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Author Topic: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on  (Read 19228 times)

txbowler

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200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« on: March 14, 2013, 10:35:36 AM »
I wonder why today's bowlers seem to be stuck on what I fell is the old standard of 200 equals an elite bowler?

And maybe we are still in the transition period of generations of bowlers where the older bowlers were still young when 200 was the realistic standard back in the 60's-80's. 

Or are they basing off the stupid PBA card requirement?

Let's be honest, on today's house conditions, elite is at least 215 in my opinion.

And I understand that it means we no longer can compare generations of bowlers.

But think about it, if you were old enough today to be involved with bowling in the 70's and 80's and you met a bowler, and asked him what he averaged, and he said 205, you'd think he was pretty darned good.

Meet a bowler today, ask him what he averages, and he says 205, I don't know about everyone else, but I think oh, average house hack.

The standard has evolved.  Doubt it will ever go back.  Adapt to to 215 not 200 and move on.

 

Gizmo823

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #46 on: March 18, 2013, 03:36:46 PM »
You are officially my hero.  For weeks these threads have been going on about "anyone can just walk in, drill a ball, and average 230 without knowing what they're doing".  It's amazing to me that I think you're the first to point out the truth of the situation.

I think you guys have become jaded. 220 and above average is elite for sure. I don't care if itis THS or Sport. I bowl in Metro Detroit and have attached some stats. Only 13.33% of sanctioned male bowlers averaged over 210. Only 3.8% averaged over 220.

Stats are not kept on 230+ averages but I guarantee that itnis less than 2%. I would consider being in the top 5-10-15 percent of bowlers elite. Unfortunately most of us are avid bowlers who look at the game as a sport and competition and bowl in higher end leagues and it strips us of our objectivitity on this issue. But numbers never lie.

I am 225-240 anywhere I go. Never won any titles anywhere but I don't bowl many tournaments. Sometimes it shows. But....I know I can compete with anyone on those shots too as I average 208 out at Nationals and am the only perso  I know who has an award score out there. (And I bowl with many staffers and regional players) I do well at States every year, I have won sweepers on PBA patterns, and I have stunk it up at times on every possible shot any of us have seen.

But 220 is still a phenomenal bowler. 200 is still decent and has potential. It is all about your perspective. But again....the numbers show us that we tend not to look at ALL bowlers when making our judgements.

http://mdusbc.com/Yearbooks/Yearbook_2012/stats_league.html

I don't know when anyone ever said that . . it's just that it's easier to make a comparison based on the easiest difference to identify, which happens to be at the high end of the spectrum.  There have always been 180 average bowlers, so what contrast do we see by talking about them?  It's basically saying that everyone as a whole is "better" than they should be.  There are people averaging 230 that should be averaging 210, and people averaging 210 that should be averaging 190, and "accomplishments" as a whole are too easy to get based on your skill level.  There are bowlers today who have more honor scores in a year than people of similar talent 40 years ago had in an entire career. 

So explain why some THS 230 average bowlers can average 210 on tougher shots and some fall to 170?  Which bowler is better?  Saying something is too easy doesn't mean it's actually easy by any stretch, it's just saying that it's not hard enough for what you're gaining.  It's like a greeter at Walmart getting paid 20 bucks an hour. 
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Mbosco

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #47 on: March 18, 2013, 08:06:10 PM »
Those quotation marks weren't for a literal quote, it was just to denote my paraphrasing of what was being said.  Here are some actual quotes:

"USBC's specifications and limits regarding legal lane conditions are so wide open that thousands of league bowlers who never practice can show up to league once a week, shoot 750 with the only ball they own, and go home without so much as a thought."  Gizmo823 (that's you) --Letter to USBC Re: the state of bowling

"Any activity that requires zero practice and little effort to achieve "perfection" will eventually cease to exist."  Gizmo823 --Letter to USBC Re: the state of Bowling

"Now with the easier conditions, people don't need to practice, and if you can walk in drunk and shoot 230 every game, the challenge slowly falls away and people get bored."  Gizmo823 --Letter to USBC Re: the state of bowling

By this point, you're probably getting the point that you have been very loose with your criticism that 230 is a readily attainable number for anyone who can tell which direction the pins are, when in fact there are many, MANY bowlers who work hard to improve and are not at that level.  It is disrespectful to them to brush off a goal they have not attained yet as something anyone can do, and disrespectful to the 230 bowler who worked hard to get there.  I suppose I should have been more specific before and said that there have been multiple threads relating to the effects of high scoring patterns on bowling today, but that mostly it has in fact been you sharing the opinion that averages on a THS don't reflect anything.  I would wager a lot that this attitude is 10x more responsible for the decline in bowling than easy lane conditions.  My first of several grievances with a very long thread.  But I digress...more quotes.

"...and why try to be good when somebody else with no clue can occasionally shoot big numbers too?"  Gizmo823 --Letter to USBC Re: the state of bowling

"Now, it doesn't take any practice to shoot 700"  Gizmo823 --The most epic meltdown in the history of bowling

"Average really doesn't mean much anymore....I average 10 pins higher than a national title holder in my area and I am nowhere NEAR the bowler he is.  There are bowlers that average higher than me that are nowhere NEAR the bowler I am...."  Russell --200 average is no longer elite - deal with it and move on

"Do we all realize though that we're just talking about house shots here? What I mean is that averaging 200 or better is still somewhat respectable if you're doing it on demanding conditions. It's only in the house shot arena that 200 has lost all credibility."  Gene J. Kanak --200 average is no longer elite - deal with it and move on


As for the question you pose near the end...on a THS, the bowlers are exactly equal in ability.  MUAHAHAHAHA I SAID IT.  They are equal in ability.  The lower sport average has figured out how to score on a house shot, meaning HE HAS DEVELOPED THE TOOLS NECESSARY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT AND USES THEM WELL.  Yes, THS requires tools.  People rag on it largely because it requires less of one in particular, precision (and there is a false equivalency that precision=good bowling, which is a terribly incomplete statement).  However, he has developed a solid spare game, can line himself up in practice, and can stay moderately ahead of the transition all while either hitting his target or missing it THE RIGHT WAY.  At that level, he's probably also fairly skilled at making hand position changes and is experienced enough to know if/when to make a ball change.  The higher sport average might have a larger tool box which gives him greater success on a wider variety of tough conditions, but apparently on a scoreable pattern he can't use his more developed toolbox any more effectively than the other guy.  IF YOU'RE INCAPABLE OF USING YOU'RE TOOLBOX EFFECTIVELY, IT DOESN'T MEAN SQUAT.  The situation is completely different on a sport shot.  Of course the 210 average bowler has more ability in that environment (although the only reason I could fathom a 60 pin difference in someone's THS and sport average is inexperience with sport shots).  I would say the 230/210 bowler is much more rounded and complete of a bowler, and more of a threat in a variety of extraordinary situations, but on a normal league night he's not any better.  If he wants to be better than the other guy on league night, he should figure out how to strike more instead of grabbing a beer and complaining about how all house shots are "carry contests".  Focus more on checking racks/flushing the pocket better to get the 8 out, or estimate how long before he starts ringing 10s and make an adjustment before it happens.  Bad carry has absolutely nothing to do with luck, and everything to do with not understanding the minute changes in the lane before making a shot.

You are officially my hero.  For weeks these threads have been going on about "anyone can just walk in, drill a ball, and average 230 without knowing what they're doing".  It's amazing to me that I think you're the first to point out the truth of the situation.

I think you guys have become jaded. 220 and above average is elite for sure. I don't care if itis THS or Sport. I bowl in Metro Detroit and have attached some stats. Only 13.33% of sanctioned male bowlers averaged over 210. Only 3.8% averaged over 220.

Stats are not kept on 230+ averages but I guarantee that itnis less than 2%. I would consider being in the top 5-10-15 percent of bowlers elite. Unfortunately most of us are avid bowlers who look at the game as a sport and competition and bowl in higher end leagues and it strips us of our objectivitity on this issue. But numbers never lie.

I am 225-240 anywhere I go. Never won any titles anywhere but I don't bowl many tournaments. Sometimes it shows. But....I know I can compete with anyone on those shots too as I average 208 out at Nationals and am the only perso  I know who has an award score out there. (And I bowl with many staffers and regional players) I do well at States every year, I have won sweepers on PBA patterns, and I have stunk it up at times on every possible shot any of us have seen.

But 220 is still a phenomenal bowler. 200 is still decent and has potential. It is all about your perspective. But again....the numbers show us that we tend not to look at ALL bowlers when making our judgements.

http://mdusbc.com/Yearbooks/Yearbook_2012/stats_league.html

I don't know when anyone ever said that . . it's just that it's easier to make a comparison based on the easiest difference to identify, which happens to be at the high end of the spectrum.  There have always been 180 average bowlers, so what contrast do we see by talking about them?  It's basically saying that everyone as a whole is "better" than they should be.  There are people averaging 230 that should be averaging 210, and people averaging 210 that should be averaging 190, and "accomplishments" as a whole are too easy to get based on your skill level.  There are bowlers today who have more honor scores in a year than people of similar talent 40 years ago had in an entire career. 

So explain why some THS 230 average bowlers can average 210 on tougher shots and some fall to 170?  Which bowler is better?  Saying something is too easy doesn't mean it's actually easy by any stretch, it's just saying that it's not hard enough for what you're gaining.  It's like a greeter at Walmart getting paid 20 bucks an hour.

completebowler

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #48 on: March 18, 2013, 08:37:38 PM »
I agree with the above poster. Many that struggle on sport shots do so because they haven't had much experience on them. There are kids in their early 20's floating around town that I used to coach that will kick my ass on sport because they bowled on it all through high school and MJMA tournaments.

Also, remember that bowling on certain conditions create a swing style appropriate to said conditions. I was reminded of this yesterday when bowling onsome tuff conditions. Shot 567 because the house I am bowling on has a TON of recovery. So....I see this as a bowler and open up the lane and use the miss room to the right. Why wouldn't I? That wasn't happening yesterday and I left many a split as the conditions demanded a higher level of accuracy than I have been faced with.

Remember when the PBA put out a house shot a few years back? Pederson was going on and on about how we were gonna see qualifiers average 250 and see 300 on t.v. and everything else. Turned out....they didn't tear it up like so many assumed. See the pros (as well as those of us who started before resins) learn to "help" the ball when the swing feels wide and "layoff" when the swing feels tight. On a house shot it is better to do the opposite.

So, a good fundamental bowler who has a good feel at the bottom of the swing is going to cover up some of his mistakes at the bottom of the swing. A guy who is averaging 230 cause he has the right match-up is going to struggle more on a sport shot as his release is the same if he misses 3 left or 4 right. Hope you see what I am saying here.

And finally, there are us pro shop guys. I know enough about the game that I can take a shot I am bowling on and match someone up with a ball that will give him at least 5-10 extra pins in average. Sometimes more. Does that mean he is a legit 225 anywhere he goes? Nope. But he is averaging 225 on the house he bos in which is what his goal was.

These are the majority of the guys you see struggle on sport. They have a ball that hides their flaws on the house shot. Elite bowlers have fundamentals that limit their flaws and hide them when they are off. So they score anywhere.

Then there is versatility. Sometimes important....other times it doesn't matter. But many guys can only hook it or can only play straight so depending on the sport shot they see they are locked out before they walk in the building.


Steven

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #49 on: March 18, 2013, 08:47:23 PM »
Mbosco and Complete -- excellent posts. Gizmo and others who are still in the "THS is too easy" camp should read and re-read as necessary.

completebowler

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #50 on: March 18, 2013, 11:08:23 PM »
Mbosco and Complete -- excellent posts. Gizmo and others who are still in the "THS is too easy" camp should read and re-read as necessary.

Thanks Steven. It is all relative. A guy recently shot 822 and commented that it is a big deal to him because he isn't a big shooter. Armed with the stats from our local association I showed him he is top 1-2% of bowlers in the largest association in the world. (He is averaging 229).  I call that elite....

Gizmo823

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #51 on: March 19, 2013, 09:35:41 AM »
I had a bunch typed, but I don't think you guys are going to get my point or the concept behind what I'm saying.  People shoot better scores than they should on easier shots, and because there's a cap at 230-240, no matter what you do, how hard you work, the logistics of the sport, aside from an isolated case here or there, just don't allow for a sustained average of any higher than that.  I got to 230 several years ago, before I should have.  I have honor scores I don't deserve.  Now I'm much smarter, much more experienced, and much more skilled in all aspects, but my THS average is unchanged and unaffected.  My sport average and success at sport tournaments has improved significantly, but that's not what matters to anyone. Maybe that just means I don't have to practice any more to maintain it, but there's tons of guys I bowl with that average 230 that struggle to shoot 500 at Nationals.  There are plenty of 230 average bowlers who criticize other 230 average bowlers, because some have actual bowling skill, and some have simply figured out how to take advantage of the conditions.  It's not fun to know that on a shot that requires actual accuracy, true skill, and knowledge, that you would take 10 out of 10 games from someone who you might split those games with on a THS.  If bowlers that can shoot 230 on a house shot can barely break 170 on a sport shot, shouldn't the bowlers who average 210 on a house shot be able to average 250+ on a THS?  Do you guys see what I'm actually getting at here? 

I'm saying the inflated scores are really hurting bowling from several angles.  If some bowler who has a 300 suggests a ball to a lower average or less successful friend, or tries to coach them, or gives them advice, the lower average bowler takes it to heart, whether the 300 guy really has a clue or not.  He has a 300, so he has to know something, right?  This is a guy who doesn't understand that putting the fingerholes in a ball in the same place will do completely different things for people with different paps.  If mr. 300 has a pap of 5 over and 1/2 up, and he tells a friend that likes the same ball and wants that reaction who has a 4 over and 1 up pap to get it drilled the same way, they're not going to get the same ball reaction unless the fingers are put in a different location.  Then if you as the pro shop guy do the RIGHT thing, then the 300 guy tells their friend, "oh wow, he really screwed that ball up."  Mr 300 can tell somebody, "oh, if you're having trouble releasing the ball, go get more reverse pitch."  Or he can tell them, "well, you have to keep your shoulders square to the line, that's proper form," when their friend is trying to play 20-5.  Or he develops some little quirk that works for him, and preaches that as gospel to everyone else.  Or someone can't get their hook monster to hook on light oil, so he sends them after something that hooks even more.  Or they say a Taboo is junk because a Vibe outhooks it on light oil. 

These are the guys that THS produces.  The guys that would average 170 30 years ago, the guys that wouldn't have the same "power" or influence as the guys who really know what they're doing.  The guys who have more knowledge and more skill won more often, not the big strong athletic guys who can figure out that speed plus revs plus throwing it right equals big numbers.  I've seen guys who hit different arrows on every shot shoot 300.  And you're saying that's skill?  You're saying they deserve it?  That's basically saying everyone who has ever shot 300 is just as good as Chris Barnes, Walter Ray, PDW, because those guys can't average any better on a house shot because it's a theoretical impossibility.  EARL the robot is perfectly accurate, but has never shot 300.  More accurate bowlers get penalized more because they burn their shots up faster.  It's a complete insult to guys who actually work and practice to suggest otherwise.  You give anybody 2+2+2, and ask them to add that up.  Give it to a 4th grader and give it to a trig professor.  Then say, "well, that 4th grader is every bit as good at basic math as the trig guy is!"  Ok, congratulations . . but that doesn't mean the 4th grader knows anything about math.  They start talking about why 2(2+2) should be 6, while the trig professor knows it's 8.  "Well, 2 times 2 is 4, plus 2 is 6!"  No, there's some rules in there you don't understand, and that's exactly the concept I'm getting at.  Too much emphasis is put on 300 as a number which means significantly less on a THS than it means on something tough, but because people don't understand this, it's throwing off the balance of the whole game.  They look at the numbers as numbers, completely unrelated to the challenge, or lack thereof. 

You can say, "well don't put down people who have never averaged that high or who have never gotten a 300 before."  Well sorry, but not everybody will average 200, not everyone will shoot 300, and for the benefit of all concerned, some things MUST be put into perspective.  There's a kid here in town who has a couple 300's and a couple 800's.  He was nearly disqualified from high school bowling this year because his grades were too low.  His dad went in to the athletic director at the school and had a shouting match with him over the qualifications.  Dad's words were, and I quote, "Well why do his grades matter?  He's going straight to the PBA after he graduates, he doesn't need good grades!"  So tell me, what 170 average bowlers 30 years ago had that attitude?  Back then, when the level of bowler was more clearly defined, everything was just fine.  Now we have debates like this. 

When you call a 230 THS bowler with a handful of honor scores elite, you aren't giving them their due respect, you're insulting all the professionals.  Out of all these 230 avg THS bowlers, what is the percent that can ACTUALLY bowl rather than just abuse a house shot?  That's the number that should be looked at.  I'm a 230 THS bowler with a handful of honor scores, and there's no way in hell I'd put money on the line against a pro on a PBA shot, but I'd do it on a THS is a heartbeat.  THAT is the real story of the THS and its effect on bowling. 
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Jorge300

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #52 on: March 19, 2013, 09:40:00 AM »
Mbosco, you say that someone should be given credit for using the toolset they have to score well on an easy THS. They have learned how to miss correctly and still strike and should be given credit for that. Let's take the philosophy to other sports shall we?!? In baseball, you miss hitting the center of the ball by an inch, what do you get? An easy groundball or a pop-up most of the time. You miss hitting a golf ball with the center of the club what do you get? A hook or a slice. You miss hitting the puck directly by an inch, do you still get a goal? You miss kicking a soccor ball by an inch, do you still get a goal? I can go on and on. Missing what you are aiming at, consistently should not be rewarded. It isn't in any other sport out there. Why should it be in bowling? Athletes who can't repeat consitently are not the elite of any sport, yet we are supposed to think they are in bowling because the easier THS conditions reward them for their inconsistentcy?
 
There will always be varying levels of talent. For some, even THS is hard. They just don't have the skills or talent to score well. Maybe they will get better with time and practice or maybe they have maxed out their potential. I, for one, don't think anyone can walk into a bowling alley and average 230. But I also don't think someone who bowls on a THS pattern and averages 220-230 is elite either. Are they good, yes. Do they have talent, yes. I don't think anyone is disputing that. But they are not elite, they are not the best in their sport. To go back to my baseball reference, the 220-230 THS/205-210 Sport average bowlers are the "stars" of the sports, the 230 THS/180 Sport average bowlers are major-league players, the good players every team needs, but not the "stars". These bowlers can break through and have a great day, win a big tournament, a top 100 finish at the USBC Open, etc., just like the good MLB players can have that 2 homer game. But until they do that kind of thing consitently, they aren't a true star, in both cases.
Jorge300

trash heap

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #53 on: March 19, 2013, 09:55:54 AM »
Mbosco and Complete -- excellent posts. Gizmo and others who are still in the "THS is too easy" camp should read and re-read as necessary.

Why can't you read. Every statistic proves the THS is Easy. There are more honor scores and higher averages bowled on them. The pattern allows for room. The need for precision (release, speed, accuracy) has greatly reduced to produce a strike.

Why do bowling centers use this pattern?
Why do bowlers prefer this pattern?

Simple. It's easier to bowl on. Why is this so hard for you guys to understand?

Yes there are guys that bowl super high averages on this pattern, but just because someone bowls super high on the easiest shot designed in bowling should not make them an elite bowler. We as a comumnity of bowlers should recognize it.

We are not stating the every 230 THS average bowler isn't an ELITE bowler, we are stating that the score only on it's own is NOT ENOUGH to determine the elite status! How does the bowler do on flatter patterns? How good is he or she when they need to be more accurate, more precise in the release?

Many that have a high average on THS do bowl well on the flatter patterns and we should consider them ELITE, but there are just as many that can't handle those patterns. Should those bowlers be considered on the same level as the ones that do well on flatter patterns? I say no.




Talkin' Trash!

completebowler

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #54 on: March 19, 2013, 10:19:47 AM »
We have established that there are various levels of vuys that average 230. A good friend of mine is a lefty with around 25-300's and over 30-800's. Carries at least 230 anywhere he goes. But struggles on sport shots because he isn't very versatile.

I have long said I think I am a better all around player. I can pipe it up 5 or play 5th arrow. But when he gets a good look he is gonna whack them. Period. He repeats the shit out of his shots. So....which is better? The guy who has mastered one style and beats he pins up when it matches.....or the guy who is more versatile and can stay more consistient?

You guys want to label the different bowlers too much. We don't need to figure out who is better, what defines elite, or anything else. But....if you do want to then 230 average is elite....yes even on THS. The stats speak for themselves. Less than 2% of bowlers will average over 230.

Now where you guys get screwed up is trying to say WHICH 230 bowler is better. Well.....the answer is both of them. And neither of them. At that level anyone can win on any given day.

This is why we see amatures on t.v. much more often these days. Short format tournaments allow them to have a shot. The longer the format the more the cream rises to the top. League bowling is the same way. Long format leads to thebest bowlers having the highest average most years.

Steven

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #55 on: March 19, 2013, 10:26:10 AM »

Why can't you read. Every statistic proves the THS is Easy. There are more honor scores and higher averages bowled on them. The pattern allows for room. The need for precision (release, speed, accuracy) has greatly reduced to produce a strike.



When roughly only 1-2% of league bowlers are able to achieve 230+ THS averages, it's not really all that easy to master. Averaging two turkey's a game without missing any spares over a 100+ game season is a challenge. That's the perspective I'm coming from.


I really don't care that with relatively little work someone can average 180-200 on a walled condition using a helpful resin ball. That's the 'easy' part. The harder part is taking it to the next level, which even on a THS isn't easy.


I don't believe achieving a 230+ average on a THS makes anyone automatically 'elite'. Your'e certainly elite among your THS peers, but as Jorge most recently pointed out, you're not necessarily elite among the best in the game. I would argue that if you can't hit the 230+ mark in your local center, your chances of achieving elite status among the best are slim to none, but there are always exceptions. I''m talking about what's generally true.


BTW, my reading skills are fine, thanks. 
« Last Edit: March 19, 2013, 10:28:33 AM by Steven »

Gizmo823

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #56 on: March 19, 2013, 10:38:02 AM »
But there has to be qualifications.  If you're going by THS only standards, then yes, 230 is elite, I have no problem with that.  If someone can hit shots, then they should be able to at least hit a sport pattern here or there, one has to match up with them.  But 95% of bowlers don't understand the difference, that is the problem caused here.  They think if you average 230 and have honor scores that it universally translates, it's giving people a false idea and false impressions overall.  It's driving people to easier shots, and away from tougher shots.  I'm ready to quit the pro shop and walk away from bowling altogether because of people who don't "get it."  Some pro shoots 230 and wins a tournament, no one cares.  "I shot 250 at league last week, if they're so good they should shoot 270's every game."  The misconceptions created by the THS are dangerous for bowling, point and case. 

Steven and complete, I'm not going to argue with your points one bit . . because I think you "get it."  But there are too many out there who don't, and the THS is only serving to create a larger gap and more problems.  The challenges facing bowling are multi-faceted, yes, but you CAN'T tell me people didn't bowl more and practice more when scores were lower, that translates into tons more revenue, which centers in turn could use to balance things like being in "prime" areas.  Lower scores equalled more money, and money in this world fixes everything.  Yeah, it's a really simplistic viewpoint, but I believe that's the key that holds everything else together.  I used to practice 30 games a week and bowl 3 or 4 leagues, now that I'm 230 whether I practice or don't, bowling really isn't fun anymore, so I never practice and had to be talked into 2 leagues this year.  At a 200 average, the cap wasn't there. 
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Cornerpin

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #57 on: March 19, 2013, 10:48:19 AM »
You make very valid points and I agree with most of them but you maybe overlooking one big factor, whether or not the game can actually go the route of reducing scoring across the board.  In my opinion it cannot.  That can of worms has already been opened and if the USBC tried to toughen oil patterns and actually enforced this, the bowlers would go crazy since we are now so used to the current scoring levels.  The same goes for any sport; imagine the USGA limiting driving distance by prohibiting metal drivers, golfers would rebel for sure.  Yes, scoring is outrageous and yes, we all practice less, if at all, but I don't see anyway of ever turning back.

completebowler

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #58 on: March 19, 2013, 11:00:24 AM »
Well I attribute that to the fact that you have achieved great success on the conditions you are bowling on. When you find tougher conditions or want to take it to another level you will get back to practicing again.

But again 230 isn't so easy. Even 220 isn't so easy. I know a ton of decent bowlers who have bowled their entire life that don't average 220. I bowl with many of them on my teams.

Now they don't practice either which is why they can't get to the next level. You, me, and Steven put our time in the past working on our games so we can average that number. Doesn't mean we need to go bowl 30 games a week to stay there....we have built up the fundamentals and versatility to stay there.

Now if I want to average 230 on sport, chase the regional tour or Masters/US Open, or an Eagle at the Championships I am gonna have to put more time and effort in. But to be honest....as cool as any of those successes would be I don't have the time or energy to pursue them.

But again I think this boils down to a pissing contest in some ways. You see a guy averaging 230 who has bad form and fundamentals, knows nothing about lane play and ball reaction, has no clue as to what his equipment is designed to do, and it irritates you. You know you outscore him on sport so you want to point out the reasons you are better. I get that and have had similar conversations. But reality is.....on the THS you aren't any better than him.

And THS isn't going anywhere and it isn't the fault of the bowlers in my opinion. It falls on the proprietors. They have been fighting over the dwindling customer base for so long by putting out easier and easier shots that if they were to change it now bowlers would leave in droves. But who began this in the first place? I have never heard a bowler say he wants easier conditions. I have heard they want more consistient, more oil, less oil, better carry etc. but never just flat out easier.

The centers did this to our game by trying to lure bowlers over from the competing house. And now we have what the game is today. Get over it.

Gizmo823

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #59 on: March 19, 2013, 11:07:49 AM »
Well I attribute that to the fact that you have achieved great success on the conditions you are bowling on. When you find tougher conditions or want to take it to another level you will get back to practicing again.

But again 230 isn't so easy. Even 220 isn't so easy. I know a ton of decent bowlers who have bowled their entire life that don't average 220. I bowl with many of them on my teams.

Now they don't practice either which is why they can't get to the next level. You, me, and Steven put our time in the past working on our games so we can average that number. Doesn't mean we need to go bowl 30 games a week to stay there....we have built up the fundamentals and versatility to stay there.

Now if I want to average 230 on sport, chase the regional tour or Masters/US Open, or an Eagle at the Championships I am gonna have to put more time and effort in. But to be honest....as cool as any of those successes would be I don't have the time or energy to pursue them.

But again I think this boils down to a pissing contest in some ways. You see a guy averaging 230 who has bad form and fundamentals, knows nothing about lane play and ball reaction, has no clue as to what his equipment is designed to do, and it irritates you. You know you outscore him on sport so you want to point out the reasons you are better. I get that and have had similar conversations. But reality is.....on the THS you aren't any better than him.

And THS isn't going anywhere and it isn't the fault of the bowlers in my opinion. It falls on the proprietors. They have been fighting over the dwindling customer base for so long by putting out easier and easier shots that if they were to change it now bowlers would leave in droves. But who began this in the first place? I have never heard a bowler say he wants easier conditions. I have heard they want more consistient, more oil, less oil, better carry etc. but never just flat out easier.

The centers did this to our game by trying to lure bowlers over from the competing house. And now we have what the game is today. Get over it.

Very nice points, I can't argue any of them.  The first paragraph got me especially, haha, I'll be practicing before going to the Greater Ozarks Open next month and staying after the PBA league this summer to practice.  Well said. 
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trash heap

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Re: 200 average is no longer elite - Deal with it and move on
« Reply #60 on: March 19, 2013, 12:20:42 PM »
And THS isn't going anywhere and it isn't the fault of the bowlers in my opinion. It falls on the proprietors

I disagree. The proprietors have every right to put out whatever shot they want. It's their business. However, I will put the blame on the USBC. You have to realize this was an organization at one time upheld integrity to the Sport of Bowling. Things were checked and verified. Honor scores were denied. Now the flood gates are wide open. For the fear of losing anymore members the USBC has become a shell of what it once was. Today its about keeping members and keeping as much money as possible. 

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I have never heard a bowler say he wants easier conditions. I have heard they want more consistient, more oil, less oil, better carry etc. but never just flat out easier. And now we have what the game is today. Get over it.

Of course they will never state they want it easier. That would be admitting the truth. If a center would put out a flat pattern accidently on a league night, you not going hear "Hey what happenned to our THS". You will hear:

"My ball is not hooking!"

"The lanes have too much oil!"

"My series is 100 pins below my average, something is wrong!"

That's what you are going to hear. So to me that equals; "We want our easy shot back!"


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And now we have what the game is today. Get over it.

I understand the game will never change, but I sure find it odd that many who enjoy competing in this sport, settle for a condition that takes away the skills and abilities that made this sport great.  I will never change my opinion on this matter. What ever accomplishment someone does on THS, my personal thought is "I am not impressed."  Will I congratulate them....Sure will! No need to downplay their success because of my opinion. I know I am not going to change their mind. Not the right approach.

I will however encourage bowlers to bowl on tougher conditions. I say things like:
 "Give it try!" 

"Sure its a challenge, but isn't that what this Sport is all about!".

"You will learn so much more about your own game!"  "What do you got to lose?".

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But again I think this boils down to a pissing contest in some ways. You see a guy averaging 230 who has bad form and fundamentals, knows nothing about lane play and ball reaction, has no clue as to what his equipment is designed to do, and it irritates you. You know you outscore him on sport so you want to point out the reasons you are better. I get that and have had similar conversations. But reality is.....on the THS you aren't any better than him.

He sure is better than me on THS. Highest scores wins everytime. A guy can throw 12 brooklyns in row against me and it wouldn't bother me a bit. The name of the game is to out score your opponent. It doesn't matter how pretty or how ugly. But staying with the category of him being an elite bowler. I am entitled to my opinion.
Talkin' Trash!