The possible score will depend on the average setup of the league, i.e 80%of 200, 90% of 200, 80% of 2xx?, etc. From there it will be 5 time the handicap if all team members have max handicap and have a very low average. You do the maths.
Glenn McGrath Shane Warne Brett Lee Stuart Clark Mitchell Johnson Andrew Symonds Simon Katich Michael Clarke Stuart MacGill Ishant Sharma Glenn McGrath Shane Warne Brett Lee Stuart Clark Mitchell Johnson Andrew Symonds Simon Katich Michael Clarke Stuart MacGill Ishant Sharma
Information about the Duckpin Bowling Pins, can be obtained from ONE Existing Manufacturer:
API, Inc.
250 Front St.
Pawtucket, RI 02860
Contact: Peter Lietar (business owner)
Phone: (401) 723-7630
Fax: (401) 723-9787
E-mail: peterlietar@yahoo.com
They still manufacture pins for "Home Alleys"... and have both New and Used Pins for Sale.
Hope that helps you out. Signed: Stan Lee Jay
the back spin you put on the ball, but how do you even ask a question on this site? i cant figure it out :/
You need a manager, who may also be able to fill one of the following duties as well.
You need a person to monitor the front counter, give out lanes, take in money, and answer the phone.
You'll need someone to man the food area and the bar, if there is one.
And at a minimum, you also need a mechanic to keep the machines running.
Depending on how many hours the center is open and how busy it is, you'll probably need additional people for each position, along with a porter (floor person) or two to help keep the place clean, and a waiter or waitress to take customer's food and drink orders. Plus it helps to have additional staff in place to be able to cover for an ill, absent, or vacationing employee.
I work in a 40-lane center, and we have a total staff of around two dozen people, both full- and part-time. Even if you only employ full-timers (and how lucky you'd be if that were the case!) it's doubtful you could cut it down to less than 15 or so... at least, not without risking employee burnout and a very high turnover rate.
If you are a right-handed bowler it is called a Brooklyn strike.
No. Speed and force cause a bowling ball to roll down a lane. Friction may cause a bowling ball to change course on a lane though, and also slow it down.
With the advent of high-tech bowling balls and forgiving lane oil patterns, tens of thousands of perfect 300 games are bowled every year. While a good number of them are bowled by people who have already done so at least once, there are still several thousand first-time 300s bowled each year.
In fact, as of April 2010, 15 people have officially bowled a 900 series -- which is three 300 games back-to-back in the same league or tournament session. (The actual number of 900s bowled is over 20, but only 15 have been recognized by the USBC.)
Fun fact: in duckpin and candlepin bowling, two variations of the sport, no 300s have ever been rolled.
There are three sets of dots on the approach:
Some centers do not use targeting dots at the further levels.
Denver Broncos for the majority of his career and a short stint with the Baltimore Ravens.
bowling, home, pool, concert, disco place, pub, shops, mcdonalds, sizzlers, park, sport places, hairdresser(4 gurly gurls)
tyler selmont.. he has 451 300 games and 213 800 series
There is no bowling term for the 4-7 split because the 4-7 isn't a split. A split has to have at least one pin-width between two (or more) pins. The 4-7 is one half of the dreaded 4-6-7-10, known variously as the Big Four or Double Pinochle. But 4-7 by itself is just a standard and not especially difficult two pin leave on the left hand side of the lane.
It's known as the 'hand span'.
theres actually no set distance you have to get it custom fit for your finger span
The space between the finger holes is called the "bridge".
Span
5-6 inches
If you are a league bowler, the league secretary as well as house secretary can verify your average. There is also a yearbook which is put out every year. If your league is sanctioned then you will have a yearbook average. To obtain a yearbook ask your league secretary or the Front Desk Attendant to help you.
If the pins left standing after rolling one ball are more then one pin apart AND the head (1) pin isn't standing, then it's a split and is designated by an "S" or a circled number or a number of a different color on the scoreboard.
The first 15 feet or so (up to the arrows) is traditionally called the heads, which is short for the headboards. When bowling lanes were made of wood, it was usually made from very hard woods such as maple, because it was the part of the lane that took the most pounding.
The information is not currently publicly disclosed. If you were trying to base the sales information from the Manufacturers, then you would need to contact any manufacturer of bowling pins world wide.
Bowling balls do not have a specific color. Every ball is different and it all depends on the company what color the ball will be. The most uncommon color is probably yellow, there are very few "strike" balls that are yellow, there are a few "spare" balls or plastic balls that are yellow but not many. The most common color would have to be a dark blue, dark purple, or black. Anything on the dark scale would be the most common. That color may be the most common but not by much.