Showing posts with label hambone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hambone. Show all posts

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Bowling Week in Review--May 2-May 8, 2010

~ On my Bowling Quote of the Day for May 3, I quoted renowned bowling coach Fred Borden on the importance of moving fast enough on the approach and through the armswing to generate sufficient ball speed to hit the pins with more energy and better carry. I think many of us are too slow and deliberate with our games, and this results in our throwing the ball too slowly to be as effective as we could be, or we mistakenly try to increase our ball speed by forcing it with our upper body.

I think I've tended to throw the ball too slowly over the years (click here to see a fairly recent video of me throwing the ball slowly, even though I did get a strike). So I mentioned that I've recently upped the tempo of my approach and armswing and have been pleased with the effortlessly extra speed and better carry it's created. I tried it out in league this week and got good results and even threw 22 strikes in a row in practice after league as I alternated lanes. That's encouraging. Now if I can also work with a coach to successfully increase my revs and alter my axis tilt and all that fancy stuff, it should dramatically improve my scoring on a variety of lane conditions.

~ When I was growing up, I kept seeing the name Elvin Mesger as the guy with the most sanctioned 300 games. He was THE 300 god to me back then. When you're a kid who loves to bowl, you really look up to records and to the people who set them. But I never knew what Mr. Mesger looked like until this week when I saw his photo on Dr. Jake's Bowling History Blog. Now I know. He looked like a serious bowler who could get the job done.

~ As you may know, the Women's U.S. Open is now taking place in Ft. Worth Texas and the finals will be televised live next Wednesday on ESPN2 at 9 PM EDT. It should come as no surprise that Kelly Kulick leads the tournament after the first 8-game round.

What may surprise if not shock you if you haven't been reading my blog or bowling news from somewhere or other is that the USBC recently announced that they won't be sponsoring the Women's Open in 2011 due to a budget shortage. That's right, they say they can't afford to give the women their due. So, unless another sponsor steps up to the plate, the Women's Open is on indefinite "hiatus." I don't know about you, but I think this is a travesty.

I agree with Bowlers Journal International writer Dick Evans that the BPAA (Bowling Proprietors Association of America) should do it if no one else will. They apparently did it before, and they could do it again if they really care about women's bowling in particular and bowling in general in the good ole USofA.

~ Did you read Mike J. Laneside's piece To Hambone or not to Hambone on PBA.com this week? When you read the comments there and elsewhere, you discover that some people are absolutely rabid haters of the "hambone" and of its originator, ESPN's bowling announcer Rob Stone. Here is what one particularly disgruntled guy named Dave said about the hambone and Rob Stone:
"If you use "HAMBONE", you should be fed a milkbone. Don't sink to the level of that no-nothing Stone. Also, don't drag bowling down into the sewer that he has taken it to during the regular season. I have never before been this uninterested in watching a telecast of the best in the world at a game that I have played for 44 years. Rob Stone is the biggest joke and disappointment in the history of the PBA. He should be thrown aside and forgotten after turning a great thing like the PBA into one of the biggest running jokes that we have in our bowling league. It used to be "Did you see Pete?" or "What a finish in the finals this week." Now it is "Did you hear what the moron said on Sunday?" Don't sink to his level. Put on the great show we deserve. Who knows, maybe you can be a permanant replacement. He would never be missed!"

Do you agree? Or do you think this is all "much ado about nothing"?

~ People continue to debate whether Chris Barnes is a great bowler. I think Thomas Scherrer does an excellent job of addressing the issue (don't be deterred by the "Adult Content Warning" page that comes up first when you click on the link) in his This is Bowling Philosophy blog. He systematically lays out 5 criteria for bowling greatness and opines that Barnes unequivocally meets one of them and is likely to meet some or all of the others before his career is over. I agree. How about you?

~ I quoted Mika Koivuniemi saying that he moved to the U.S.A. when he decided that, despite his many tournament victories, he wasn't winning enough money in Europe. However, the way things are going, it looks like the men and women from the USA will soon need to move to Europe, Asia, or the Middle East to earn even half way decent money from tournaments. Yet, if Mika came here because he wasn't earning enough in Europe, and, pretty soon, there won't be any more professional tournaments here for either men or women, will this spell the end of high-level professional bowling everywhere?

~ Back when bowling apparently got more respect than it does today, they even had heavyweight boxing champ Rocky Marciano plugging Ebonite ball fitting equipment. Could you imagine a boxing or any other sport's champ doing that today? If you asked them too, they'd probably laugh in your face. How sad!

~ One nice feature of Bowl.com is its live streaming coverage of the USBC Open in Reno, and one of the highlights of that coverage this week was its airing of Mike Lichstein bowling doubles with his dad Larry Lichstein, and Pete Couture bowling doubles with John Janawicz. They were all on the same pair, and Ricky Ward was bowling on the pair to their right. As I pointed out in my blogpost, Mike Lichstein has one of the most unusual styles I've ever seen. And what I didn't point out then but have discovered since then is that his style has changed since he bowled on TV during his younger years. Check out this video and this one (that also includes a very young Patrick Allen) from two of those early TV appearances. But what watching guys like Wayne Garber and Mike Lichstein tells ME is that you can move to the line in some of the strangest ways imaginable and still get the job done if you know what you're doing and can repeat shots.

~ When it was announced that Walter Ray Williams Jr. would be bowling his first PBA Senior event last week, everybody was saying he'd waltz right through the field to the championship. After all, he'd topped all the major statistical categories and won Player of the Year on the regular tour. How could he not dominate any Senior event he entered with competition that couldn't come anywhere close to his level on the regular tour?

Yet, it seemed to me that in a single elimination match play format on higher scoring conditions against guys who, though they may be 50+ years old can still bowl, even Walter Ray was no shoo-in for a title. And when he finished in 11th place going in to match play, it looked as though I might be right, and I began to tone down my expectations for him.

I needn't have bothered. He proceeded to dominate match play with a perfect 10-0 record and average over 260 on his way to his first Senior title in his first Senior event. Yes, he got a few breaks and his opponents might have fared better had they gotten more breaks or had better carry in crucial situations. Nevertheless, if you watched then or watch now on PBA Xtra Frame, you saw or will see Walter bowl great under what must have been tremendous pressure to meet the lofty expectations people had for him. The man is an absolute bowling marvel!

Now he's bowling a PBA Regional event in Canton, Georgia that will be carried by PBA Xtra Frame tomorrow (Sunday).

When I heard he was headed for the tournament in Georgia, I commented on PBA.com that he was like the Terminator headed to another destination to "decimate" his enemies. Someone else asked if NORAD was tracking him. He DOES seem kind of like an unstoppable force right now. You know he's coming, but you can't do anything about it if you're his competition. Can he win "simultaneous Player of the Year" honors?

~ If, like me, you're impressed enough with the two-handed bowling style to try it yourself or, at least, to help others learn it, Joe Slowinski, the "Mr. Spock" of bowling coaches, has an article that dissects the style with patented Slowinskian meticulousness. Enjoy.

And that's all for this week's Bowling Week in Review. The next installment should appear next Saturday. Take care, and great bowling.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Bowling Bytes--5/4/10

~ The 11th Frame: Could it be the last U.S. Women's Open? -- "It has to be a gloomy setting for the U.S. Women's Open, which starts Friday at Cityview Lanes in Fort Worth, Texas. Looming over the event is the cancellation of the 2011 U.S. Women's Open, which was announced last week by the financially strapped United States Bowling Congress. The big question is whether a sponsor can be found to rescue the event for future years, and perhaps even 2011. The event's demise also could make for an especially competitive tournament, as the world's top women bowlers vie to win the possible final U.S. Women's Open..."

~ Mike J. Laneside: To Hambone or not to Hambone -- "It is Shakespearean comedy or tragedy of epic proportion depending on your interpretation of ESPN play-by-play broadcaster Rob Stone’s catchphrase for throwing four strikes in-a-row. Whether it is actually really fun or disturbing the sanctity of bowling, the great fans of the Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour regularly gather at television finals shows with their signs either celebrating or cursing The Hambone. As You Like It...Do you disappoint the fans who celebrate four strikes with cries of pork’s tastiest cut? Or do you satisfy Troilus and Cressida, or Troy and Cassie for that matter with a stout “four-bagger” even though that is really an old baseball term applied to the lanes? What’s a humble sportscaster to do as I ponder this conundrum for a Twelfth Night?..."

~ Keith Sharp Leads After First Round in Senior Miller High Life Classic -- "Keith Sharp of Orlando, Fla., averaged 247.7 to lead after the first round Monday in the PBA Senior Miller High Life Classic at George Pappas Victory Lanes in Mooresville, N.C. Sharp had games of 247, 239, 266, 255, 258, 258, 256 and 203 for a 1,982 pinfall total to hold a 57-pin lead over Dave Flemming of Fairborn, Ohio in second...Reigning PBA Player of the Year Walter Ray Williams Jr., making his Senior Tour debut, finished the round in 11th with a 1,861 pinfall (232.6 average)..."

~ 2010 USBC Hall of Fame Profiles: Kim Terrell-Kearney -- "If Kim Terrell-Kearney’s leap from a teenager whose interest in bowling “faded through high school” to the USBC Hall of Fame seems implausible to you, don’t worry — it seems just as implausible to Kim Terrell-Kearney...Since her days as that young college star who was just trying to make sense of things, Terrell-Kearney’s dreams have compiled the itinerary of a traveling diplomat, from her San Francisco youth to the head coaching position at Delaware State University and, most recently, to the International Bowling Campus in Arlington, Texas, where she works with Team USA Head Coach Rod Ross..."

~ John Jowdy elected newest member of Bowling Coaches Hall of Fame -- "Longtime bowling coach, writer and industry advocate John Jowdy (pictured left) has been selected as the 2010 inductee into the Bowling Coaches Hall of Fame in recognition of his superior coaching contributions to the sport...John Jowdy began his coaching career instructing and training youth bowlers in San Antonio in the 1940's and 50's, and since the late 60's has coached over 100 professional men and women bowlers...As a writer, Jowdy's columns appear in dozens of bowling newspapers and magazines as well as on Bowlingdigital.com and he is the author of two books on the sport, Bowling Execution and Bowling Execution, Second Edition..."

~ The 11th Frame: Hooray! Jowdy elected to Bowling Coaches Hall of Fame -- "It's quite possible that John Jowdy has impacted the careers of more top bowlers than any coach in history. In his long career with Columbia 300, Jowdy traveled the PBA Tour and provided coaching to hundreds of pro bowlers, from great stars like Marshall Holman to lowly journeymen like myself...Jowdy was best known for his emphasis on not "hitting up" on the ball at release -- eliminating lift, which had long been a fundamental of bowling. The advent of exotic bowling ball technology made hitting up a negative and Jowdy would tell students to release the ball like a jet landing on a runway..."

~ Dennis Eklund ends Super Six title drought in Orgryte International 2010 -- "In a title match between two members of the Swedish national team, Dennis Eklund defeated Martin Larsen, 202-195, to win the Örgryte International 2010, the third stop of the Swedish Super Six Tour 2010..."

~ Chris Barnes--The 40-Year-Old "Version" -- "One of these days, people will truly see themselves laughing at what they say or feel in regard to Chris Barnes when his career accomplishments and active participation as a professional bowler comes to its nadir..."

~ Chapter 5: The Information Age -- "...I like big data sets. I like searching for patterns and trying to explain them. I think data analysis is probably one of my greatest skills if not my greatest. I see the potential for study and analysis in many mundane things. I'm not sure exactly when I saw the potential to study bowling, but it was around the beginning of December 2008 that I started doing so..."

~ Any early swing can bring early elimination: Without synchronized timing of your arm and leg, it'll be tough to hit the ideal release point (John Jowdy: The Pro Level: Bowling This Month, May 2010, pgs. 52-54) -- "A free armswing is one of the greatest assets for a solid fundamental game...Nonetheless, free armswings can sometimes contribute to sub-par execution..."