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Posted
13 hours ago, Screwball said:

I don't remember the year, sometime in the late 70s. I bowled in a pro-am at Imperial Lanes in Toledo, Ohio. You bowled 3 games and a different pro would bowl against you each game. Earl was there, and probably **** too. The big tournament started like on Thursday and would be televised on Saturday. Big stuff. We were before that started.

I was lucky, one guy I didn't know, and the other two were **** Ritger and Dave Davis. Davis was a tall lefty. He shot about 190 on the lane I was on. The next game he moved one pair to the right, made an adjustment, and tossed a 279. Dude had a big ball, and natural like most lefties did. Earl was a machine. So smooth. Made it look easy. It's not.

Those guys bowled hundreds of game a week. Saturday afternoon was about watching the tournament that week. Great stuff. Now a dying and soon to be dead sport. 

Have you seen bowling on TV lately? Now it seems all the pros are wearing flashy colors—the more the better—and talking trash to opponents. PBA is trying to attract a certain type that likes watching that kind of thing.

Posted
12 hours ago, oblong said:

Curling is up next

There are these three guys on my softball team who curl during the winter, meaning, an actual league in an actual suburb, like, Buffalo Grove or someplace else way out there. I’ve never curled and expressed interest and they said I should come out and try it and they’ll let me know when.

Posted
1 hour ago, chasfh said:

Have you seen bowling on TV lately? Now it seems all the pros are wearing flashy colors—the more the better—and talking trash to opponents. PBA is trying to attract a certain type that likes watching that kind of thing.

No, I haven't watched in years. Lost interest. I do follow some bowling stuff on FB. The scores they shoot today is nuts. There are people out there averaging 230 that wouldn't average 180 back in the days of Earl Anthony, **** Weber (he was at our town for bowling alley opening in 1977).

The sport started dying years ago. For example, our little town had 3 alleys at one time. 2 with 24 alley's and one with 4. The one with 4 is in the basement of a K of C hall. It is the only one left. The others closed in 1985ish, and the other in 2016. You could see them competing for bowlers years ago when the newest 24 lane alley opened. Scores and averages went up. People went where they could score the best. I worked in the oldest one and it was quite a thing to watch. The owners hated each other but their kids were buddies.

It was great fun for a lot of people over the years. They were full 7 days a week at on time. The bar was also a happening place over the years. Bowling alleys were also the place for drinking and smoking. Cigars were a thing back then. We had a big case of them to choose from. When the smoking laws changed, and of course the local cops cracking down on DD, that was the beginning of the end for some.

I can imagine the sport today is doing everything they can to promote the sport given it's not so popular anymore, including looking like NASCAR drivers and putting on a show between the competitors. 

I found my old bowling ball in the basement a few years ago. 16lb ball. I have no idea how I could have ever thrown that thing as I can't hardly pick it up now. 😞

Posted
44 minutes ago, Screwball said:

No, I haven't watched in years. Lost interest. I do follow some bowling stuff on FB. The scores they shoot today is nuts. There are people out there averaging 230 that wouldn't average 180 back in the days of Earl Anthony, **** Weber (he was at our town for bowling alley opening in 1977).

The sport started dying years ago. For example, our little town had 3 alleys at one time. 2 with 24 alley's and one with 4. The one with 4 is in the basement of a K of C hall. It is the only one left. The others closed in 1985ish, and the other in 2016. You could see them competing for bowlers years ago when the newest 24 lane alley opened. Scores and averages went up. People went where they could score the best. I worked in the oldest one and it was quite a thing to watch. The owners hated each other but their kids were buddies.

It was great fun for a lot of people over the years. They were full 7 days a week at on time. The bar was also a happening place over the years. Bowling alleys were also the place for drinking and smoking. Cigars were a thing back then. We had a big case of them to choose from. When the smoking laws changed, and of course the local cops cracking down on DD, that was the beginning of the end for some.

I can imagine the sport today is doing everything they can to promote the sport given it's not so popular anymore, including looking like NASCAR drivers and putting on a show between the competitors. 

I found my old bowling ball in the basement a few years ago. 16lb ball. I have no idea how I could have ever thrown that thing as I can't hardly pick it up now. 😞

Meanwhile my soon to be 14 year old grandson loves the sport. I'm not sure his school has a team, but he's found some sort of league in Livonia where he rolls on a fairly regular basis.

This is after trying baseball, soccer, football, basketball and discovering he has his parents and grandparents sports genes

Posted
31 minutes ago, CMRivdogs said:

Meanwhile my soon to be 14 year old grandson loves the sport. I'm not sure his school has a team, but he's found some sort of league in Livonia where he rolls on a fairly regular basis.

This is after trying baseball, soccer, football, basketball and discovering he has his parents and grandparents sports genes

They have high school teams around here too. That was a big deal and the kids loved it. Just not too many choices to where to go anymore.

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Posted

I remember when bowling was popular in the 70s.  I didn't play enough to get good at it, but it was fun to go once in a while, ugly uncomfortable shoe rentals and all!.  There used to be two alleys in town  - one really big one which everybody went to and another tiny one that looked like somebody's basement.  The big alley is long gone.  The five-lane basement alley is still there - almost 100 years old.  

  • Like 1
Posted
23 hours ago, Screwball said:

I don't remember the year, sometime in the late 70s. I bowled in a pro-am at Imperial Lanes in Toledo, Ohio. You bowled 3 games and a different pro would bowl against you each game. Earl was there, and probably **** too. The big tournament started like on Thursday and would be televised on Saturday. Big stuff. We were before that started.

I was lucky, one guy I didn't know, and the other two were **** Ritger and Dave Davis. Davis was a tall lefty. He shot about 190 on the lane I was on. The next game he moved one pair to the right, made an adjustment, and tossed a 279. Dude had a big ball, and natural like most lefties did. Earl was a machine. So smooth. Made it look easy. It's not.

Those guys bowled hundreds of game a week. Saturday afternoon was about watching the tournament that week. Great stuff. Now a dying and soon to be dead sport. 

You bowled against Earl Anthony? The Earl Anthony? Even I know about him. That’s some impressive stuff, man.

Posted
1 hour ago, IdahoBert said:

You bowled against Earl Anthony? The Earl Anthony? Even I know about him. That’s some impressive stuff, man.

Not exactly against him, but three other pros. He was on another lane. It was a pro-am. Cost maybe 100 bucks to get in. You didn't have to be any good. You got to bowl three games on one pair of alley's and the pros move after each game, so you got to bowl with/against 3 of them. It was a neat deal. They were just practicing for the tournament that started the next day. Earl wasn't too far from me, so I was on the lanes at the same time, but didn't bowl against him.

Some of these guys traveled the country all year, and did this every week. They had motor homes they traveled and lived in. They even had their own ball drilling machine so they could drill the balls they way they wanted for the house they might have to bowl in that week. Ball drilling is wild stuff. 

Posted
2 hours ago, Tiger337 said:

I remember when bowling was popular in the 70s.  I didn't play enough to get good at it, but it was fun to go once in a while, ugly uncomfortable shoe rentals and all!.  There used to be two alleys in town  - one really big one which everybody went to and another tiny one that looked like somebody's basement.  The big alley is long gone.  The five-lane basement alley is still there - almost 100 years old.  

As I said, I worked in a bowling alley. 13 years, a second job. I started a month after I turned 21 as a bartender, but late I moved out to the counter and took care of the lanes.

Rental shoes...Oh boy. We rented shoes, you have to. We had hundreds of shoes behind the counter of different sizes, both men and women. They would pay so much for shoe rental, use them, then return them. That's where the can of spray came in. Disinfectant to spray in the shoes after use. That was probably the worse part of the job. 

It was also some of the most entertaining jobs I ever had in my life. I could write a book.

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Posted
34 minutes ago, Screwball said:

Not exactly against him, but three other pros… 

Still, you’re the only person I know who was in the same bowling alley with him. Just seeing him on TV he seemed to be incredibly focused. 

Posted

Not much of a bowler but when I was 17 I went to an alley by myself to burn some time.  For one game it seemed I could lay the ball down where ever I wanted it.  Scored a 225.  Then I went back to my normal 120.   

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