Bowling

Five main variations are found in North America, with ten-pin being the most common but others being practiced in the eastern U.S. and in parts of Canada:[3] Another form of bowling is usually played outdoors on a lawn.(Ex: Bocce Ball, an Italian lawn game) The earliest known forms of bowling date back to ancient Egypt,[5] with wall drawings depicting bowling being found in a royal Egyptian tomb dated to 3200 BC and miniature pins and balls in an Egyptian child's grave about 3200 BC.Remnants of bowling balls were found among artifacts in ancient Egypt going back to the Egyptian protodynastic period in 3200 BC.[8] Around AD 400, bowling began in Germany as a religious ritual to cleanse oneself from sin by rolling a rock into a club (kegel) representing the heathen, resulting in bowlers being called keglers.[9] In 1366, the first official mention of bowling in England was made, when King Edward III banned it as a distraction to archery practice.[11] In the 15th–17th centuries, lawn bowling spread from Germany into Austria, Switzerland, and the Low Countries, with playing surfaces made of cinders or baked clay.In 1530, he acquired Whitehall Palace in central London as his new residence, having it extensively rebuilt complete with outdoor bowling lanes, indoor tennis court, jousting tiltyard, and cockfighting pit.[9] On 29 July 1588, English Vice-Admiral Sir Francis Drake allegedly was playing bowls at Plymouth Hoe when the arrival of the Spanish Armada was announced; he replied, "We have time enough to finish the game and beat the Spaniards too.A circa 1810 painting of Ipswich, England shows a man bowling with a triangular formation of ten pins, before that variant of the sport is believed to have appeared in the United States.[21] In 1819, New York writer Washington Irving made the first mention of ninepin bowling in American literature in his story "Rip Van Winkle".[14][26] In 1846, the oldest surviving bowling lanes in the United States were built as part of Roseland Cottage, the summer estate of Henry Chandler Bowen (1831–1896) in Woodstock, Connecticut.The lanes, now part of Historic New England's Roseland Cottage House Museum contain Gothic Revival architectural elements in keeping with the style of the entire estate.[30] In 1927 Mrs. Floretta "Doty" McCutcheon (1888–1967) defeated Smith in an exhibition match, founding a school that taught 500,000 women how to bowl.In 1908, the now-oldest surviving bowling alley for the tenpin sport was opened in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the basement of the Holler House tavern, containing the oldest sanctioned lanes in the United States.[40] In 1926, the International Bowling Association (IBA) was formed by the United States, Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, and Finland, holding four world championships by 1936.[42] About 1950, the Golden Age of Ten-Pin Bowling began, in which professional bowlers made salaries rivaling those of baseball, football, and hockey players; this ended in the late 1970s.In 1952, the Fédération Internationale des Quilleurs (FIQ) was founded in Hamburg, West Germany, to coordinate international amateur competition in nine-pin and ten-pin bowling.In 1958, the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) was founded in Akron, Ohio by 33 prominent bowlers (including Don Carter, Dick Weber, Dick Hoover, Buzz Fazio, Billy Welu, Carmen Salvino and Glenn Allison) after they listened to a presentation by sports agent Eddie Elias.It attracted name players such as Billy Welu and Buzz Fazio, but failed to sign top star Don Carter.Bowling" Don Carter became the first athlete to sign a $1 million endorsement contract: a multi-year deal with Ebonite International.In 1964, Marion Ladewig, a nine-time winner of the Bowling Writers Association of America's Female Bowler of the Year Award, became the first Superior Performance inductee into the WIBC Hall of Fame.[58] On 27 February 1982, Earl Anthony won the Toledo Trust PBA National Championship, becoming the first bowler to reach $1 million in career earnings.On 1 July 1982, former PBA pro Glenn Allison rolled the first 900 series (three consecutive 300 games in a three-game set) to ever be submitted to the ABC for award consideration.[60] On 22 November 1986, George Branham III (born 1962) became the first African-American to win a PBA national touring event: the Brunswick Memorial World Open in Chicago, Illinois.On 2 August 1991, in Havana, Cuba, tenpin bowling became an international medal-level sport for the first time at the 1991 Pan American Games, and continues to this day.On 2 February 1997, Jeremy Sonnenfeld (born 1975) bowled the first officially sanctioned 900 series of three straight perfect 300 games at Sun Valley Lanes in Lincoln, Nebraska, becoming known as "Mr.Bowling pins are constructed by gluing blocks of rock maple wood into the approximate shape, and then turning on a lathe.
A ten-pin bowler releases his bowling ball.
Playing bowls at Tiverton West End Bowling Club, United Kingdom
Archeologist's drawing of items found in 1895 in an ancient tomb in Naqada, Egypt, thought to resemble the more modern game of skittles . The archeologist conjectured as to the particular arrangement of the items found. [ 4 ]
An early bowling tournament (1905; American Bowling Congress; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.)
Side-by-side duckpin and ten-pin bowling lanes. The duckpin ball has no finger holes, whereas the ten-pin bowling balls of the day (photo circa 1919) had only a single finger hole in addition to a thumb hole.
Bowling alley in February 1940
Automatic lane oiling machines can be programmed to lay down oil patterns of different levels of difficulty. " Typical house shot " oil patterns enable higher scores than the more challenging " sport shots ".
The number of sanctioned perfect (300) games per league bowler has increased substantially since the 1990s. Freeman and Hatfield posit that the increase in perfect games is due to factors such as the introduction of reactive resin coverstocks, asymmetric ball cores, synthetic lane surfaces, and precision lane oiling machines.
Bowling balls with cores exposed, as displayed in the International Bowling Museum
Ten-pin bowling pins shown at different stages of manufacture
Bowling centers maintain bowling shoes for rental to patrons, to prevent damage to lane approaches.
Ten-pin bowlingDuckpin bowlingCandlepin bowlingNine-pin bowlingFive-pin bowlingBowling (disambiguation)United KingdomCommonwealthlawn bowlsUnited Statesstriketen-pincandlepinduckpinnine-pinfive-pinskittlescarpet bowlspétanqueboulesCurlingNorth AmericaCanadaancient EgyptEgyptian protodynastic periodporphyrytrilithonbrecciaalabasterNaqadaHerodotusLydiansAsia MinorRoman EmpireSouthampton, EnglandBerlinCologneEnglandEdward IIILondonFrankfurt, GermanyJan SteenDutch Golden Age paintingsHenry VIIIEnglish lawChristmasWhitehall PalaceMartin LutherFrancis DrakePlymouth HoeSpanish ArmadaDutch East India CompanyHenry HudsonHudson BayNew AmsterdamJames IDeclaration of SportsCharles IBowling GreenBaltimoreHarpers WeeklyIpswichWashington IrvingRip Van Winklebowling alleyRoseland CottageWoodstock, ConnecticutRevolutions of 1848Scottish Bowling AssociationGlasgowAmerican Bowling CongressWorcester, MassachusettsBrunswick CorporationChicagoNew York CityFloretta "Doty" McCutcheonBoston, MassachusettsBaltimore, MarylandEnglish Bowling AssociationW. G. GracePittsburgh, PennsylvaniaQuebec, CanadaLignum vitaeCaribbeanBrunswickColumbia IndustriesVictorian Ladies' Bowling AssociationMelbourne, Victoria, AustraliaHoller HousesanctionedBowlers JournalWomen's International Bowling CongressSaint Louis, MissouriPeoria, IllinoisDetroitAustralian Women's Bowling CouncilSydneyQueenslandDallas, TexasMajor League BaseballABC MastersFédération Internationale des Quilleurs (FIQ)Hamburg, West GermanyHelsinki, FinlandInternational Olympic CommitteeInternational Bowling FederationAmerican Machine and FoundryBrooklyn, New YorkPinsetterSteve NagyDick WeberEarl AnthonyProfessional Bowlers AssociationAkron, OhioDon CarterDick HooverBuzz FazioBilly WeluCarmen SalvinoGlenn AllisonEddie EliasMicrosoftSeattle, WashingtonPBA ChampionshipMemphis, TennesseeProfessional Women's Bowling AssociationNational Bowling LeagueBritish Tenpin Bowling AssociationABC TelevisionSaturday afternoon broadcastAlbany, New YorkSeabeesMcMurdo StationpinsettersPBA Tournament of ChampionsFirestone TireLouisville, KentuckyMexico City, MexicoSports IllustratedEbonite InternationalMarion LadewigAMF Bowling World CupJapan Professional Bowling AssociationTokyo, JapanBPAA U.S. OpenCharlotte, North Carolina1982 Commonwealth GamesBrisbane, Australia900 seriesGeorge Branham III1988 Summer OlympicsSeoul, South KoreaHavana, Cuba1991 Pan American GamesBest Bowler ESPY AwardNational Bowling StadiumReno, NevadaLincoln, NebraskaWorld Tenpin MastersWeber CupRyder CupJason BelmonteKyle Troupperfect (300) gamesLiz JohnsonKelly KulickAMF Bowling CentersRichmond, VirginiaChapter 11 bankruptcyBowlmorInternational Bowling MuseumBowling ballBowling pinplasticquadriplegicDisability classification in lawn bowlsWest WingWhite HouseHarry S. 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