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Author Topic: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years  (Read 19077 times)

bradl

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Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« on: August 13, 2013, 05:53:30 PM »

This one hits home for me. I've bowled at Kelley's Hilltop all throughout my YABA years as well as our Junior Traveling Classic league in the late 80s/early 90s. Scott Sedlak was not only just a good friend of mine, but also a classmate, and lived 3 blocks from me. So I got to know him and his parents very well. So to hear of this house closing after so long is, as he said, devastating.

But he does describe some of the issues we have with bowling nowadays.. And to see those hit home outside of a generation of people where bowling was the big thing really makes you want to take stock of the sport.

I hope the PBA, USBC, and BPAA are taking note of this. Outside of us bowlers, it is up to them to stem the tide. Either way, have a read.

http://www.omaha.com/article/20130810/NEWS/130819934/1685#kelly-i-m-devastated-kelley-s-co-owner-says-as-bowling-alley-to-fall-silent-after-57-years

Quote
Kelly: 'I'm devastated,' Kelley's co-owner says as bowling alley to fall silent after 57 years

By Michael Kelly / World-Herald columnist

To the co-owner of Kelley's Hilltop Lanes, the hard and high-pitched collision of bowling pins and ball is music.

“I could sleep to pins falling,” said Scott Sedlak. “To me, there's no greater sound than the noise that bowling pins make.”

Soon, the 57-year run of Kelley's Hilltop will end and the music will stop. The doors will close and it will be so quiet that — yes, you can hear a pin drop.

The last pin will drop on Aug. 24, which also will mark the end of a seven-decade, four-generation family business.

During World War II, Scott's great-grandparents, Vince and Hazel Kelley, bought the downtown Ak-Sar-Ben alleys and changed the name to Kelley's Bowlatorium.

In the postwar years, bowling became so popular that they added lanes — for a total of 40 on two floors of the old Kresge building at 16th and Harney Streets. The alley even had a TV show, “I Go Bowling.”

In 1956, Kelley's Hilltop opened at 48th Avenue and Hamilton Street, just up the hill from the two-year-old Rose Bowl. There were plenty of bowlers for both, and Omaha was a bowling capital — at one point with more alleys per capita than any other city.

“There used to be not enough lanes,” Sedlak said. “They had to turn people away.”

The Rose Bowl, for years the site of TV's “Strike It Lucky,” closed in 1991.

Kelley's Hilltop kept going another two-plus decades, but Scott and his mother, Rosalyn, have sold the building and the 180-stall parking lot to Waypoint Church. The price was just under $500,000.

“Mom is getting to be retirement age,” Scott said, “and the church really wanted the building. So we decided it was a good time to sell.”

As word has begun to spread, longtime patrons have expressed sorrow, some even teary-eyed. “It's really tough to see customers coming in crying.”

The Bowling Proprietors Association of America says bowling remains the nation's top participation sport. But like many others businesses, things have changed, and there are fewer bowling centers.

In bowling's heyday, weekly leagues dominated. Once making up 70 percent of revenues, league bowling dropped to 40 percent, according an industry study.

“People's attention spans have lessened,” Scott said. “They used to sign up for leagues for 33 weeks. It's hard to get them to commit to leagues long-term anymore unless they are really diehard bowlers.”

A dozen or so alleys remain in the Omaha area, down from 30 or more in the old days.

The Kelley family entered the business in the era of pin boys, when pins had to be manually picked up and reset. The invention of the automatic pinsetter helped lead to the national boom in bowling in the 1950s and '60s.

Bowling had been so much a part of postwar America that it was used as a metaphor in the title of a 2000 book about the decline of social intercourse and active engagement in civic life.

In “Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community,” author Robert Putnam asserted that the decrease in league bowling was an example of declining personal interaction and fewer civic discussions that otherwise occur when people regularly gather.

Most bowlers don't go to alleys to philosophize. Still, Scott Sedlak couldn't help being philosophical about the end of an era for his family.

“There's a lot of bowling history here,” he said. “We were the first center in Omaha to have underground ball returns.”

Starting in the 1980s, he said, “the entertainment dollar got thinned out, and there were a lot more options.”

One recent factor that hurt business, he said, was a ban on smoking in public places.

“We definitely took a hit from the smoking ban and never recovered,” he said. “A lot of bowlers smoke.”

An industry report in recent years said, though, that smoking bans have led to more women and youths bowling.

While blue-collar workers may have dominated the sport in the past, an increased percentage of bowlers today are said to hold white-collar jobs.

With more competition for people's time, bowling proprietors have had to be more creative, with such promotions as “glow in the dark nights” and “bumper rails” for children to keep balls out of gutters.

As with golf, equipment has changed over the years to make scoring easier. It's still very difficult to throw 12 straight strikes for a 300 game, but perfection isn't as rare as it was.

Scott said Kelley's Hilltop used to go years between 300 games. As at alleys elsewhere, when word spread that someone was close, other bowlers would stop and watch the last frames.

“The whole place would shut down and get quiet,” he said. “And if it happened, the place would erupt.”

Vince and Hazel Kelley, who founded the family business, had a daughter, also named Hazel, who married Stu Sedlak. They had a son in the business, David, who was Scott's father.

David Sedlak, also a bronze life master bridge player, died of a heart attack while jogging in 1994. He was 47.

Scott, 39, said he thinks of his dad as he and his mom prepare to close the family operation.

“I'm devastated,” he said. “This is the saddest I've been since my father died. The business was kind of a continuation of his life.”

BL.

 

JOE FALCO

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2013, 07:13:20 PM »
Thanks for the info!

It's a shame what's happening! I've been bowling a long time and have never giving a thought to stopping .. been through all the changes to bowling balls/conditions and even the constant increase in cost's .. never missed a Winter or Summer season in many years .. I think this AMF-BOWLMOR situation is just about getting to me. Don't ask me WHY cause I can't put my finger on it .. but I'm a little turned off!

Might hit one league this Winter outside of AMF ..
RIP Thongprincess/Sawbones!

Pinkiller35

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #2 on: August 14, 2013, 10:35:39 AM »
I bowled in this house from 8 years old until I was 22.  Through Jr. league, Classic League, and a few Adult leagues as well.  I have not been in that house for 20+ years. The area around it is not the greatest these days.  I knew Dave, Scott and Roz for many years.  It is too bad they are closing up shop.  With the Rose Bowl, Leisure Lanes, and Cougar Lanes all closing down in the past 15-20 years, bowling is not what most people want to do.  For example...I would love to have my son bowl in a league, but with baseball and basketball there really is no time for bowling.  Other than letting him bowl during fun week at the end of the season.

I am sad to see Kelley's Hilltop go.

bradl

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #3 on: August 14, 2013, 12:31:53 PM »
I bowled in this house from 8 years old until I was 22.  Through Jr. league, Classic League, and a few Adult leagues as well.  I have not been in that house for 20+ years. The area around it is not the greatest these days.  I knew Dave, Scott and Roz for many years.  It is too bad they are closing up shop.  With the Rose Bowl, Leisure Lanes, and Cougar Lanes all closing down in the past 15-20 years, bowling is not what most people want to do.  For example...I would love to have my son bowl in a league, but with baseball and basketball there really is no time for bowling.  Other than letting him bowl during fun week at the end of the season.

I am sad to see Kelley's Hilltop go.

Totally agree there.

My learn-to-bowl league was at Rose Bowl (What ever happened to the King Louie properties, anyway? I don't remember..). My mother's main league was there, as well as Ames Bowl, and I used to run around both of those alleys every week. But you bring up a major point which goes along to the decline that we are seeing today. Leisure Lanes to me was the closest to Rose Bowl that I had seen and I loved Linda Whitmarsh and her crew there.

I was shocked to hear that Cougar closed down. I would have thought that Papio Bowl or ICC would have closed down before Cougar. That pushed everyone over to Western Bowl (ugh) or out to Elkhorn. Now with that new, so-called 'bowling alley' opening up next to Oak View Mall.. it's places like that, that are just for open bowling and partying is also what is killing league bowling. That's for another thread, so I'll leave it there. :)

Back to my point. Most alleys are where they are located for the long haul. Someone sets up shop at a given location. At that time, the location is new, the neighbourhood is new, the clientele is new. But as we progress and progress progresses, city limits get pushed further out, and people move further out of the central part of the city. That's gets us blight around the older parts of town, especially if not kept up. no-one wants to be around that, so business suffers as it costs more to maintain where you are at. it isn't as if a bowling alley can just pull up shop and move to a new location.

So add in blight around a given alley and we're in a world of hurt.

BL.

LuckyLefty

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #4 on: August 14, 2013, 02:58:37 PM »
I believe many centers in rural America with AMF under Bowlmore's profit philosophy may not make it. 

But I hope I am wrong!

Regards,

Luckylefty
It takes Courage to have Faith, and Faith to have Courage.

James M. McCurley, New Orleans, Louisiana

Pinkiller35

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #5 on: August 14, 2013, 03:01:43 PM »
I can't believe I forgot about Ames Bowl!  Leisure used to run the JR. Eliminator on Sunday nights.  What a great time that was!  No chance I will ever go to that place by OakView.  I don't know if ICC is still operating.  I had a buddy still bowling there, but they left and went to Scorz.

bacon22

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #6 on: August 14, 2013, 03:08:55 PM »
Also Ranch Bowl and Broadway bowl across the river

bradl

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #7 on: August 14, 2013, 03:23:27 PM »
I believe many centers in rural America with AMF under Bowlmore's profit philosophy may not make it. 

But I hope I am wrong!

Regards,

Luckylefty

You may be right, and I agree in hoping that you're wrong.

I'm trying to think of how many AMF centers in Omaha are left. Growing up we had..

King Louie's Rose Bowl
Maplewood Lanes
Wildcat Lanes
Cougar Lanes
Leopard Lanes
Leisure Lanes
Western Bowl

Everything else was Brunswick or independent:

Kelley's Hilltop
Kelley's North Bowl
Ames Bowl
Gateway Lanes
Mockingbird Lanes
West Lanes
Ralston Bowl
Ranch Bowl
Chop's Bowl
ICC Bowlatorium (independent)
Valley View Lanes
Gretna Bowl
Peacekeeper Lanes (Offutt AFB)
Papio Bowl

Now? A fair number are gone.. Cougar, Leisure, Rose Bowl, Ranch, Ames, ICC, Gateway, Gretna, and now, Hilltop. Valley View (actually in Council Bluffs, IA) is now Thunderbowl, where the PBA has a tour stop, and I believe Ralston Bowl is now Scorz.

I don't know if West Lanes is still running, and I wouldn't be surprised if Kelley's North Bowl closes. But of those AMF houses, only Western, Wildcat, Leopard, and Maplewood are left. Next closest is Sun Valley in Lincoln, and I doubt that one will ever close, since Nebraska practices there.

I'm seriously hoping that Bowlmor's strategy doesn't kill off other centers. they are already struggling as is.

BL.

marvey23

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Re: Omaha Bowling Alley to shut down after 57 years
« Reply #8 on: August 14, 2013, 04:56:50 PM »
West lanes is still running and in fact just put in synthetics at the start of last fall season.