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Brunswick Staff Position For Sandt


      Lee Sandt has been granted a position on the Brunswick Bowling staff. Lee has been using Brunswick equipment for the past 20 years and will now be proudly representing the company and their products exclusively. Lee will also be called to represent Brunswick at bowling clinics, trade shows and seminars.

       "I'm extremely excited and honored to represent Brunswick Bowling. It's no secret that there has been a negative stigma associated with the brand for the past few years. I would have to say that I can completely understand the disappointment in some of the equipment over the last 3-4 years. I have experienced the same results as many bowlers who have become disillusioned with the brand.

        My goal is to open the minds of these bowlers and to have them take a look at the products that Brunswick is now producing. I have personally experienced the transformation the company has gone through in regards to the quality and performance of their bowling balls. What they have done is taken a hard, honest look at what has gone wrong in the recent past and made great strides to address these issues. Brunswick has now taken the entire bowling ball production process under their own control from start to finish. No outsourcing their cores, coverstocks, testing or CAD designs. Everything from start to finish is controlled by Brunswick. The company is dedicated to regaining their prominence in the marketplace.

         What needs to happen now is for more bowlers to take a second look at Brunswick and to give the products a try with an open mind. I'm confident that many will be very impressed with the performance and versatility that the Brunswick line has to offer."

         


BOWLER
ALL OVER EASTON CITY TOURNAMENT

BowlerX captured the scratch team title at the 64th annual Easton Area USBC City Tournament for the second consecutive year. This years team event was held at The Fleas Club in Easton. The team was led by Kyle Hartzell (718) followed by teammates Bill Kocher III (657), Lee Sandt (644), T.J. Heimbach (643) and Tim Roof (618).

BowlerX bowlers also captured the scratch singles, scratch doubles and scratch all-events titles. Dan Schriner completely crushed the pins at a 265-300-278=843 clip in the singles event held at Nazareth Holy Family Club. The match not only ensured him the singles title but also a place in Holy Family Club history. The three game set eclipsed the old house record of 824. Dan went on to capture the All-events title by posting a 721 in doubles and a 730 in the team event for a staggering 2294 (254.8 average) total! Dan now has 8 Easton City Tournament titles to his credit to go along with 33 perfect games and 23 series of 800 or better.

The doubles scratch event went to the team of Tom Steuer (683) and Kyle Hartzell (748) who put up a total of 1432.


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BowlerX
  Town & Country Lanes
1770 Stefko Boulevard Bethlehem, PA 18017
 484-274-2998

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THE SPLIT MASTER

Is it the ball or is it the bowler? Of course it's the bowler but ever since Kyle Hartzell has started using a Bowler X plastic ball for shooting his spares some cool things have been happening. It seems that pins are flying out of the pit at an unusually frequent rate and the toughest split in the game has been converted not once, not twice, not three times......but four times in a span of two months.

Anyone knowing Kyle and who has seen him bowl knows how good of a player he is. To bring you up to speed on just a few of his accomplishments (not nearly all), he has 36 sanctioned 300 games in 14 different houses and 20 series of 800 or more. He won the NJ State Tournament Actual All-Events title in 2006 and a free entry into the USBC Masters event that year in which he promptly cashed. He was named the 2008 Easton Area Bowler of the Year after averaging 244 at Oakwood Lanes in Washington, NJ. He won this years Lehigh Valley Masters Tournament held at Playdrome Rose Bowl in Allentown. He also holds the house record for average (231) and series (848) at Town & Country Lanes in Bethlehem, PA. He has had many other highlights in his career but lately it seems that he has added trick shooting ala Andy Varipapa. Kyle has converted the 7-10 split three times in the last five weeks in the Friday night Lehigh Valley Masters League at Playdrome Rose Bowl, once doing it twice in the same night!! He also converted the same split during a session at Bardon Lanes in Easton in between his conversions at Rose Bowl. He has made the split 5 times in his career. The feat of making it twice in one three game match ties the USBC record. Keep your eyes on Kyle and the BowlerX ball anytime the 7-10 rears its ugly head in his presence.


Kegel Bowling Ever walk into a bowling tournament and see the charts hanging on the walls that show you in various ways how the lanes are dressed? You look at them and think..."I wish I could understand this thing so that I could use it to my advantage." Here's some valuable info from Brandy Padilla at Kegel that will help clear up the mystery of lane pattern charts and graphs. Read the charts!

Kegel Bowling Bowling knowledge... Bowling ball layouts of the pros, lane oil patterns and how to read them, effective practice sessions. Here is some great info from Ted Thompson of Kegel for those of us who are always wanting to learn more about our sport. Check it Out!
College Bowling.com


East Greenville Fire Co. Bowling

EAST GREENVILLE FIRE CO. BOWLING CENTER INFO


Phantom Radio PHANTOM RADIO
Listen Now!

Every week will feature a report of interest to those of you who love bowling, as we do! On this program, we will be doing many stories and interviews along with reporting on topics that you'll be interested in and won't want to miss. We will also be doing some commentaries and expressing our opinion as well as talking to some of the makers and shakers of this great sport.



 

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Different Strategies for Lane Play

By Danny Speranza



            The way to play lanes and make adjustments has changed a lot in recent years. This is a result of changes in the bowling environment due to the modern oil patterns and bowling balls.


            Today there is always more than one way to play any lane condition. This is a nice result from all the different balls in the market. A bowler can use a weaker ball and play a straighter line to the pocket. Or, a bowler might decide to use a stronger ball and hook it more. But it really is more involved than just selecting a ball and a target on the lane. Today, I want to show you different ways to attack any given lane condition.


            In just about all bowling centers today, the lanes are oiled with a heavier concentration of oil in the middle of the lane and less oil on the outside boards by the gutters. There is an abrupt change from a light amount of oil on the outside to the heavy oil in the center. This abrupt oil change usually is located between the 8th to the 12th board on a freshly oiled lane, and then it will move in as the lanes are bowled on. The goal in bowling is to find this oil line and use it to create an area on the lane in which you can throw the ball and have it get to the strike pocket. Most bowlers lay their ball down in the heavy oil and cross the oil line. This uses the extra friction on the outside boards from the lighter oil to help the ball to hook more.  If the ball is pulled a little inside of the target, the heavy oil in the middle helps to reduce the hook. This allows the ball to still end up in the strike pocket. You will create "tug area" as your margin for error to get to the strike pocket. A lot of times this technique works well with a polished ball, which will slide more in the oil and save energy for more hook and snap on the dry outside boards and/or dry boards down the lane. A sanded ball can also be used, but it will hook sooner with less direction change on the backend.

            There is a totally different strategy for playing this same lane condition in a different part of the lane. A bowler can also play this same lane condition by keeping the ball in the heavy oil in the center of the lane for the entire distance of the oil pattern. With this technique, a sanded ball will usually work better, but the goal is to move in much deeper so that the ball never touches the drier outside boards. A stronger ball is required. In this scenario, if the bowler misses wide of their target, the ball will go out to the drier boards and hook back more. The result is a ball that still wants to end up in the strike pocket. The secret is to use a much stronger ball and make sure that you move in deep enough so that a well-thrown ball never has to reach the dry outside boards in order to hook back to the pocket. Use the drier boards to the outside for your mistake area. This creates "swing area" in which to hit the pocket.


            So you now have a strategy to create either "tug area" or "swing area". Depending on the lane condition, one will probably work better than the other. You need to find which works best for your style and on the lane condition your center utilizes.


            The second major item that alters how bowlers are forced to play lanes is how the oil moves due to bowling activity. A lot of this has to do with the new bowling balls. All modern balls have a flaring ball track due to the core designs. This allows the ball to hook more, but creates changes in the oil movement. This has drastically altered how the lanes will play and change over the course of a league session. Balls with flaring tracks, pick up more oil as they travel down a lane. The flaring track can be seen as many tight rings of oil on the ball. You can see more oil on the ball. The oil is mostly picked up in the heads, which is the area of the lane just past the foul line. As this area gets drier, the ball starts to hook early. If the ball hooks early, it will probably hook high on the head pin. The bowler needs to constantly adjust for this changing lane condition. The usual adjustment is to move your feet and target in a little deeper into the center of the lane to find more oil. This works most of the time. Sometimes, the oil picked up by the ball in the heads results in the oil moving down the lane in the form of carrydown. This makes the backends tighter. The normal adjustment of moving a little deeper to find more oil, might result in the ball sliding too much and missing wide of the pocket. The correct move might be to just move your feet in deeper to catch more oil in the heads but leave the target the same. This can allow the ball to hook around the carrydown oil and miss the carrydown oil on the backend of the lane.


            Sometimes the traditional moves on the lane do not work as the oil transitions in the course of play. But bowling has a lot of adjustments. A ball change will work a lot of time. Remember that the strategy of changing to a different area of the lane in order to switch from tug area to swing area, which probably include a ball change. The better bowlers can alter how they release the ball to create more or less hook with a hand position change or ball speed adjustment.


            Bowlers need to learn that they will bowl much better if they learn to move their stance on the approach and target on the lane. The goal is to move in order to find the best area to play the lane to create the maximum "margin for error" and still hit the pocket. Beginner bowlers must learn that they do not want to play the second arrow all the time.


            The modern sport of bowling has changed into a sport requiring not only a good physical game to repeat shots but also a good mental game. The ability to read the changing lane environment and make the correct adjustment, as fast as possible, is just as important as making a good shot. Learn to look for the changing lane conditions. If you make a good shot and the ball hooks a little high, this tells you that it is time to make a move.  Learning to make the necessary adjustment quickly will result in a competitive edge for you over your opponent.



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