Bowling Tips: A Beginner Bowlers Guide to 10 Pin Bowling
June 30, 2009 by Bowl 900
Filed under Bowling Lessons: Beginner
A fun and unusual sport is ten pin bowling. You can tell a good strike ball, right? A perfect 1-2 or 1-3 pocket. But when it hits the pins and leaves a combination of 8-10 or another combination of pins standing and you feel you have been robbed of a perfect strike and do not understand why.
You need to know that the center of each of these pins is twelve inches away from each other and this a long way for a pin to travel and they do not travel the same way each time they go down. This is information you should know and the way to learn is ask the management of the local alley you go bowling for permission to see the pins close-up.
The head pin or the one pin is sixty feet away from you. You may have what looks like a perfect strike ball, but it may be a fraction of an inch off. And you are unable to see the difference at 60 feet.
A perfect strike is when the ball hit’s the 1-3 pocket deflecting left of the 3 pin into the 5 pin then right into the 9 pin dropping into the pit. The 1 pin goes left into the 2 pin which goes into the 4 pin and the 4 pin takes out the 7 pin. The 5 pin takes out the 8 pin and the 3 pin takes out the 6 pin which takes out the 10 pin.
Then there is the 8-10 split (the punisher.) This combination was probably created by less than a quarter of an inch. The ball carried into the 5 pin a fraction light and the pin shot across in front of the 8 pin and all because your ball was too light on the head pin (1 pin.) Making the 6 pin go around the 10 pin, because the 6 pin did not go directly toward 10 pin.
In the game of 10 pin bowling, in order to get a strike, it is necessary for several pins to go in a straight line. The bowlers needs to know how easy it is for one, two or several pins to remain standing. Even if the ball it look good from 60 feet. These are only facts and not meant to discourage you. Just so you know why you don’t always get a strike.
The average male bowlers score is around 153 and for women it is 130 and you have probably see the AMF Champions play. As an average bowler you were probably amazed at how easy these professional bowlers score a 200 or higher game. Even reaching 700 and sometimes a 800 series.
The thing to remember is you are classified as one among average bowlers because that’s the way you want it. And if your score is under the average, then you may be just a beginner or maybe not interested in the game at all. You go to the lanes because you go with friends or you bowl in any of bowling leagues to accommodate a friend. And before you know it – you’re hooked?
One of the major difference between the stars (professionals) and those who have averages are around 170 -180s range is being able to shrug off a bad game. Every professional bowler runs across a game in the lower 100s. It only takes a couple of nine or eight counts, three or four splits, maybe a miss. Everyone can have a bad game and so even a champion can have a 140 game, even in a championship match.
“Practice makes perfect.” so the saying goes and it’s very true. Practice your 10 pin bowling game to improve your average. And you will be amazed at how much your game will improve.
Follow these few bowling tips and you will be scoring higher in no time.
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Ingredients for a Good Bowling Arm Swing
June 19, 2008 by Bowl 900
Filed under Bowling Lessons: Beginner
Arm swing direction is important because it allows you to hit your target consistently and project to your bowling balls break point. Professionals and top amateurs keep their arm swing in what is known as the pro groove.
USBC Coaching advocates keeping the swing in line with the shoulder joint of your bowling arm, varying left or right by at most only four inches.
Top players will consistently keep the ball in the groove. They may tuck their arm swing in slightly when coming forward from their backswing. This allows them to have stronger leverage and hand position at the point of release.
Regardless of your skill level, you can improve your bowling scores at MyBowlingCoach.com where you’ll have 24/7 access to video and audio coaching sessions tailored to your skill level.

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