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For all people that have a love and knowing for bowling.
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Saturday, November 10, 2012
Bowling Philosophy-November 2012
"R
eason t
o Believe"
How the PBA Tour and Wo
rld Series of Bowling has gotten the most im
portant season in the sport's history off and running in the right direction.
By Thomas Scherrer-November 1
0th, 2012
Every season of bowling comes and goes with h
eig
htene
d
anticipation, whether it be a local leag
u
e or tournament
,
college bowling season, o
r elite bowling tour events. There is so much to learn and so much to expe
riment with from the
warm summer months. Did you purchase new equipment? Perhaps work on a new h
and position? Grip pressu
re? The basics, of course. Then there is the PBA Tour and its "Super
Sized
"
season, and no, I wasn't referring to Dale T
raber's wa
istline. That woul
d be in reference to basically run more events
-both national and international-to try and gather worldwi
de exposure, with the intention of trying to accomp
lish a very stated goal: try, try,
try
to
firmly establish a new generation of
bowlers to the audience. This sport has been for
ced into adaptation on num
erous occasion
s over the past few seasons, if only to s
tay relevant, but to ultimately assure the future of th
e spo
rt in some way, shap
e, or form. May it be having more inter
natio
nal bowling events, a possible WSO
B event outside the U.
S., o
r to possibly engage the PBA To
ur in
to a league.
One week into the Ship Window (what the PBA logo on F
ace
book looks like), the PBA got off to a
very impressive start.
Wo
rl
d Series of Striking (and occasional sparing)
For some reason, the WSOB somewhat modeled your local Thursday night men
's league in
terms of
raw numbers. Again, the
se
are
the best bow
lers in the world, so guys putting up numbers shoul
dn
't be a surprise to the most jaded of skeptics. In any event, one question begs: were the numbers
too high?!?
Consider these facts: of the 16 TV finalis
ts for the 4 name
d
An
imal patterns, the
lowest
average to make the shows w
as
Tom Daugherty's 232.93 average i
n the Bowler
s' Journa
l PBA S
corpion Championship. Think about that for a
moment: Daugherty had to shoot just under
a 700 series
per 3 game block to barely make one telecast. And thankfully, Daugherty did not have to include his TOC
television score at any point.
Wolfe Score
The honors go to Mike Wolfe for his performance in the Alka Seltzer Plus Cold Ch
eetah Championship. In a tournament free on heartburn in terms of generating a ball reaction, Wolfe led the
"Ch
eat" with a blistering 253.57 ave
rage
over 14 games. Fairly impressive, no? Wolfe was 51 pins better than Dearborn
, Michigan native Jeff Roche. The
difference between Roche and Wes Malott, who finished 6th? Just 54 pins. Over the course
of just 14 games, the distance Wolfe gained in relation to the rest of the field was staggering
, when you consider the scoring enviro
nment (very high), and the
shortness of the format
, and the ever fearing risk-reward nature the Cheetah pattern provides. One shak
y game or one loose shot could have separated some from not just a television show, but even ca
shing. Of the 30 best individual averages during the 4 Animal
events, all 16 finalis
ts fro
m the Ch
eetah Champio
nsh
ip
made the list
, with Brett Spangler coming in
with the 24th best average at 236.29.
Ha
d Spangler dupli
cated that per
formance on the Scorpion Championship, he would have led the event
by 13 pins over Osku Palermaa.
Oh, no...he's going to Z-Score you, huh?
Wha....me? Why would I ever do such a thing to
you? The answer: to prove a point. While averages are sexy, they do not tell the
story of how great the p
erforman
ces were. Z-
Score does. We already established the high scoring of the Cheetah
Championsh
ip
; the Chameleon Championship also had its share of b
ig numbers as well. For example, here are the 10 highest individual averages from this past week (excluding the PBA World Champion
ship):
Mike Wolfe
Cheetah 253.57
Jeff Roche
Cheetah 249.93
Chris Loschetter Cheetah 248.43
Bill O'N
eill Cheetah 248.36
Jason Belmonte Chameleon 247.29
Lennie Boresch
Jr.
Cheetah 246.36
Wes Malott Cheetah 246.07
Walter Ray Williams Jr. Chameleon 245.21
PJ Haggerty
Cheetah 2
43.43
Scott Norton
Chameleon 242.79
Now, here are the Z-Scores
of each bowler, with the ranking in parenthesis:
Wolfe 2.13 (1)
Roche 1.38
(5)
Los
che
tter 1.07 (1
0)
O'
Neill 1.0
5 (11)
Belmonte 1.75 (2)
Boresch Jr. .64 (22)
Malott .58 (25)
Williams Jr. 1.52 (4)
Haggerty .04 (T30)
Norton 1.25 (9)
First, we notice th
at 6 of the top 10 are from the Cheetah and C
hameleon,
with O'Neill just outsi
de the top 10 in elev
enth
place. We also notice
that yes, Wolfe's performance
was an impressive
and
dominant performance
both in terms of raw
numbers and my hippie-wearing, bra-burning, Colorado-pot smoking numbers
(I'm only kidding about
the pot smoking). But as for the rest of the bowlers outside the top 11, Boresch
, Malott, an
d Haggerty fa
il to match up to
be even close. That leaves us
1
1 players who
bowle
d better
between
O'Neill
and Boresch
. We are also missing the
#3, 6, 7, a
nd 8
top Z-Scores...and th
ese gentlem
en were:
Brad Angelo (Viper) 1.57
Sean Rash
(Viper) 1.37
Osk
u
Palermaa (Scorpion
) 1.34
Belmonte (Scorpion) 1.31
The
Scorpion Championship a
lso had
double
the amount of bowlers that fell into the top 15 Z-Scores (6), than the other 3 patterns
(3 each), making it argu
abl
y the most competitive tournament of the
4, which would make sense considering the field
average of the Scorpion
Championship for the 16 finalists was the lowest at 228.3
9. The point is, as I've alluded to...averages
are not the end-all
to bowling.
PB
3-The Original Pr
ototype
If there is a sentim
ental favorite going int
o the televised finals of the PBA World Championship, on
e would be hard pressed not to be rooting for Parker Bohn III. Bohn, a native of Ja
ckson, New Jersey did not make it to the WSOB practice ses
sion not by way of absent-mindedness
or promotional event
s, or simple apathy...he was living up to being bowling's greatest
modern day ambassador. With the damages sustained in New Jersey during Super
S
torm Sandy, Bohn stayed an extra day to help
frien
ds and neighbors
recover from the horrifying effects of the sto
rm, as first reported by Bill Vint on pba.com
. Bohn
then proce
eded to bowl just well enough to make the 24th and final match pla
y position
, and then lost a tournament tyi
ng low 8 games to
find himself in the 5th and final position for the stepladder.
At 49, Bohn is sitti
ng on the final few legs of an historic career
, one for which he has accomplished everything. Two Player of the Year awards, 30+
titles, 300 game on TV,
4 J
apan Cup titles, 4 Steve Nagy Sport
smanship awards, and countless stories of Bohn being an ambassador, leader, and model citizen. The one m
ajor outlier to h
is resume
is jus
t that: majors, as in he has only one (2001 ABC Masters). If you could poke a
hole in Bohn's legacy, it would be just that. For all of Bohn'
s 32 wins, he has been small when the stakes have been the highest on national soil. If
Bohn were to win, he'd have that elus
ive 2nd major, as well as be
the 15th bowler to come from 24th pla
ce in match play to a tit
le, amid the struggle millions in the tri-state area are enduring due
the dual s
torms of Sandy and Athena. Would there be a more emotional and satisfying victory in re
cent bowling memory? I dare you to come up with a better one.
Draft-y
If you were lucky enough to view the inaugural PBA Draft on Friday, it was quite a site to see. For the first time, the PBA is going back to the future by establishing 8, 6 person teams (we thank Mike Fagan for drafting Kelly Kulick
k
as his supplemental pick, otherwise we would have had to
check everyone's heart medication, except Pete Weber-we'll get to that) and having them c
wisehad toompete in team competitions still to be determined at Detriot's famed Thunderbowl in January. Norm Duke got the 1st selection and sort of surprised everyone with selecting Rhino Page. Sort of surprising
ssurprising
in that taking a lefty in Page with the first pick, but not an illogical pick for Duke-after all, Page might be the only player on tour Duke can literally talk to eye-to-eye, but I digress
o-eyea
. Page, as we all remember led Kansas to the 2006 IBC Championships and is arguably the best left hander in the Ship Window. In fact, most teams decided having a lefty around was not a terrible idea (well, except Chris Barnes-I know, you're shocked by this is eis revelation and Fagan, but he chose Kulick so he's off the hook, sorta).
One of those left handers was Scott Norton, chosen by Pete Weber with 2nd pick. In the process, Weber made history in this decision. Norton, an open homosexual, has officially/unun-officially
ial
become the first openly gay member of a team sport that I can think of in American professional sports. Yes, the PBA is not entirely a league entity, but the point remains that professional bowling made a bit of
of
history Friday. Fitting that the son of a Hall of Fame dad would draft the son of a Hall of Fame
e
mom, in a landmark moment. Should it be such an issue? No, it shouldn't be. We should clearly look beyond the scope of sexual orientation as to how it pertains to athletic performance by now, but there are still plenty of close-minded people in our society that do not think that this is acceptable
acceptable
. I tell them to go read someone else's blog then. As for everyone else, thank you for your continued support in allowing me to offer intelligent and insightful conversation into the world of bowling. We are hopefully in for one of the more memorable seasons in PBA history. We all need a reason to believe.
For those with a love and knowledge for the Sport of Bowling...this IS Bowling Philosophy. Namast
e.
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