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Author Topic: Looks like the Lefties were shut out at the PBA  (Read 948 times)

The Hose

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Looks like the Lefties were shut out at the PBA
« on: October 10, 2003, 02:38:03 AM »
Bohn, Alby, Scroggins, Rick Lawrence, Hugh Miller, Patrick Allen, Ricky Ward?  All of these guys were at the bottom after the first round and I not sure any lefties made it to the round of 32.

Any guess on how many will be in the top 50 at the end of the year?

I'm a little surprised because Pattern E should play pretty good for a lefty.  Apparently not
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Scolai

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Re: Looks like the Lefties were shut out at the PBA
« Reply #1 on: October 10, 2003, 07:37:30 PM »
and the preeminent lefty, Parker Bohn III finished 5th from last, I believe.  It's not very often Parker finishes 124th.

Go figure on a field stacked against the players who generally have little trouble playing the twig.
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TwoFourEightNineNine

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Re: Looks like the Lefties were shut out at the PBA
« Reply #2 on: October 10, 2003, 09:49:51 PM »
in the past years, the longer patterns tend to help out the lefties, rather than the shorter ones except for Chris Hayden (2003 Orlando Open, BoardWalk Lanes, Pattern E) this past season.

Jason Couch has dominated the past 3 T of C tournaments, as the patterns in the past years have been at least 46'. In (i believe) the 2001 Orleans Casino Open, the top 5 in the stepladder was an all-lefty show (a 40 foot + lane pattern from what I remember from Kegel). In the 2001 Silicon Valley Open, the pattern was 43', there were 4 lefties and one right-handed player.

Well, we're not physically there at the tournament and maybe it's the way the pattern plays with the lane surface. That counts a lot, too. I have also noticed that having a lot of axis tilt can cause some problems on the newer tour patterns. No offense to lefties, but I see a lot of them having a lot of axis rotation at times, and it becomes a problem.

It looks like the players in the top 32 are mostly of the straighter players...  I can imagine that it helps to stay behind the ball on this pattern, too. You have to control the backends.

That is all.
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