Sorry to hear about your wrist, Dennis. I hope it doesn't affect you at Nationals.
Last Thursday was our league playoffs, and they set it up like I'd suspected--the six playoff teams were lined up on the 'tough' side of the house, with the best combined score after three games crowned champion. We were furthest left at 5/6, same as in the position round the week before, and (aside from a bit of extra oil on the outside) the lane reacted similarly, so I had the good fortune of being able to game plan using what I'd learned the previous week.
I started with my
Hammer Doom, which is usually too snappy for that house, but with enough speed--starting at (standing)36/(arrows)17--I was able to give myself a bit of room to miss on the inside. I matched our anchor in striking the first seven, then ruined my game with splits in the 8th and 10th, finishing with a 231. Our team put up 870 with handicap, which gave us a 60-point edge over the second-place team.
The second game, I switched to a Target Zone on the right lane (18/8) and struggled with accuracy on both sides. I made my spares, though, and by the late stages of that game our opponents finished digging a groove in both lanes--all four were right-handers with medium hooks. I put the Doom away before the 8th frame and struck out from the 9th (with the Zone) for a 225. Our team's 820 kept us comfortably in the lead.
I spared the first frame in the third game, and the pressure was off after that: our lead-off bowler struck his first eight, and our anchor struck his first ten, so my contribution was no longer necessary. I struck the next four anyway, but the strike in the fifth frame was very lucky--I moved my starting point half a board inside, and the ball basically rolled out. The sixth, I decided not to move in the other lane and left a Greek Church. So in the seventh, I switched to my Groove Urethane (29/14), figuring it would be easier to bounce my ball off the dry spot rather than trying to bowl through it; I tapped the 10pin that frame, moved right one board on both lanes (28/13), and struck out without further drama. My 251 was third-best on the team for that game.
We wound up shooting 972 scratch in the third game (1005 handicap), which I believe was our best game of the year, and won the playoff by nearly 300 pins over the second-place team. I shot a 707 series, my fourth 700 in the league--all in the second half of the season.
We don't have much prize money and most of what we do have goes to points, so we'll only win back about half of our total costs, but it was nice to be on a really good team for a change: this is only the second time I've made the league playoffs in my 'career'. Oh, and I finished with a 202 average, my highest so far.

Our anchor bowler was the team's star performer,
rolling a 259-226-289 774. The second frame of the second game, he rolled through the nose for a 4-7-10, but the 2pin bounced off the wall and took out the 4-7, and the 4 slid and rolled over to the 10pin, which rocked back, turned, rocked forward and went down.
The problem was, this had taken so long, the rack touched the 10pin on its way down, and the computer scored a '9'. We all sat there for a bit, looking dumb, but eventually one of the bowlers from 7/8 came over and told us very authoritatively that if the rack touches a pin, it needs to be set back up according to the rules, regardless of whether it was going down anyway. So, that's what we did...
Our anchor was flustered by this turn of events and missed the spare, and the difference between strike and open cost him 32 pins--and as it turned out, his first-ever 800 series. He tried his best not to harsh our mellow when we were packing up, but I imagine we'll all be hearing about this again at some point...
