A night to forget

My Week 6 bowling (BowlSK)

My last game was what really killed me tonight, as I couldn’t really find anything I liked, but a couple of simple spare misses hurt, too. First game was a 190, but could’ve easily been clean except for a couple more spare misses. Here’s hoping I can regroup next week.

Result: 190-156-144=490
Average (18 games): 178 Last 9 games average: 172
Next week’s AVG+1 score: 546

5 thoughts on “A night to forget

  1. I’m not sure if I’d know what I was looking at. We’re playing two different games, sir. 🙂 You’re shooting ten pin and I’m doing five pin. I have to admit the 742 was a once or twice a year thing. If I’m around 600 for 3 games that’s a good night for me. (In five pin a perfect game is 450). The big thing I’ve noticed is, since I started bowling more than 3 games a week my average has improved each year over the six years I’ve been bowling.

    cheers,
    Gar

  2. Of course…didn’t think five-pin was found anywhere in the US (I did know it’s popular in Canada). I admit I know nothing of five-pin scoring (other than the 450 perfect game score), so I don’t know what sorts of scores are considered standards (in tenpin, you’re doing well if you score better than 700 for a three-game set, and even a 600 series can be considered respectable).

  3. Generally speaking there are as many perfect games bowled in five pin over the course of a year as there are perfect games thrown in ten pin in one day. I don’t think five pin is more difficult. I do think there is more luck involved in five pin. A good pocket shot can yield some surprises. Some of them good and some not so good.
    A professional caliber average would be around 270-285. An exceptional game is pretty much anything over 350.
    I have thrown a few 300’s and a few 740 triples, but I would never enter a scratch tournament playing for cash.
    Here is a link to the Canadian 5 pin site http://www.c5pba.ca/
    There are some lnks there to some national tournaments and a cross Canada tour of five pin alleys in celebration of 100 years of 5 pin bowling.

    cheers,
    Gar

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