Print this all off to show your buddy. 300 requires mostly consistency and a bit of luck for 1 game. 800 requires nearly all consistency and a bit of luck per game for 3 games. Now whereas 800 allows you to miss here or there once or twice a game, 300 requires all of them going down every shot, but it doesn't take 3 solid games to shoot 300. Plus the crunch time is a lot smaller . . you can't really think 300 until you get the front 8 at least, and shouldn't until you get 9, but we all do it. But when you go into the last game of a set with 540 or 550 and have a good shot . . you can't tell me you're not thinking 800, and then instead of just having to worry about a few shots, you've got 12 shots to think about over the next 45 minutes if you're bowling 5 man teams. 300's are really fun, but 800 is the real number. There are a lot of guys out there that have a handful of 300's that will never crack even 750, but I bet you can't find one person out there at the end of their bowling career that has an 800 and doesn't have a 300, or at least that doesn't have a significant amount of 800's without a 300.
He only shot 650? What happened the other two games? He can have his 300. I'd take that in league. Let him shoot 300 one game, but if he posts a couple 175's the other two and we take two out of three games and total . . yay for him. As you can see . . 300 is more of a number for you to take pride in. Saying you got a 300 nowadays doesn't mean a whole lot to anybody else, but for you and your close friends, there's that sense of accomplishment, and something else to add to the resume. People still respect 800's. Here's a suggestion. Take your buddy out pot bowling since your average is 20 pins higher . . then we'll see where that 300 gets that one game wonder . .
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This is Fluffy. He is the Destroyer of Worlds.