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This is Bowling Philosophy
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Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Bowling Philosophy-April 2013
This Is 50...
A Perfect "Ten"
Pete Weber's Drive to Greatness
By Thomas Scherrer
Imagine yourself with Doc Brown's DeLorean in 2013 with the ability to travel back in time to talk to one person at their point of professional rock bottom. Most would point to President Nixon in 1973 after Watergate or President Clinton after Sexgate or Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson after "Tooth Fairy" or Skip Bayless talking to Richard Sherman. The point is: everyone has doubt and fear creep into their psyche. It is the most inevitable disease a man or woman can have. Nothing can stop its onset or determine its cause, nor can anyone diagnose its nature or determine its cure...once it is there, it stays there. Sometimes, it looms larger over what made you great. Other times, you would hardly know it exists. It is like nothing ever happened to you. You are free of fear and doubt, but instead overcome by confidence and assurance. Every decision, every move is made with conviction and purpose. All acts are definitive and assertive. The results might not work, but the process has been trusted and with that comes a sense of pride and understanding that you did what you had to do and you believed in it. There was no regression and no reverting. There is clarity, purpose, and trust.
Back to the DeLorean...I'm a bowling fan as you all know by now, so why not use it to go back to 1995 and visit Pete Weber. Why? Let's look at these stats and you'll understand:
Events: 17
Cashes: 7
Match Play: 2
TV Finals: 0
Wins: 0
Earnings: $27,585
For all seasons in which Weber bowled at least 20 events, it was by far his worst in almost every category with the exception of money, which came in 1980-only his Rookie of the Year season. It was the rarest of sights: how could a player of such talent-a rare blend of power and finesse, in game management, and overall swagger-suddenly lose it, just as he was entering his prime? Had the game gotten away from him? Was being the son of a larger-than-life father just too much? Were the failed relationships hurting his ability to perform? Was it the late nights of partying and perhaps drugs/alcohol taking its toll on an already undersized body? Was it the exquisite mullet haircut perhaps presenting too much image over results? Go back and read those last 6 sentences again and you'll ask yourself one question: why did I start writing about Andre Agassi all of a sudden???
No two athletes in the last 25 years shared so much promise, lost so much so fast, then recovered to become top stars, then superstars, then surefire legends of their game in such a short period of time, you wonder if it wasn't all part of an elaborate plan to remind those who had less natural talent than Agassi and Weber to never waste it. After all, it looked as if for all the world that both Agassi and Weber were destined to never live up to what they might have been despite what they already had accomplished. Agassi was arguably the cleanest the striker of a tennis ball and
unquestionably
the greatest returner in the game's history. Weber arguably has the cleanest release in all of bowling and
unquestionably
has had the greatest ball roll in the game's history. After all, how does one generate so much axis tilt without grabbing it? Doug Kent tried and became a Hall of Famer, but always fought his timing in the process. Jeff Carter tried it (along with Weber's golf glove) to the tune of just one title-ironically over Weber. Many have tried to fire all 5 fingers open like that without grabbing it and they never can. You can teach a lot of things in bowling: hand positions, grip pressure, lane play, spare shooting, and so on. You know what you
cannot
teach? Pete Weber. He is as unique a prototype as you'll ever see in bowling. We'll see a thousand more Jason Belmontes before we'll see another Weber duplicate. It's a virtual improbability.
Which leads us to Sunday afternoon. Fittingly, it was April Fool's Day. A day in which people can say or do anything with enough validity to make it feel like its the truth before you are "catfished" by enough people. And standing on top of the Barbasol Tournament of Champions after 48 games of bowling? A man who is 50. Yes,
fifty.
In a generation where speed and revs dominate the sport, someone who once had the revs to be a power player was now relegated to a power stroker or even a power tweener. This is a joke, right? He didn't belong. In fact, none of the old guard do anymore. Yet, Norm Duke finished 12th; Walter Ray Williams Jr. finished 16th; Kent had a top 20 finish. But Pete Weber led them all after 48 games. He needed one more win Sunday afternoon to claim a historic win on so many levels. But Sean Rash and Belmonte had other ideas. You see, they tried to blow up the pattern so far to the left that they probably said in their own heads
whoever wins our match will win the tournament. There's no way Weber can get this deep anymore and loft it at this age
. And they were right. Weber could not loft the left gutter...didn't need to. Instead, Pete Weber decided to use his talent one more time to slay his 10th major championship. One that now ties him with Earl Anthony and...oh, wait-that's it! Weber became the only man to win all 3 PBA Triple Crown events
twice
in a career and set his own record of 9 Triple Crown wins as well. He also became the oldest TOC winner in history and yes, did I mention this was his 10th major win?
That last one matters the most. Now, history shows that Weber and the unmistakable legend Earl Anthony both have 10 majors. Yes, I mentioned it again because it needed to be mentioned again. It is very likely that Weber has possibly exceeded any expectations about his career in the past 12 months by winning his record 5th US Open and 2nd TOC to get to #10 while doing it when at his age, bowlers get ready to be called "rookies" on the senior tour. He even said during the show that he will keep bowling 'til he passes, just like his father, Dick Weber, used to. In winning #10, he has finally separated himself from Walter Ray and Duke as this generation's greatest big game performer. He now stands 3 wins shy of joining Williams and Anthony as 40+ time champions, and can consider himself a viable Player of the Year candidate. After all, #11 might be coming up at his favorite stomping grounds: Bowling's US Open. Suddenly, we might have to rewrite what we think about PBA history and what Weber has done to place it in this proper perspective. Chances are people won't rank him higher than Williams (has never beaten him for a title in their legendary careers) and slightly higher than Duke and Mike Aulby based off of majors alone.
But what if #11 comes? Do we weigh the historical significance of majors over regular victories at long last and say Pete Weber is the greatest bowler of all time? We honestly should have been doing this years ago but we got wrapped up in the dopey Walter Ray vs. Earl conversation when it was not really an argument as to who was greater. Pete Weber has given everybody something else to look forward to: does he have one more major moment in him to get #11? Hop in the DeLorean.
So...what would 2013 Me tell 1995 Pete Weber about 2013 Pete Weber? I'd tell him that you might be at rock bottom right now, but don't give up the gift. The struggles in 1995 are going to be worth it nearly two decades later, just you wait. What would 1995 Pete Weber told me to do? He'd probably tell me to crawl up my own ass and I'd laugh at it. Truth be told, there is pretty much nothing I could tell '95 Weber that he already did not know about himself. He just needed to hide the fear and doubt. It will always be there. It never dies. And that is why Pete Weber has become one of the two greatest big game bowlers ever. Fear and doubt won a few rounds, but Pete Weber won the fight...at long last.
For those with a love and knowledge for the Sport of Bowling...this IS Bowling Philosophy. Namaste.
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