Amateur,
Thanks for all the help with the
Lane Masters balls. I did notice some tiny gaps in it but I'll have to
deal with them when the time comes. And thanks for the tip about drilling the Buzz stronger. If I go with the
Lane Masters arsenal I have posted then I'll definately keep that in mind.
Dennis,
Thanks for the
Lane Masters link that helped out a lot. I really like their presentation of their bowling balls. It's the best so far. And I did see your name flash up with the 300 game so congrats.
Satyuros
First, pretaining to your point about how every company doesn't carry every type of ball. This is true. But to be a better bowler, wouldn't be easier to adjust to a line of balls that a company makes in order to fit those balls. By knowing what to expect from a company's line of balls it enhances your game. Because now you actually have to think about what you're doing, why you're getting that ball, how you are going to throw it, what line to use, what conditions to look out for and what conditions it excels on. Instead of having 11 balls for different comapny's to use, why not have 3 from the same company that fit your game, and you know will all deliver instead of the old guessing and checking.
And although your "forcing" example could happen. In the realm of reality, it is very unlikely.
As for purchasing a balls, why go with the multi-company route. There's so much reasearch involved and then places like this get repeated threads about "What ball should I get?" Pluss you get blasted with all the marketing about the newest balls and you should get them becuase they are the newest and the best on the market. Why do that when there are perfectly good older balls that work just as well i.e. the
Ebonite Turbo X.
Why not go the one company route? That way it narrows the choices and allows you to find an exact fit for what you are looking for, very little reasearch and you have the price. Have you looked at any of the prices for the
Roto-Grip balls that I chose. The most expensive was the
Cell at 104 dollars. All the others are considerably cheaper and will probably deliver just like the
Cell does.
Besides isn't a smart buy when you purchase a ball from a company that you are bowling exclusively from and know what to expect because you know how those balls work (granted there may be variations between the converstocks but you still know what to expect i.e.
Lane Masters balls have thicker coverstocks and are a bit stronger than other bowling balls). And it fits your game becasue you know all of the things to expect from that brand of ball.
Essentially, you aren't forcing the ball to change at all. You are forcing yourself to be a better bowler. I'd rather be a versatile bowler with 3 balls than a versatile bowling ball buyer with 11 balls.
I am a strong advocate of letting the ball do all the work (you can ask a few of the guys on here, they know). But when you really need so many balls to make your game work, what's that say about your ability. So you have the money to go out buy a new ball and get it drilled to match the conditions you're bowling on. I've seen those types of bowlers fail time and again. As a matter of fact, I had two on my state team, and I still beat them with my BW solid (in all three categories), and they had 6-7 balls to work with and couldn't get anything going.
Besides those small gaps in the arsenal are for learning experiences so that you can be versatile, hence perform better.
Anyways, now that I've written a
book, let's get back to the topic at hand. I need opinions and experiences with either
Roto-Grip balls or
Lane Masters balls. And advice on how to have the most versatile arsenal with either of those company's. If everyone thinks that both are sound arsenals then all that's left is for me to choose and slowly start syphening out the balls that I have with new ones and going from there.