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Thursday, March 20, 2014

New Ball Alert!: Storm Pitch Black

With nearly 25 years of experience manufacturing high performance balls, Storm is the bowlers company. Storm knows what you need, and we are here to help. We are here to help you conquer all types of lane conditions, ranging from the deepest seas of heavy oil to the dry lake beds of the Sahara desert.

Speaking of bowling in the desert, the Pitch Black™ is sure to satisfy even the thirstiest camel. Storm looked back to proven technology of yesterday and developed a new spin on it with the porous and predictable new Controll™ solid urethane coverstock. It’s durable, consistent, and just what you need on rough, wood lanes and shorter oil patterns. It’s midlane roll with tons of control!

The Capacitor™ Core helps regulate your flare potential, making you the ultimate master of your ball motion. Higher rev players and those with slower speeds are going to love this shape as it is a true-rolling masterpiece…pure predictability at its finest. 


The Specs:

- Color: Pitch Black
- Core: Capacitor™ Core
- Coverstock: Controll™ Solid Urethane
- Factory Finish: 1000 Abralon Sanded
- Reaction: Med - Low
- Radius of Gyration (RG): 2.57**
- Differential (Diff): .022**
- ** RG and Diff are based off of 15 lb. balls
- Recommended Lane Condition: Light-Medium Oil

New Ball Alert!: Storm Tropical Breeze (2 New Colors)

With exciting colors and innovative fragrances, the Tropical Breezes are sure to appeal to bowlers of all skill levels. They all feature a proven Reactor™ reactive coverstock material that glides easily through the heads yet reacts down-lane to provide optimum pin carry.

New for 2014, Storm is pleased to add two new color options: Teal/Blue and Orange/Teal, both featuring  vibrant colors and delicious fragrances. But the new Tropical Breeze isn’t just for the novice. League and tournament players will appreciate the performance on drier lanes, too. Why? Because the Camber™ Core’s inverted light bulb shape has real substance. It is one true rolling ball! World wide release date May 13, 2014. 


The Specs:

- Color: Teal/Blue & Orange/Teal
- Core: Camber™ Core
- Coverstock: Reactor™ Pearl Reactive
- Factory Finish: 1500 Abralon Sanded
- Reaction: Med - Low
- Radius of Gyration (RG): 2.57**
- Differential (Diff): .009**
- ** RG and Diff are based off of 15 lb. balls
- Recommended Lane Condition: Low Oil

New Ball Alert!: Storm Wipe Out

Performance comes in all shapes and sized…and price points! The new Punch Out™ and Wipe Out™ widen the scope of ball reaction and hit the pins a lot harder than they will hit your pocketbook!

Why two new balls? Bowlers and lane conditions are different from center to center and day to day. Both balls feature the proven R2S™ coverstock which has helped make the Hy-Road™, among others, famous. Some even use the term ‘legendary.’ Yes, it‘s that good.
And both feature the proven Turbine™ core which create ample dynamics for many players. But, to make sure that Storm has the perfect ball for you no matter what, we are pleased to offer both a solid, textured option in the Wipe Out that will read the midlane and a pearlized, polished choice in the Punch Out that will react later and snap harder on the backend. World wide release date May 13, 2014.

 The Specs:

- Color: Green/Navy
- Core: Turbine™ Core
- Coverstock: R2S™ Solid Reactive
- Factory Finish: 3000 Abralon Sanded
- Reaction: Med
- Radius of Gyration (RG): 2.55**
- Differential (Diff): .038**
- ** RG and Diff are based off of 15 lb. balls
- Recommended Lane Condition: Medium Oil

New Ball Alert!: Storm Punch Out

Performance comes in all shapes and sized…and price points! The new Punch Out™ and Wipe Out™ widen the scope of ball reaction and hit the pins a lot harder than they will hit your pocketbook!

Why two new balls? Bowlers and lane conditions are different from center to center and day to day. Both balls feature the proven R2S™ coverstock which has helped make the Hy-Road™, among others, famous. Some even use the term ‘legendary.’ Yes, it‘s that good.
And both feature the proven Turbine™ core which create ample dynamics for many players. But, to make sure that Storm has the perfect ball for you no matter what, we are pleased to offer both a solid, textured option in the Wipe Out that will read the midlane and a pearlized, polished choice in the Punch Out that will react later and snap harder on the backend. World wide release date May 13, 2014.


 The Specs:

- Color: White/Charcoal
- Core: Turbine™ Core
- Coverstock: R2S™ Solid Reactive
- Factory Finish: 1500 Abralon Sanded
- Reaction: Med
- Radius of Gyration (RG): 2.55**
- Differential (Diff): .038**
- ** RG and Diff are based off of 15 lb. balls
- Recommended Lane Condition: Medium Oil

Monday, March 17, 2014

Monday Morning Morphine

Another weekend passed, the TGIF league not in the books, and another Monday morning that feels short on coffee...

Happy St. Patrick's Day everyone! So today's entry will not be anything special due to an overwhelming pile of real life stacking up. TGIF bowling sucked, work is killing me, and I need to finish 3 articles that I have started writing.


So the bowling tip of the day? Always stretch before your match! With that, this concludes today's post...

Monday, March 10, 2014

Monday Moring Morphine

Another weekend passed, the TGIF league not in the books, and another Monday morning that feels short on coffee...

First off I would like to start by saying that Day Light Savings is a sham. We live in a 24/7 society these days,  why the hell do we have to continue with this farce of an action? I know there are supposedly good reasons to keep it around, but in the grand picture of day to day life, in my humble and crippled mind, it can take a hike. Ok, now that I have that out of my system it's time to move on.

This past Friday in my TGIF 'beer' league, it was once again humbling. It is interesting that I have fewer problems on a Sport Shot than I do a TGIF House league. I can make all sorts of excuses about the number of plastic balls on the lane, carry down, original urethane equipment, or the high rev no thumb bowlers with reactive gear burning up the oil in eight frames. Point is, I need to be good enough for the most adverse conditions and that league certainly provides it. Friday provided those rough conditions and yielded me a weak 598. The interesting thing is how I got there. The first game was going dutch through the 8th frame trading off strikes on one lane and spares on the other. When the 9th frame rolled around, my ball hitched just a bit and went high leaving a 6-7-10, finishing with a 182. The second game featured me trying three different lines and just as many balls hunting for something that would hold and be out of the mess created on the right side of the lanes. A hunt and peck split filled 174 is all I could muster. In a move I hate to make, I grabbed my Hyper Cell, moved way left, lined up with the gutter cap, gripped it and ripped it through the lanes swinging just about the entire playable surface. Adding a dash of loft for good measure. Well if you are the mathematical type, you know that this move worked based on my final series and the previous two games. A solid 242 pulled me within two pins of what would have been a very welcome 600 series. So what did I learn? I learned that I need to force myself to get out of my comfort zone when things are not working out. Plain and simple, so I challenge each one of you out there, when you are practicing take some time to do the opposite of what you would normally try to roll. If you like going down the boards an in with a straighter shot, try moving deep left. If you normally are more comfortable reving up the ball and getting deep, how about moving out to the first 5 boards and breaking the wrist more to create a straighter shot. Bowling is about adjusting against adversity and change, no better way to arm yourself than knowing exactly what you are capable of in a time of need. Try it, you might surprise yourself with what you find.

Since there was no televised PBA action to report on, I watched a bit of the Music City Classic Women's Tournament. Now, all I was able to catch were the final two matches between Vanderbilt vs Fairleigh Dickinson and the finals match featuring Vanderbilt and Arkansas on USBC Bowl TV being streamed on Youtube. However, damn that was some good bowling. It was nice to see some familiar faces from the Team USA trials with their teams fighting for a win. Vanderbilt in the finals looked like a machine on a mission, never really allowing Arkansas to get comfortable in the best of seven match. The nail in the coffin was Vanderbilt going off the sheet with a Baker's 300 to take the point and the tournament win, 4-1 against Arkansas. The wild action however was not restricted to the championship pair. Right next door, as Vanderbilt was going into the 10th frame, Nebraska who finished 5th, also shot a 300 in their final game making the pressure unimaginable for sophomore All-American Robyn Renslow. Watching a 300 right next door, sitting on the front 9 for your own team 300, win it all situation, but with what looked like ice in the veins, Renslow systematically went up and crushed the pocket three times for one of the most memorable finishes of all time. Congrats to the Commodores for a great showing and win at the Music City Classic.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

New Ball Alert!: Motiv Venom Shock

The new solid purple Venom Shock produces a violent reaction on light to medium oil conditions.  It attacks the lane with the proven Gear™ weight block and new cover technology – Turmoil™ MFS (Medium Friction Solid) Reactive, which is a modified version of the more aggressive shell featured on the Covert Revolt.  This core and cover combination provides a smooth yet angular backend motion that strikes with devastating continuation. World wide release date March 28th, 2014.



The Specs:

- Color: Purple/Purple Solid with Orange/Green NeoMark™
- Core: Gear
- Coverstock: Turmoil™ MFS Reactive
- Factory Finish: 4000 Abralon Sanded
- Reaction: Med
- Radius of Gyration (RG): 2.48**
- Differential (Diff): .034**
- ** RG and Diff are based off of 15 lb. balls
- Recommended Lane Condition: Light-Medium Oil

Monday, March 3, 2014

Monday Morning Morphine

Another weekend passed, the TGIF league not in the books, and another Monday morning that feels short on coffee...

As I say hello to Monday, I wish the I could just get an I.V. of coffee. It's cold, my back hurts, and I just cannot wake up! At any rate, Monday is here and I need my 'morphine', so here we go.

So TGIF didn't happen this week due to a scheduled break, so at the last minute, I floundered on entering a local tournament. I had myself completely talked out of it since I didn't want to focus on the tourney and then turn around and get on a plane Monday (today) for meetings in New York.  Roll on Saturday morning and I find out that my meetings had been canceled. Going through my list of do it or don't do it, I decided not to roll the tournament because my mind just wasn't prepared for it. With my mental game being a bit shaky right now, the last thing I wanted to do to myself was spend a few hundred on a tournament that I didn't have a chance to money in. And it's not even really about the money, it's about the fact that I would look back on a poor showing and just become increasingly pissed off at myself. Next time... and I will be ready.

This week PBA League action featured the Silver Lake Atom Splitters and the Dallas Strikers dueling it out for a slot into the semifinal round. Chris Barnes for the Atom Splitters took on Norm Duke of the Strikes in the head to head match worth one point. Early on in the match, Duke just could not generate enough pin action to trip out the 10 and quickly fell behind Barnes who could only strike. Duke, the only player/manager of any PBA League team, quickly benched himself for the 14lb rolling Rhino Page, who is recovering from wrist surgery. The move wasn't to try to win the match, but to get an understanding how that 14lb ball and his repaired wrist would carry on the deck. What turned into a game where Page was pacing Barnes for a possible 300, it was not to be. Barnes went high in the 10th and left the nasty 4-6-7 split for a decisive 265-208 win.

In the second match, it was a fight for survival. Neither team could take over and just run away. The Atom Splitter's pair of Barnes and Bryon Smith and the team of Duke and Mike Machuga of the Strikes showed the viewers why spares and high pin count matter so much in competition. Trading punches of spares, sprinkled with a rare strike or two, it came down to the 10th frames with Smith needing to 9 count to tie or a strike to win. The ball off his hand looked a bit soft and proved to be just that as it hit the pocket leaving an 8 count for the one pin loss, 195-194.

With the points tied up 1-1, the triples match became the momentum match to swing into the finals which would be critical in taking the day. The Atom Splitters sent up a power house trio made up of Dom Barrett, Wes Malott and Tommy Jones, with the Strikers represented by the technicians of the game, Rhino Page, Amleto Monacelli, and Dave Wodka. Today was a day where power won out, strike after strike from the Atom Splitters prevented the Strikers from every really being in the match with a commanding 213-184 win.

In the final match, the Dallas Strikers had to win the Bakers game to snatch the win away from the Atom Splitters. Using the full roster of Duke, Machuga, Monacelli, Wodka, and Page against Barnes, Smith, Barrett, Malott, and Jones, both teams knew what was on the line. Like a slow rolling ball, the Strikers took up until the 7th frame to really get rolling full speed, which in a single game is a tough situation to recover from. However, it looked like the bowling gods were looking down and flashed the pins with a messy 2-8-10 split left by Jones in the 10th frame, cracking the door open just enough for a chance to pass the win over to the Strikers. Page and his 14lb ball stepped into the 10th frame needing to sheet out in order to pull out a one pin win, but today was not to be his day. On his first shot, the southpaw left a stone 7 pin giving the match and the passage to the semifinals to the Silver Lake Atom Splitters. 205-185.

Next up is the final elimination match up show casing the Philadelphia Hitmen lead by Bill O'Neill versus the Pittsburgh Jack Rabbits captained by Finalnd's golden bowling boy, Osku Palmeraa on March 23rd. It's going to be a good one!