My specs:
Left handed, ball speed around 16 MPH, rev rate around 300 RPM, axis rotation of around 60 degrees, and axis tilt around 30 degrees.
So you’ve read or heard about the “Rico†drilling. You’ve wanted to give it a try but weren’t sure which ball to try it with. My friends, your search is over. I had read that the Rico drilling worked well with lower RG symmetricals, and that it would cause the ball to roll earlier. I wasn’t sure how much earlier, so I knew I needed a ball with a very versatile cover so I could tweak it as needed. Being a Visionary lover, the FMG was the obvious choice. Based on previous experience I knew what a monster the ball is in box finish, so I took it from there (400 matte) up to a 1,000 grit wet sand finish before I even drilled it. I headed to the nearest lanes to give it a try.
This particular house, for me, has a tendency to make the ball push pretty long through the midlane and can overreact off the dry. All in all, something that should be tailor made for a Rico drilling. To make a long story short, I would judge this ball / layout combination to be a success. I consider 290 out of the box to be successful. The ball was amazing. Nothing eye-popping as far as a back end reaction went, but I could play pretty much straight down the edge of the oil and it blended the oil / dry marvelously. The next two games (220 and 250) I tried to spray the ball around a bit, to get a feel for its range and what it would do. I could miss to the outside and have the ball recover, but not boomerang. I could miss to the inside and it might leave a single pin, but not “dart and dive†and leave those designer spares. I couldn’t throw it too much away from the pocket, because with my amount of hand the even arcing back end the Rico drilling gives it simply wouldn’t let it recover enough to carry the corners. But as long as I went fairly direct (up to about a five board swing), the ball couldn’t miss.
I know that this ball has been around for a while (forever, the way most ball companies change their lineups), but it still has one of the most versatile covers you’ll find, excellent dynamics, and super hit and carry. Bowlers shouldn’t overlook this beauty just because it wasn’t introduced last week. It can still more than hold its own with anything out there.