1st Place - Mike Machuga - Storm Virtual Gravity, Storm Hy-Road, Storm Dimension

2nd Place - Bill O’Neill - Storm Rapid Fire

3rd Place - Wes Malott - Roto-Grip Cell Pearl

4th Place - Brian Kretzer - Roto-Grip Grand Illusion

5th Place - Sean Rash - Brunswick Twisted Fury Destruction, Brunswick MaxXX Zone

Women’s Series:

1st Place - Michelle Feldman

2nd Place - Jodi Woessner


 Week 4: Chameleon Championship

Michael Machuga and Michelle Feldman captured the Chameleon Championship at Taylor Lanes, the fourth stop on the Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour.
No. 5 seed Michael Machuga of Erie, Pa. struck out in the 10th frame to narrowly defeat No. 1 seed Bill O’Neill of Southampton, Pa., 209-204, to win his second title in his eight year PBA career.
In the PBA Women’s Series, sponsored by the United States Bowling Congress (USBC), Michelle Feldman of Auburn, N.Y. handily defeated Jodi Woessner of Oregon, Ohio, 199-173 in the championship match.

“I was good through the entire week, then I threw my second ball tonight and my thumb ripped open,” Feldman said. “My goal was to not finish twice in two weeks,” added Feldman.

1st Place - Norm Duke - Storm Hy-Road

2nd Place - Chris Barnes - Columbia 300 Momentum, Columbia 300 Momentum Swing, Columbia 300 Pro Loomed Towel

3rd Place - Steve Jaros - AMF 300 The Code

4th Place - Sean Rash - Brunswick Avalanche Slide, Dexter Men's SST 8 , Brunswick Loomed Towel


 Week 1 - PBA World Championships

Norm Duke became the first player in PBA history to win three consecutive Majors as he captured the PBA World Championship at Northrock Lanes in Wichita, Kan., which marks the first event of the 50th Anniversary Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour season. Prior to today’s win over 2007-08 PBA Player of the Year Chris Barnes of Double Oak, Tex. (259-189), Duke had won the 2007-08 Denny’s World Championship and the U.S. Open.

“That (making history) hasn’t hit me,” Duke said. “I was focused on winning the World Championship. When I heard that, it kind of choked me up. It’s a dream and I want to thank my family for standing by me the whole time.”

Available November 17, 2008

The HY-ROAD™ is the latest release in the Thunder™ Series of balls. HY-ROAD™ is the perfect complement to the 2007 solid ball of the year; the T-ROAD™ Solid.

That’s right. We’ve merged together the T-Road™ Solid and the T-Road™ Pearl and created the new Hy-Road - the Ultimate hybrid. This was accomplished by blending the R2S™ coverstock at 50% Solid and 50% Pearl and then wrapping it around the road-tested Fe Technology core.

Buckle up, because this baby is gonna turn the corner hard in the mid-lane and then floor it to the pocket

Features:

  • Coverstock: R2S™ Hybrid
  • Weight Block: Inverted Fe2™ Technology
  • Durometer: 74-76
  • Flare Potential: 5-6″ (Med-High)
  • Fragrance: Boysenberry

Review by bowlingball.com Staff Member Brian Halstrom:


The one thing I loved about the Storm Hy-Road was the ability it gave me to play different parts of the lane. I can stand further right and play a little straighter. It still allowed me to get through the heads easily while maintaining enough energy down lane. After finding out that I could play straighter with this ball, I moved left about 15 boards to stand at 35. This is where I usually like to throw my Storm Virtual Gravity. Once again, this ball impressed me by turning the corner effortlessly and exploding at the pins, sending messengers everywhere. This is an essential piece in any bowlers arsenal.


Review by bowlingball.com Staff Member John Congdon:


We tested the ball on a fresh typical house shot before our Thursday night league. I was able to control this ball better than most High Performance Bowling Balls. It still got down the lane with a strong backend reaction. This ball is a GREAT companion to the Storm Virtual Gravity. Start your night out with the Virtual Gravity and as the lane condition changes and the Virtual Gravity starts to hook too much, change to the Storm Hy-Road and finish your night strong.

Storm’s next high performance bowling ball, the Storm Virtual Gravity, is going to be released November 17, 2008.

We were privileged to be able to test the ball early and we were very surprised. Read our reviews on the product page at Storm Virtual Gravity.

The new Storm Virtual Gravity is the latest endeavor using the well received R2X™ coverstock and the high performance Shape Lock HD™ (High Density) Core.

Through extensive testing, Storm’s research and development has perfectly matched the surface of the now legendary R2X coverstock to the Shape Lock HD (High Density) to create the Virtual Gravity, the finest Premier performance ball ever produced by Storm. Continue reading ‘Storm’s Virtual Gravity bowling ball - Available 11/17’ »

rhino Rhino Page - ESPN The Magazines Next Athlete

When a sport’s top five players average 40 years of age, it might be time for a fresh wind to blow through. Enter Rhino Page, a 24-year-old bowling phenom who’s taken the PBA Tour by storm. Page, who grew up in San Diego, now calls Kansas home after attending KU in hopes of being a meteorologist. The lefty captured his first PBA Tour title, notched five TV appearances and collected $84,811 last season, all while having to battle through the qualifying rounds as an non-exempt player. Not only did he nab 2007-08 PBA Rookie of the Year honors, but finished ninth in the overall points standings.

“It was a season I could never have dreamed about it was so good,” says Page. “Everything that could have happened, did. It was truly unbelievable. I was just hoping to make the cut every week and get to compete in the top 64 with the best pros in the world. But to have everything happen so quickly, I’m just blown away.”

Right into the eye of the storm.

“WHY I’M NEXT”

“My versatility is a big strength. My versatility and experience on international teams have helped me be successful. I’ve also had great mentors on tour, teaching me things I definitely wouldn’t have figured out on my own, somebody like Patrick Allen—another lefty who’s become a good friend on tour. It’s my goal to be the best lefty ever. Well, actually I want to be the best bowler ever. I have a long way to go but a good start.”
— RHINO PAGE

JUST SO YOU KNOW …

  • He got his nickname from his T-Ball coach because of his intensity on the field. His real name is Ryan, but no one, not even his family, calls him that anymore.
  • Rhino was conceived after his mother had her tubes tied. Talk about determination!
  • He has made it a personal goal to see every state by the time he’s 30. (Only 10 more to go!)
  • Rhino is terrified of snakes, spiders and heights.
  • He tried to grow a killer bowler’s mustache but, “it just doesn’t work out.”
  • Rhino’s favorites:
    • Sports Movie: Major League and Miracle
      (”Kingpin?” It made me laugh but it makes fun of bowling so I’m sort of 50-50 on it.”)
    • Food: Spaghetti
      (”I make sauce from scratch.”)
    • PBA Tour Stop: Medford, Ore.
      (”We look forward to it every year. The hospitality is great.”)

Courtesy of ESPN THE MAGAZINE

Coming June 24, Storm will be releasing their latest addition to their Master Series of balls, the Storm Dimension. Order today to make sure you’re the first one in your center to open your game up to a whole new Dimension!

Technical Specs:

  • Coverstock: R2X Solid Reactive
  • Weight Block: Continuum Core
  • Ball Finish: 2000-Grit Abralon
  • Logos: Dimension, Cube, CG, Storm
  • Flare Potential: 5″ - 6″ (Med-High)
  • Fragrance: Fruit Punch

Check it out and help your fellow bowlingball.com visitors by writing a review or comment of your own.

Golf has oversized drivers. Baseball has corked bats. Bowling has rough balls.

The United States Bowling Congress recently released the results of a two-year study on the science of bowling balls that found that the roughness of a bowling ball, not the shape of its core or the oil on its lane, is more likely to result in strikes and higher scores.

The study was originally undertaken to restore what many feel is a lost balance between engineering know-how and player skill that saw a steady rise in the number of perfect 300 games and the overall rise in players’ scores.

“Over the past 20 years, the technological advancements in bowling…[have] jeopardized the credibility of the sport of bowling,” reads the introduction to the 16 page-long USBC report.

The battle over bowling balls began in June 2005, when the USBC issued new specifications to limit the technology in bowling balls. Bowling ball manufacturers objected to the new regulations.

“They felt the new specifications were kind of made up, that there wasn’t a lot of hard scientific data behind them,” said Paul Ridenour, a researcher at the USBC.

To combat those concerns, the USBC formed the Bowling Ball Specifications Task Force. Staffed with representatives from each ball manufacturer and the USBC, the BBSTF’s goal was to study the science behind bowling and create new science-based ball standards, instead of the original arbitrary standards initially proposed.

Over the next two years the BBSTF tested more than 75 bowling balls at the USBC’s testing facility in Greendale, Wisc.

A robotic bowling ball thrower, nicknamed Harry, threw each ball past 23 cameras linked to a computer. The scientists studied 18 different bowling ball characteristics, from the amount of oil the outer ball coating absorbs to the shape of the inner core, searching for their effect on a ball’s speed, spin and direction.Harry Rough Bowling Balls Lend Unfair Edge

The variable that most affected bowling ball performance, the USBC discovered, was bowling ball surface roughness.

A bowling ball might look and feel smooth, but under a microscope tiny ridges and valleys appear. These are the result of chemicals and resins used to manufacture the balls.

Those ridges and valleys determine how much grip the ball has on the lane. The more grip a ball has, the easier it is for it to curve, resulting in more strikes and higher scores.

Based on data from the study, the USBC made several new ball regulations, the most important of which caps ball roughness at 50 micro inches (1 micro inch is one millionth of an inch), slightly above the average of the balls tested.

The new specifications are ‘”our way of controlling the technology in bowling,” said Ridenour.

The new regulations won’t go in effect until April 2009, but ball manufacturers are already adjusting.

“This definitely has an effect on what could do,” said Steve Kloempken of Storm Bowling Balls.

While Kloempken wouldn’t discuss any specific changes Storm was making to their bowling balls, he reiterated Storm’s support for the new specifications.

“We want player scores to reflect their physical ability and not let the technology outweigh the skill of the bowler,” said Klompken.

Eric Bland, Discovery News

We would love to hear you thoughts about the scheduled changes that USBC intends to make next year. Please feel free to leave your comments about this post for all of our readers to view.

I just received a tweet with a link to an news station in Des Moines Iowa. A blind Iowa man scored a perfect 300 game at the Century Lanes bowling alley on Saturday, The Storm Lake Times reported.

CONGRATULATIONS!!!

Read the complete story here: Blind Bowler Rolls 300


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