Inexpensive bowling balls are available in a variety of Performance ranges at bowlingball.com. Every leading manufacturer produces bowling balls with a variety of ball motion versatility and capabilities which match to lane conditions you will encounter anywhere you bowl and at various price points.

Simply click on the “Bowling Balls” button at the top of our home page, then click on “manufacturers” to select the given brand you wish to review, and then on the the Performance category to bring onto your screen available models. Next, click on the image of any item you wish to view description details, reviews about these balls, and product availability, and importantly, the price information. You will find inexpensive bowling balls in every Performance range.

Merely click on the highlighted name of each ball under our various Performance categories below to view current price information:

Pro Performance

Hammer Taboo Electric Blue/Silver currently selling for $164.95

Storm Virtual Gravity NANO Pearl currently selling for $159.95

Roto Grip Rogue Cell currently selling for $119.99

High Performance

Motiv Primal Impulse currently selling for $147.88

Hammer Arson currently selling for $114.95

Hammer Epidemic currently selling for $139.95

Advanced Performance

Roto Grip Shooting Star currently selling for $89.99

Storm Frantic currently selling for $109.99

Linds Easy Flip - SOLD OUT currently selling for $59.99

Performance

DV8 Misfit Orange/Blue currently selling for $79.95

Hammer Midnight Vibe currently selling for $87.99

Ebonite Cyclone Purple/Orange/Yellow currently selling for $82.99

Entry Performance

Brunswick Slingshot Black/Pink currently selling for $64.99

Storm Tropical Breeze Kona Blue/Silver currently selling for $82.99

Hammer Taboo Spare currently selling for $85.99

While you are visiting bowlingball.com today, please take a few moments to view the excellent Ball Reaction Videos we provide where you can see the latest in inexpensive bowling balls rolling down our private test facility lanes. bowlingball.com has created our own hook rating scale. Because each manufacturer uses a different method for indicating a ball’s hook potential, we developed a way for the consumer to compare bowling balls across all manufacturers. The result: The Perfect Scale®. Our goal is simply to make it easier for our customers to compare products and feel confident in their purchases.

It is easy to understand why we have become the No. 1 “e-tailer” of choice for inexpensive bowling balls by consumers of America. Ordering is easy by merely by following our simple online instructions Thanks for visiting.

BV sliver rich Inexpensive Bowling Balls

 

If you are an experienced bowler averaging 170 or less and are looking to improve your game, then learning how to develop a consistent bowling hook is an important step. First, improving your initial alignment skills and your lane adjustments techniques will certainly help you achieve a consistent bowling ball motion and your ability to read the lanes.

We have posted many articles in the “BowlVersity” section of bowlingball.com which address getting lined up to the pocket as well as articles discussing lane adjustments for changing lane conditions. We urge you check out a few of these articles to expand your thinking about playing the lanes and making effective adjustments. Improper alignment will cause your bowling ball to read the lane and react at unpredictable times and thereby reduce your ability to hit the pocket consistently. We cannot stress the importance of good alignment and adjustment techniques enough.

By knowing, however, how to develop a consistent bowling hook, you can make clear adjustments because of reliable bowling ball deliveries. The process begins by understanding a few important release techniques to improve the quality of your shot-making.

Here are a few easy keys to get you on your way:

1. Maintain consistent gripping pressure with your bowling fingers throughout your arm swing cycle. The majority of gripping pressure should be with the pads of your bowling fingers with very little pressure on the pad of your thumb.

2. Release the ball between the shoe laces of your sliding shoe and the toe of the shoe. The momentum developed from the swinging of the bowling ball will carry the ball onto the lane surface beyond the foul line.

3. To produce a modest and controllable hook, less finger rotation at the moment of release is required than if you wish to produce a larger hooking action as the ball travels down the lane. Less hook is easy to control. A strong hook requires more discipline because of a faster and larger rotation by the fingers during the release of the ball.

4. Place your hand holding the ball not flatly underneath the ball and not completely on the side of the ball as if you were going to shake hands with someone, but rather in between the two positions. If you were to allow your hand to maintain this position through the entire swing cycle and into the release area, you will rotate the axis of the ball perhaps only 15-20 degrees and the result will be a controllable hook on the back end of the lane.

5. Avoid “over-turning” your hand and bowling elbow while releasing the ball as to have your hand pass over the top of the ball and your palm of your bowling hand face the floor. That type of release will certainly cause inconsistencies and result in poor direction toward your target as well as an ineffective roll.

6. For a sharper hook motion, place your hand under the ball with the palm of your hand facing toward the ceiling. This type of hand position is commonly known as “behind the ball” positioning. As your hand reaches the critical release zone with your hand maintaining the “behind the ball” positioning on the forward swing, you must rotate your fingers quickly and decisively from left to right (for right handed bowlers – opposite for left handed bowlers) or about two or three hours on a visualized clock dial from “behind the ball” to the side of the ball near to the three o’ clock or four o’ clock positions. This quick and decisive rotation of the bowling ball by your bowling fingers will tilt the rotating axis of your ball causing it to hook more sharply than the previous example of maintaining your hand between the “behind the ball” position and the “handshake” position.

7. In tips 5 & 6, be careful not to rotate your entire arm but rather only your fingers and wrist action.

8. Use a wrist device when practicing (if you do not already use one) which allows for a setting to be adjusted to create a quick and consistent thumb release and a crisp axis-tilt rotation motion. Tilting the wrist upward while you are releasing the ball will fly your thumb out of the ball well before the fingers so the fingers can rotate the ball decisively and create additional revolutions on the ball and/or increase the amount of tilt in the rotating axis of the ball, both of which will undoubtedly work toward maximizing your release hook potential.

bowlingball.com always recommends you consult with a certified coach so you can sharpen your skills and learn how to develop a consistent bowling hook. We hope these tips help?

bowlingball.com has become the No. 1 e-tailer of choice for bowling equipment by the consumer of America. Once you have found any item you wish to order, please be reminded that every item at our site comes with free shipping, free insurance, and no hidden charges. To place your order, simply follow our easy online instructions. Thanks for visiting.

BV sliver rich How To Develop A Consistent Bowling Hook

 

Inexpensive pearl reactive bowling balls are available in a variety of Performance ranges at bowlingball.com. Every leading manufacturer produces pearl reactive bowling balls you can match to lane conditions you will encounter most frequently and at various price points.

Simply click on the “Bowling Balls” button at the top of our home page, then click on “Coverstock” and then on the the “Reactive Resin” to bring onto your screen available models. Next, click on the image of any item you wish to view description details, reviews about these balls, and product availability, and importantly, the price information. You will find inexpensive pearl reactive bowling balls in several performance ranges.

Merely click on any of the pearl reactive ball options from our category listings below to view description details and current price information:

Pro Performance

Storm Virtual Gravity NANO Pearl currently selling for $159.95

Brunswick Nexus f(P) Pearl currently selling for $152.95

Lane #1 Pearl Panther currently selling for $164.99

High Performance

DV8 Hell Raiser currently selling for $139.95

Storm Marvel Pearl currently selling for $140.95

Lane #1 Boom-R'ANG currently selling for $134.99

Advanced Performance

Track 607A Special Edition currently selling for $124.95

DV8 Too Reckless currently selling for $114.99

Storm 2 Fast currently selling for $109.99

Performance

Hammer Midnight Vibe currently selling for $87.99

DV8 Misfit Magenta/Yellow currently selling for $79.95

Morich Frenzy currently selling for $82.99

Entry Performance

Brunswick Slingshot Black/Pink currently selling for $64.99

Columbia 300 Scout Reactive Red/Gold currently selling for $69.99

Roto Grip Outlaw currently selling for $74.99

While you are visiting bowlingball.com today, please take a few moments to view the excellent Ball Reaction Videos we provide where you can see the latest in inexpensive pearl reactive bowling balls rolling down our private test facility lanes. bowlingball.com has created our own hook rating scale. Because each manufacturer uses a different method for indicating a ball’s hook potential, we developed a way for the consumer to compare bowling balls across all manufacturers. The result: The Perfect Scale®. Our goal is simply to make it easier for our customers to compare products and feel confident in their purchases.

It is easy to understand why we have become the No. 1 “e-tailer” of choice for bowling equipment by consumers of America. Ordering is easy by merely by following our simple online instructions Thanks for visiting.

BV sliver rich Inexpensive Pearl Reactive Bowling Balls

 

If you are a bowler who is trying to raise your average and has recently switched from a conventional grip to a fingertip grip, then you may be searching for information about how to adjust to a bowling fingertip grip. Learning how to adjust to a bowling fingertip grip is key in making consistent deliveries. The benefits of using the fingertip grip are the ability to apply more effective roll on your bowling ball, develop a decisive hook motion with your ball deliveries, and will increase your rev-rate and which provides more power when your bowling ball impacts the pins.

A good grip enables you to properly release the ball. Here are a few tips provided courtesy of bowlingball.com in gripping a fingertip bowling ball followed by a few tips to help you get used to controlling a fingertip grip:

1. the fingers should be inserted into the bowling ball before the thumb. Care should be taken to fit your fingers into the holes of the ball in the same manner each time you are getting ready to bowl.

2. in a fingertip grip, your fingers should be inserted down to the first knuckle joint and the weight of the ball will be supported by the pads of your fingers from the tip of your fingers to the first joint.

3. the thumb must be inserted into the thumb hole of the ball down to the second knuckle joint as to allow the ball surface to rest on the palm of your hand and to the full extension of your thumb.

4. when your hand is placed properly into the holes of the bowling ball, there needs to be more gripping pressure on the finger pads of your hand than on your thumb pad.

5. Spread your index finger away from the gripping fingers will cover more surface of the bowling ball while keeping your “pinky” (little) finger positioned against your ring finger of your bowling hand. Spreading the index finger will stabilize your grip on the bowling ball.

To develop into an accomplished player, you must learn to release the ball effectively. Your thumb must be released before the fingers so the fingers may impart the rotational action which causes the bowling ball to travel down the lane with an effective rolling and hooking motion. Gripping too tightly, particularly with the thumb, will slow the action of your hand at the moment of release. It helps to learn to grip the ball properly from the onset.

Here are a few tips to make a good release of the ball using your new fingertip grip:

1. position your hand directly behind the bowling ball through the entire back swing and forward swing motion so the palm of your hand faces the pins as your hand enters the release zone.

2. rotate your bowling fingers only very slightly just after your thumb exits the bowling ball, perhaps from about the six o’clock position on a clock dial to four o’clock position (right handed bowlers – opposite for left handed bowlers). This rotation action produces sufficient bowling ball axis tilt and imparts an effective forward rolling action onto the bowling ball yielding a moderate hook motion from the break point down the lane to the pocket. It does not really require much finger rotation to impart good rev-rate and enough axis tilt to help your ball transition properly in the mid-lane and again at the breakpoint to the pins. Many “stroker” players and “up-the-boards” players do not rotate the ball a great deal and develop into extremely accurate bowlers.

3. avoid over-rotating your fingers in an attempt to make the ball hook a great deal. This type of overturning motion causes the elbow to rotate around and outside the bowling ball and results in a poor delivery. Overturning the ball is a common mistake to all bowlers, pro bowlers included. You can reduce this overturn motion by training your hand and bowling elbow, through practice, to remain in position behind the ball until the hand reaches the release zone, your thumb exits the ball, and your fingers rotate the ball. Your swing should continue upward toward a full-finish follow through position.

4. your thumb must exit the ball slightly before the fingers at the “moment of release” as you are entering the sliding step of your approach. Leading the release with your ring finger on your bowling hand in an upward motion is another useful technique used by good players to avoid rotating the ball early.

5. when first practicing with a fingertip grip and trying to adjust to the new feel, wear a wrist support device. The device will help prop your hand and avoid the wrist tilting back during the release of the ball. Tilting the wrist back slows the thumb from exiting the ball in relation to your fingers. The wrist support device will prop up your wrist to regulate the moment your thumb leaves the ball so your ratio of effective releases increases.

bowlingball.com recommends you consult your pro shop professional or a certified bowling instructor to monitor you bowling deliveries until you develop a good bowling ball release technique and get accustomed to using the fingertip grip.

While you are visiting our site today, please check out the vast menu of bowling consumer products we offer at great prices, with no shipping charges, with free insurance, with no hidden handling charges, and with delivery right to your doorstep!

bowlingball.com has become the No. 1 “e-tailer” of choice for bowling equipment by the consumers of America. Ordering is an easy process by following simple online instructions. Thanks for visiting.

BV sliver rich How To Adjust To A Bowling Fingertip Grip

 

Every January, pro shop operators from around the world are invited to vote on the best bowling balls of the year. The results are tallied and posted in the January edition of Bowler’s Journal. Storm is a perennial contender during the voting and 2011 was no different! Storm bowling balls were voted number one in every category they were nominated in, including the overall Ball of the Year!

Without further delay, the Storm balls that were ranked and their respective categories are:

Ball of the Year

1. Storm Virtual Gravity NANO
2. Storm Marvel Pearl
3. Storm Virtual Gravity NANO Pearl
4. Brunswick Nexus f(P+F) Solid
5. Ebonite Mission $250K

Pearl Reactive

1. Storm Marvel Pearl
2. Storm Virtual Gravity NANO Pearl
3. Ebonite Mission $250K
4. Roto Grip Critical Theory
5. Columbia 300 Eruption

Solid Reactive

1. Storm Virtual Gravity NANO
2. Brunswick Nexus f(P+F) Solid
3. Storm Victory Road Solid
4. Ebonite Cyclone Black/Gold/Silver
5. Motiv Raptor P7

Hybrid Reactive

1. Storm Frantic
2. Roto Grip Infinite Theory
3. Morich DestroyR
4. Ebonite Game Changer
5. Roto Grip Rising Star

Urethane

1. Storm Natural Pearl

“We are truly honored to be recognized by our peers with these great awards,” commented Hank Boomershine, Vice President of Sales and Marketing.

For more information on all Storm bowling balls CLICK HERE!

 

If your bowling average is 180 or less and you are trying to learn about changing lane conditions, then it is important to understand what is bowling lane oil carrydown. A big step in increasing your ability to hit the pocket with greater consistency and improving spare shooting is knowing what is bowling lane oil carrydown.

Dealing with the challenges of lane oil carrydown is made easier if you understand oil carrydown properties. Ideally, lane conditions would never change and you would never have to adjust your initial alignment once you are able to hit the pocket consistently. We all know that is not ever going to happen, so we must examine what occurs during each session on the lanes.

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With the use of high technology bowling ball coverstocks, we must take into consideration that every time a bowling ball is delivered, the lane condition changes. On any oil pattern, the length of oil carry-down extends beyond the final distance the oil pattern is applied to the lane surface. Every time a ball is thrown, it picks up oil and carries it down to the drier part of the lane.

If, for example, an oil pattern distance is oiled to perhaps 32 feet distance and buffed to 40 feet before the dry, high friction portion of the back end of the lane comes into play, the oil carry-down may stretch an additional 5-7 feet to a total of about 45 – 47 feet distance from the foul line. A close examination of the lane surface will reveal streaks or stripes of oil. These oil streaks or stripes are developed from the ball passing through the heaviest concentrations of oil on the front end and in the mid-lane which literally streaks the oil onto the dry portion of the back end of the lane as the ball travels on its path to the pins.

Carry-down streaks of oil are not always consistent in width nor the same length of streaks. In the case of a highly textured, solid coverstock bowling ball, say textured to perhaps a 500 grit finish, the pores in the ball surface will capture and retain oil as the ball rolls through the heaviest concentrated area of lane oil. Once this ball passes the final distance of oil application, the oil retained in the coverstock will leave the widest possible streak on the lane because of the amount of oil retained in the ball surface due to porosity of the ball and because of the “wide footprint” a solid, pliable coverstock material develops while in contact with the lane surface.

A bowling ball with a low surface porosity such as a stiff, pearl coverstock finished to perhaps 2000 grit or greater will retain less oil in the pores of the ball than does the solid and porous coverstock bowling ball when passing through the same heavy oil areas of a given lane as well as generating less surface friction. The pearl coverstock will develop a “narrow footprint” when traveling down the lane surface and the corresponding stripe of carrydown oil will be narrow with slightly less volume of oil than the stripe produced by a porous coverstock ball.

It can be said that the factors most affecting ball motion changes resulting from oil carry-down are the volume of oil application on the front portion of the lane surface, the distance of the lane oil pattern, the number of deliveries made on a given lane in a given period of time, and the coverstock generated by bowling balls delivered on the given lane.

There are several adjustments which can be effectively used when oil carrydown occurs. Adjusting your ball speed slightly, changing bowling balls, changing release techniques varying the rev-rate or axis tilt of a given delivery, and changes delivery angles are the most common adjustments, particularly when you are competing in an event requiring moving from a pair of lanes to another pair.

When a variety of coverstock bowling balls are delivered on the same lane from a variety of delivery angles, the carrydown streaks of oil, if inspected after the given competition is completed, will show streaks of oil in more locations and at varying distances of streaking on the back end of the given lanes than will lanes you alone are practicing on with the same oil pattern.

In fact, often times on short or mid oil pattern distance applications, the carry-down will concentrate in an area which actually helps players hold a line to the pocket. A high number of ball deliveries in the same portion of the lane will achieve “carry-down hold area” on the back end to help hold the bowling ball in the pocket. This effect is lessened somewhat on long distance oil patterns but still remains a factor for players recognizing such oil carrydown tendencies.

It is difficult to improve your performance playing the lanes after oil carry-down occurs if you do not practice on a carry-down condition and test all of the available variables in real time. Remember, adjustments vary from player to player based on ball speed, rev-rate, axis tilt, the bowling ball coverstock, the layout pattern in use, and the accuracy of a given player. Depending on the oil pattern, angle adjustments systems will vary. Practice on lane conditions with the oil carry-down in transition and after the transition is complete will help you make good adjustments during competition, adjustments you can trust. We hope this helps.

While you are visiting today, please spend time searching our extensive menu of products at bowlingball.com. If you wish to make a purchase, simply follow our easy online order instructions. Thank you for visiting bowlingball.com.

BV sliver rich What Is Bowling Lane Oil Carrydown

 
RichQnA 300x246 bowlingball.com BowlVersity Q & A

bowlingball.com wishes to share with our readers a few of the many questions we receive relating to articles we post on our site. This bowlingball.com BowlVersity Q & A article features four questions sent to us by visitors in our community. It is a challenging task for anyone to read all the articles presented in the “BowlVersity” section of our site so we thought we would address a few questions randomly submitted by community visitors and create the first of a series of articles known as bowlingball.com BowlVersity Q & A.

We hope our responses to these questions below, now and in future articles, opens up a line of thinking which possibly lead to helping you improve your bowling game. Most of the responses are to questions we received from bowlers ranging from beginners to 180 average players.

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3. DV8 Hell Raiser$ 139.95Free Shipping
4. Storm Victory Road Solid$ 119.95Free Shipping
5. Roto Grip Defiant$ 154.99Free Shipping

If you are an advanced player or a highly skilled and experienced player, these responses to questions may or may not be of use but, nevertheless, you are most welcome to join in and offer your comments with the intent of sharing good information from your personal experiences on the lanes with fellow bowlers in our community. We cannot possibly keep our responses to questions somewhat short and direct in content without omitting information which could expand the range of answers to a more acceptable level, thus another reason we invite you to share your thoughts with our community by making a comment under the posted article and help us pass along useful ideas.

Here are the four questions for this article to get this started:

Q. Why do I lose my balance while I am releasing my bowling ball?

A. Most bowlers lose balance during their release because of three key reasons: hurried footwork (particularly the final two steps of the approach), because of poor posture with the upper body when sliding into the foul line, and because of improper use of the balance leg.

Try and avoid a hurried pace of walking to the foul line with a rapidly accelerated final two steps. Your sliding bowling shoe on your final step should slide toward the center of your torso for good balance while you are releasing the bowling ball.

Try and maintain good posture from the set-up positioning on the approach and throughout your walk to the foul line. Keep your head as motionless as possible and avoid sudden tilting movement with your bowling shoulder. Your head and shoulders should be directly above your sliding knee during the final sliding step and not be leaning in front of your sliding knee or be pulling back and away from your knee to avoid a loss of balance during the critical release of your bowling ball.

Your balance leg, or trailing leg, should sweep smoothly to the opposite side of your body from your bowling arm. The bowling shoe on your balance leg should remain in contact with the approach floor while sweeping away from the arm swing path. By keeping the balance leg shoe in contact with the approach floor, your upper body position will remain stable as your swing enters the release zone.

Q. Why do I miss my spot on the lane to the left so often?

A. Truth be told, most right handed bowlers (opposite for left handed bowlers), being right eye dominant, will miss their target at the bowling arrows about 15 feet down the lane to the inside, or the left of where they site, perhaps one or two boards. This is not an uncommon tendency.

Most misses to the left of target occur, however, from improper alignment, either initial alignment when setting up on the approach, alignment when sliding into the foul line caused from excessive and unplanned drifting off of the intended walking lines, or both.

For bowlers with a modest hook release, the instep of the sliding bowling shoe should cover a board to the left of the target board down the lane by perhaps 9 or 10 boards left of the target (right handed bowlers) if sighting near the common target of the 2nd arrow. The further angle of delivery is to the left on the approach and at the target, the greater the release angle to the target on the lane must occur. The more direct and up-the-boards you play, the fewer boards difference from the sliding shoe and the target on the lane are needed to be successful in hitting the pocket consistently.

We recommend having a qualified instructor help double check your alignment, your walking lines to the foul line, and your selection of target on the lane so you develop a good formula for alignment, adjustments, and improving your accuracy.

Q. What is the best speed to deliver my bowling ball for strikes?

A. The ideal bowling ball speed is about 17 miles per hour (mph) measured at impact with the pins and about 21 mph when the ball is released onto the lane, plus or minus one m.p.h tolerance.

If we use the Pro Bowlers as examples of ball speed measurements, we find that bowlers delivering a ball less than 16 mph at impact with the pins are not as effective in pin carry and in generating consistent ball motion as those who deliver the ball at 17-19 mph at impact with the pins.

Most Pro Bowlers will release the ball anywhere from 20-22 mph at the release point and will impact the pins at 17 or 18 mph. This speed range is the same range the bowling ball manufacturers use when testing new bowling balls so it makes sense to be compatible with the pros and the manufacturers when delivering your bowling ball for the best results.

Typically, a bowling ball takes about 2.5 seconds elapsed time, plus or minus 0.15 seconds, to contact the pins at an instantaneous velocity of 16.5 mph. It should be pointed out, however, that elapsed travel time varies in accordance with three common factors, lane oil conditions, bowling ball coverstock surface texture, and the amount a bowling ball hooks as it travels down the lane.

These three factors will vary the average velocity somewhat and should be considered when working to regulate your ball speed. Keeping a constant speed during your sessions on the lanes will help you improve your shot-making skills and to know when an alignment adjustment is needed.

Q. What does the term RG I hear so frequently refer to and mean?

A. The United States Bowling Congress defines the RG (Radius of Gyration) of a bowling ball as a measurement in inches and is the distance from the %%%axis of rotation%%% at which the total mass of a body might be concentrated without changing its moment of inertia. bowlingball.com describes RG as a measurement by some manufacturers in a range from 2.460″ to 2.800″, but some companies have converted them to a 1-10 scale to help give the consumer a better frame of reference. The These numbers describe the distribution of mass in the given bowling ball and RG is an account of the location of that mass inside the given bowling ball.

High RG numbers indicate that the ball’s mass is distributed more towards the cover (cover heavy) which promotes length through the heads of the bowling lane. Low RG numbers indicate that the balls mass is distributed more towards the center (center heavy) which promotes an earlier roll through the front part of the lane. Medium RG describes sufficient bowling ball skid length to reach the mid-lane before transitioning into the hook phase of overall motion.

Placing RG range measurements into three relative numerical spreads used by bowlingball.com in our bowling ball specifications articles are as follows:

Low RG: 2.460″ – 2.570″

Med. RG: 2.570″ – 2.680″

High RG: 2.680″ – 2.800″

Thanks to the bowlers who shared their questions with us for this article. We hope our responses prove useful. Feel free to offer your comments; they will be most welcomed. Be sure to check the “Improve Your Game” link in “BowlVersity” on the home page of our site for future posts titled bowlingball.com BowlVersity Q & A. Thank you.

Rich Carrubba
bowlingball.com

BV sliver rich bowlingball.com BowlVersity Q & A

 

Congrats to our newest 52 Weeks/52 Winners Contest Winner!


Week of 1/23 – 1/29 – Dennis Shain of Milwaukee, WI




Colette won a brand new Roto Grip Defiant bowling ball!



Enter for your chance to win this week’s ball!

52wks exclusives Congrats to our newest 52 Weeks/52 Winners Contest Winner Dennis Shain! Roto Grip Defiant!

 
KoreyReichardinside 10 Year Old Bowler Rolls 800 Series

Korey Reichard of Jackson, Mich., became the youngest bowler to roll a certified 800 series when the 10-year-old right-hander had games of 265, 257 and 278 for an 800 series January 21. The record is unofficial until the required paperwork has been filed and verified by the United States Bowling Congress.

Reichard rolled the 800 while competing in the AMF Singles league at AMF Summit Lanes in Jackson.

Korey Reichard inside”Korey threw the last shot, went to add it up, then everyone was yelling and he said ‘Awesome,’ said his father, Todd Reichard. “I find it amazing that he knew he had to throw 278 for 800 and went out there and did it like there was no pressure.

“Most people that I have been around would be nervous, but he stayed calm through the first eight strikes and finished the game with two strikes and nine pins to get his 800.”

Kamron Doyle of Hermitage, Tenn., previously was the youngest bowler to have an 800 series when he rolled an 802 at the age of 11 years, 2 months and 1 day on March 14, 2009. Korey was 10 years, 7 months and 23 days when he rolled his 800 this past weekend. He turns 11 on May 29.

Reichard’s father, who has coached high school bowling for 12 years, said Korey started bowling at age 2 and “is very dedicated and practices almost every day.”

Korey currently bowls in two leagues – the AMF Singles where he averages 193, and the Thursday Afterschool league where he averages 179.

Korey rolled his first 600 series in October 2011 and just more than a month later accomplished his first 700 series in the AMF Singles league. He had a 279 game in December 2011.

Everyone here at bowlingball.com would like to send out a big CONGRATULATIONS to Korey!

 

The OTB Purple Stars - bowlingball.com Exclusive bowling ball is another fine OTB product on which you can see the stars like you never have before with the bowlingball.com Exclusive Purple Stars model. You can find the OTB Purple Stars - bowlingball.com Exclusive bowling ball currently selling for $149.99 right here at our site and if you choose to purchase this item, you will receive free shipping, free insurance, and absolutely no hidden handling charges courtesy of our company.

Let’s look at some technical data:

Product ID: 10108
Brand: OTB
Release Date: 12/05/2011
Perfect Scale®: 5.0
Performance: Polyester(0)
Lane Condition: Dry
Finish: High Polish
Coverstock: Plastic
Quality: First Quality
OTB Style: bowlingball.com Exclusives
Color(s): Purple Stars

The Purple Stars is designed with style in mind and you can now look your best whether you’re bowling for fun, spare shooting, or displaying this bowling ball at your home or in your office. Don’t let this bowling ball fool you that it does not have a specific use other than as a colorful ball which will surely catch everyone’s eye as it rolls down the lane. The Purple Stars ball is a great choice when shooting spares, particularly those challenging corner pin spares, or to use on dry lanes when controlling the hook is essential to hitting the pocket.

bowlingball.com has become the No. 1 “e-tailer” of choice for bowling equipment by the consumers of America. Ordering this product is an easy process by simply following the online instructions. Thanks for visiting bowlingball.com.

BV sliver rich OTB Purple Stars Bowling Ball

 





 
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