY ROAD review by Storm Staffer Jeff Richgels
« Reply #17 on: February 04, 2011, 06:31:11 AM »
Yes and yes and yes.

 

If you really wanna do a VR then you are gonna have to rough the cover to some level for fresh or it is gonna be wacky off the end of the pattern.


The No. 1 source for bowling news, analysis and opinion is my blog, The 11th Frame, which is here:
http://host.madison.com/sports/recreation/bowling/