I like how the spinner is wiping his ball off like its going to do anything, and you know damn well his oil track is one small circle. Also no point in them buying anything other than a spareball, might as well use urethane to push oil around for your opponent
@@bobsmith-y3j that to me seemed like the bigger problem. If he could throw it over the same spot repeatedly he would probably have won this, but he was all over both sides of the head pin and through the nose. Its pot luck with no accuracy, you must have that with any style of bowling. Oddly, he was deadly accurate on spares though.
I agree, spare is very important. By the way, there are many tournaments in China that benefit spinner bowlers. Hook bowlers can't bowl well on those patterns.🤷🏻♂️
@@B4S300 In the US, nearly all people who hook the ball can and do "flatten out" their curve/hook to aim for spares with a straighter shot. I suspect China bowlers will eventually get there.
It's really perplexing to read harsh comments about this spinner style from the U.S citizens. One of the comments said those top spinner style bowlers in Asia will average 160 - 170 if they come to compete in 'proper' oil conditions in U.S. I will admit, due to advancement of ball technology, the superior style will be hook. Anytime they can average more than 240+ even in hard condition as shown in PBA Tour, & the upper limit for spinners in the long run is 220+. I've seen one Taiwanese spinner bowler, averaging 230+ on hard condition, when he & I competed in Philippines many years ago. But, to simply dismiss the spinner style is simply pure ignorance. The top spinner bowlers did compete in World Championships hosted in U.S, & won gold medals there. No, the World Championships weren't bowled on 'easy' condition. It's kinda funny though that the more open minded bowlers about the spinner styles are those elite U.S & PBA bowlers who saw 1st hand. It's the same with 2 handed style bowling when it 1st became mainstream. Majority of the elites were accepting, but the scorns came from the average bowlers.
You're dismissing the idea many of us started as children with very unorthodox conventions like the "spinner" and others. The back-up ball is another example. From a physics standpoint you're missing the drive of a ball pushing through the pocket without the ball curving/hooking into it, so you're just smacking the pocket at best. "No drive, no five" -- we all learned that from experience. There's a reason 2-handed bowling is taking off, because you get even more revs and even more drive, typically resulting in more pin action and higher scores.
@@Sparemethestrike Come to the U.S. and you wouldn't average 160 with that style...lol the difficult oil patterns from leagues, to ABT and the PBA would leave you with splits all day long using that style. Scientifically throwing todays bowling balls with symmetrical and Asymmetrical weight blocks renders the design of that ball "useless" by throwing it like that.
@@markkillset5205 it’s a 12 (i think) pound pancake weighted ball. Brunsnick did a series on it if im not mistaken. The thing I love about bowling is how abstract you can be and still have it work. It might not be ideal, but shit, they made it to championship finals against “normal” throwing players, so it obviously works to a degree
@@Sparemethestrike A championship in "china" where bowling isn't as popular and the guy who he bowled against "barely" threw the ball the correct way himself. He had a ton of hand gear on AND bowled left handed which is an advantage on top of it. Also if it was a 12 pound ball that would be even worse! serious bowlers know anything below a 13lb ball that your ball starts to bounce around after hitting the pins and loses the driving force. 13lbs-16lbs is what pros use. Yes, there are more than one style that works like "Belmo" style. But if you look at the rotations on his throws you will see without a doubt how he uses the balls design to his advantage and maximizes the force in his drive. "Spinning" the ball does absolutely nothing, he would have better luck just learning to throw a 1950's -60's straight ball.
The whole spinner shot thing is for the birds. I thought they were supposed to hit the right side of the head pin so all the other pins kinda just fall to the left. That guy was all over the place. A guy in my league throws kinda like that. Slams the ball down at the foul line and just tries to hit the head pin as hard as possible. He’s inconsistent too
As i know, their pocket also on 1-3. There are two spinner styles forward and back, depending on the spinner bowler to get rid of fingers or thumb at the last .
And the funny thing is the Japanese figured out how to strike every time and exactly how to go through the pins, spinning the ball doesn't have the angle needed
The spinner guy never learned how to bowl. I used to see kids throw that way when I was 8. Plus he's got the wrong angle...either a split, leave the 5, or a tight lucky strike. He's just throwing down the middle and hoping for the best. He might as well stand on the very right and shoot for the 1-3 pocket.
It looks like lucky, but they have their way to bowl. I will respect all kinds of bowling styles that can be made in the TV final . Because it wasn't only lucky to get there🙏🏻
this person in the red just throws down the middle what happens happens very little skill used. If he wins its very high percentage of luck. If this person bowled against me an won i would Quit bowling forever.
That spinner bowler bowls like every 6yr old girl I've seen. I guess he thinks throwing 2 balls per frame is advantageous? His odds of striking are very low.