Here are the follow-up comments to those two:
Scott Demirjian
1 day ago (edited)
Steve Wright, that's a marvelously dishonest way to dissect that scenario. I counted 10 extra claps by one person that continued beyond the cessation of clapping by everyone else, well into Pete's pre-shot routine. It was obviously a calculated effort to antagonize him. It wasn't merely cheering for her husband, it was positively calibrated to attempt to negatively affect Pete's performance, and you're going to need to own that. And if what bob20011 has said about the incident is true, then one really is left without a leg to stand on in defense of that woman's conduct. Spectators have duties to not palpably interrupt or interfere with the players beyond what standard cheering would entail, and she was overtly trespassing on the wrong side of those duties, period.
Steve Wright
1 day ago
The interaction between Jon’s wife and Weber happened in the middle of the second game. He 7-10 twice after his comment to her. Not after she said Next at the end of the match.
Steve Wright
1 day ago
The video segment is the end of the match. Weber’s crotch chop had nothing to do with him being DQ’d by USBC. The interaction between Weber and Delaney’s wife happened in the middle of the second game.
Ryman66r
23 hours ago
She obviously wasn't just cheering for her husband. She was being obnoxious about it. Someone from the tour should have stepped in and took care of the situation before it escalated. Pete was also wrong for acting the way he did.
Scott Demirjian
23 hours ago (edited)
@Steve Wright I'd love to find a video of the entire match. It's impossible to form a good opinion without understanding what preceded this video.
Steve Wright
23 hours ago
Scott,
I had the benefit of being there when it happened. I was in the middle of getting my ass kicked by Kloempken.
I’m not sure what process the USBC used in making its decision. There were several witnesses to what happened. I don’t know if Gotchall talked to them or not. I know he did talk to Delaney. The first round matches were at 9 am. The USBC didn’t inform Weber he was DQ’d until just before the first losers at round at 4pm.
Scott Demirjian
22 hours ago
@Steve Wright right, I gathered that you were there in person, competing. Ultimately, I side with the bowlers unless they've made egregious judgement calls. If what I'm hearing is this woman shouting "NEXT" while clapping hysterically after John's converted 7-pin in the 9th, I hope we can both agree that that isn't merely "cheering." So if that's relatively consistent with the antics Pete objected to earlier in the match that aren't in this video (and that you say you witnessed), then I agree with Pete that she needed to discontinue cheering in a way that compromised the integrity of the match.
Also, someone left this comment that I loved: "if my wife said "it's just a game, man" to a living legend that i am currently bowling against, she'd be left in the parking lot," and i couldn't agree with that sentiment more.
Julie McCook
6 hours ago
My husband and I were lucky enough to be there bowling nationals, so we were able to see some of the qualifying in person and connect with some old friends bowing in the tournament. We watched Pete bowl and he had “issues†with some other bowlers. He got upset with a couple bowlers that were 4 lanes away, who apparently didn’t give him enough lane courtesy. He yelled at them, pointed at them and stared them down several times, making it clear to them and the fans that he was annoyed, but no one could really understand why. These guys were outside the area concerning Pete and lane courtesy with the double jump rule used, and we didn’t see anything else they could have possibly done to warrant him being annoyed. He acted ridiculously and unprofessionally, wanting to intimidate these guys and apparently motivate himself. If he didn’t like something they did be an adult and have a quick talk with them and explain.
In this last instance he was losing and lost to the #64 player when he was the #1 qualifier. He was already mad and her cheering for her husband loudly ,(not heckling Pete), took him over the edge. Her cheering may have been a little excessive, but her husband did just beat one of the best bowlers ever, like him or not. She could have been a little more gracious about it, yes, but Pete has to own his actions and words. No one made him do or say what he did and said.
I personally witnessed him act like a spoiled child and not a professional. Not a good example or ambassador for the game we love.