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Short filmTranscript
00:00Closed Captioning by Kris Brandhagen.com
01:00Rolling is a wonderful game enjoyed by people of all ages all over the world, but to really
01:19enjoy the game, you need to get started with the proper techniques, and on this program,
01:23I'm going to teach you those techniques.
01:34Most bowling centers are equipped with rental shoes and balls that are available for your
01:39use.
01:40If you really enjoy the game to its maximum, you should get your own pair of bowling shoes
01:44and your own bowling ball.
01:45You can go to the pro shop in the bowling center, they have a professional ball driller that
01:49will fit you properly so that the ball feels very comfortable on your hand, you enjoy the
01:53game to its maximum, and you score at your best.
01:55There's been a great deal of controversy on what a bowling ball will actually do, harnesses,
02:00the porosity of a bowling ball, by porosity I mean the roughness of the shell, what causes
02:05things to happen with different kinds of bowling balls, whether they be rubber or plastic.
02:09Now there are different benefits from using rubber than there are from using plastic.
02:12Rubber ball normally, when it goes down the lane, doesn't react quite as much to the surface
02:17of the lane.
02:18The plastic ball will react to whatever is there immediately.
02:21If it hits a slight dry area, it grips immediately and moves.
02:24If it hits a slight wet area or oily area, it tends to skid more.
02:32There are three basic approaches that bowlers use, the three-step approach, the four-step
02:40approach, and the five-step approach.
02:43What I'm going to use for instructional purposes to teach you the proper approach is the four-step
02:47approach.
02:48Now, for the proper distance from the foul line, for your beginning stance, you start
02:53here facing away from the pins, take four normal steps, one, two, three, four, another
03:01half a step to give you enough room to slide at the foul line when you go into your last
03:05step.
03:06Here, then you turn around, face the pins, and you're in your proper stance to get started
03:11to the foul line.
03:13Now, we get the bowling ball, return to that starting position, very important.
03:21Stand with your knees slightly flexed and relaxed, your upper body straight.
03:25Hold the bowling ball about waist high, out in front of you like this, with most of the
03:29weight in the opposite hand, so that this relaxes your bowling hand.
03:32You can then swing the ball freely from the shoulder.
03:35The proper position for your fingers and your thumb in the bowling ball, now, before you
03:39go into your release, is to have them between three and six o'clock on the dial.
03:43This gives you a good release position, a good rotation on the ball when it goes into the
03:47pins, for maximum strike power.
03:50Now you're ready to roll the ball, remember to be completely relaxed, push the ball straight
03:54out with the first step, two, three, four, and you strike.
04:01We'll reverse the picture and see that right-handed.
04:08Okay, let's go back and talk a little bit about spot bowling, what it really can do for you,
04:18what the reasons for it are, is because as I travel around the country and teach beginning
04:22bowlers, even some advanced bowlers, they come up to me and one of the common questions
04:26they ask is, why should I spot bowl?
04:28What good does it do me?
04:29And I'll give you a couple of good reasons what it's all about, and first I'll give you
04:33a little history of what exactly the rangefinders are, or as we call them, the arrows.
04:37What they do for you.
04:38Now the history of the rangefinders was that before they were invented or put on the lanes,
04:43which is about 50 years ago, people had to pick out a dark or a light board on the lane
04:47and use that as their target, which is very difficult when you're standing 15 to 18 feet
04:51behind the foul line and beginning your approach, especially in the old days when they had very
04:55poor lighting.
04:56When the new modern centers now, with the ultra modern equipment, it's much easier to pick
05:01out your target and you can pick a spot between the rangefinders or actually use the
05:05rangefinders.
05:06Now what the spot bowling really does for you is you pick your target on the lane.
05:10One of the rangefinders, normally the second arrow for most bowlers, especially beginners,
05:14is that it gives you a target that's only 15 feet away rather than a target that is clear
05:19down the lane 60 feet from you, which is as far as the head pin is from the foul line.
05:23It's very difficult to hit a target that far away consistently.
05:26It's very easy by comparison to hit a target that's only 15 feet away.
05:33All right, now that we've made a good approach, remember, we paced off that extra half a step
05:42so that we could get the slide in there.
05:44You must slide for good balance.
05:47Balance is very important.
05:48Your knee must be bent, shoulders parallel to your target line, and right directly over your knee so that you can extend to your target with a good high follow-through for maximum roll on the ball so it drives into the pins to get those strikes we all really want to get.
06:02Let's go back and talk about relaxation.
06:03The most important ingredient in the game of bowling if you're going to do it well is to be relaxed.
06:07By being relaxed, remember when we talked about bending the knees a little bit so you're relaxed in your stance.
06:12To start with, keeping the weight of the ball in the opposite hand so that you can relax your shoulder, let the ball swing free from the shoulder with a good relaxed swing.
06:20A good relaxed arm swing creates a constant speed in the ball so the ball will do the same thing every time when you release it.
06:26Now, also, with a good relaxed arm swing, you're going to get to the foul line at the same speed, which keeps your feet at a constant pace for good balance at the foul line.
06:33Let's talk about releases.
06:35You've heard of the back-up ball, you've heard of the straight ball, and maybe the hook ball.
06:39Now, most people that score well in the game of bowling use a hook ball.
06:42A straight ball isn't used because the ball has a tendency to go down the lane and deflect away from the pins.
06:47It's very difficult to get good strike power out of a straight ball.
06:50The same thing is true with reverse hook.
06:52Okay, now I'm going to demonstrate the releases for you, all three releases.
06:56You can see what I mean by them, and here we'll start with the straight ball.
06:59Now, the straight ball is released with the hand going straight through the center of the ball in this manner,
07:04the ball rolling off the end of the fingers.
07:06It doesn't hook.
07:07Either way, it just goes straight into the pins.
07:08Now, watch closely, and I'll show the straight ball to you.
07:11Nice and relaxed.
07:16Straight to the pins.
07:17Right through the back of the ball.
07:19Notice the ball doesn't hook.
07:23It goes straight to the pins.
07:25And again, because the ball isn't hooking, it's not driving into the pins.
07:28It's difficult to strike with that.
07:30The next release I'll show you will be a back up ball.
07:33Now, the back up ball, or reverse hook, is thrown in this manner.
07:36With the inside, the elbow going to the inside of the ball, in this, which creates reverse hook, the wrist turning this way,
07:42the ball rolls in the opposite direction, or rotates in the opposite direction.
07:46Okay, here we go with the reverse hook, or a back up ball.
07:49I'll use the same type of approach as far as footwork goes, just rotating the elbow to the inside and the wrist in the opposite direction.
07:57The ball rotates the opposite direction.
08:01Sometimes it hooks.
08:02That one didn't.
08:03Okay, now we'll throw the normal delivery that most bowlers will use for maximum striking action.
08:09That's a hook ball, or the ball that goes out of your hand and hooks into the pins for maximum drive and maximum striking power.
08:16Again, nice and relaxed.
08:21Knees slightly bent.
08:23And a good follow through.
08:26That's why you throw a hook, because that's how you strike.
08:33And that's what we all want to do.
08:35We want to get those good high scores, with a good proper release, good speed, nice and relaxed.
08:39Enjoy the game the most that way.
08:49That's exactly what roll on the ball is.
08:52Different kinds of roll.
08:53What causes them.
08:54Different releases that cause different kinds of rolls.
08:56And where they actually track on the surface of the ball.
08:59You'll need to know what these kinds of rolls are naturally if you're going to talk to someone in a pro shop and say,
09:04Well, my ball rolls over here, and I want you to grill the ball so it's balanced to help that particular kind of roll.
09:09Or whatever it happens to be.
09:10So anyway, it's a good idea that you know what the nomenclature of the different things are and what causes them.
09:15And we'll start with the lowest roll, of course, there is.
09:18And that's a spinner.
09:19And you can see the holes in the ball here.
09:21A spinner would track way over here.
09:24Way over here.
09:25And that's caused by the bowler getting to this point in his release and rotating his hand in this direction.
09:30Just like that.
09:31Right on top of the ball.
09:32And the ball spins.
09:33Goes down the lane, spinning on a very small surface of the ball.
09:36Very hard, difficult type of release to control.
09:40And it really doesn't give you good pin action in the back.
09:43You can't make very many good adjustments with it.
09:45It's, I don't think, a very good release at all.
09:47The next one, very basically, is what we call a three-quarter roll.
09:51A three-quarter roll is called a three-quarter roll because it rolls over three-quarters of the surface of the ball like this.
09:57As you can see, it comes about an inch to an inch and a half from the thumb hole and approximately an inch and a half to two inches from the thumb.
10:05So it would be in this area of the ball through here.
10:08This is a three-quarter roll and what I consider to be best type of roll for most lane conditions.
10:14It's the kind that will give you the most pin action, the most carry on the back end, and it's the easiest to make your adjustments with and be consistent.
10:21Now, this type of roll you get by having your hand in this position, slightly to the right of center, your fingers.
10:28Okay?
10:29As you hold the ball like this, keep it there all the way through your swing.
10:33As you start to release the ball, your thumb comes out, your wrist rotates, not your arm, not your arm.
10:38You always keep your elbow straight through the center of the ball, but your wrist will rotate up to this position.
10:44That creates a good, firm release, three-quarter roll, the kind that gets you the most pin action.
10:50The next standard type release or the other one that some players use still today is called a full roller,
10:56where the ball rolls through the center of the ball.
10:58And it's called a full roller because it runs right through the center of the ball, obviously.
11:02It runs between the fingers and the thumb hole in this manner.
11:07This is a good roll. It rolls well, but normally it's very difficult to play from anywhere inside the second arrow with this type of roll,
11:14because the ball doesn't make a good enough move on the back to get good hit action, good pin action for you.
11:20So I, again, think this one isn't really a good type roll to have, the full roller.
11:25I suggest that all of you really work hard on trying to throw a good three-quarter roll.
11:30Again, the three-quarter roll, when it hits the pins, makes the pins go out sideways.
11:34They go out flat like this. And as the pins go out flat like this, you can see what happens.
11:38It spins the pins, gives you more carry. If the pins go out standing up like this, as they would with a full roller,
11:44again, the roll that goes between the thumb and fingers, if they go out standing up, obviously you're not going to get the same kind of pin action.
11:50You're going to leave corner pins, four pins aren't going to trip, things of this nature.
11:54Again, you can play more angles with a three-quarter roll. You make more adjustments with a three-quarter roll.
12:00You get more pin action out of the pins with a three-quarter roll. Just obviously the best way to go.
12:11What we're going to get into now is one of the most important parts of the game of bowling, being capable of making spares.
12:16Very few of us can strike every time we throw the ball down there. In fact, I have never met anybody yet that could.
12:21So what we're going to learn how to do at this point in the program is cover those spares that you will leave from time to time,
12:27no matter what they are and what variety they might be in.
12:35All right. Now, as you can see, the pins that I've left standing are very commonly for a lot of bowlers
12:41because they get a little bit quick with their feet or make a little bit of a bad shot.
12:44And they leave, for example, what I've left here, which is the one, three, six, nine. Very commonly.
12:50Sometimes you leave a nine with this. Sometimes you leave just a one, three, six.
12:54Anyway, the proper way to make this spare, I'll show you now, is to move slightly with your feet
12:59to the left. For me, as a left-hander, to the right, if it was on the other side of the lane, for a right-hander.
13:08So I'm going to move three boards to my left with my feet, which makes a six-board difference down there,
13:15which will make the ball gloss over the head pin and cover the spare on the other side of the head pin.
13:21For the right-hander, it will look like this.
13:29Now, here we go. We've got a spare that is very common.
13:31Right-hander, left-hander bowler doesn't make any difference.
13:34We all have the same spare leaves.
13:36Now, again, light in the pocket. I've left the three, the five, and the six.
13:41Part of the bucket. Now, if I'd left the nine pin with it, they'd call it the bucket, the three, five, six, nine.
13:46The right-hander is the two, four, five, eight.
13:49The same spare, just on the opposite side of the lane.
13:51Now, again, as I showed you when I converted the one, three, six, nine, I move slightly to my left with my feet,
13:58using the same target that I used for my strike ball on the lane, the second arrow.
14:02I want the ball to come into this area, just like a pocket shot, and take out the three, five, six.
14:09Slightly to the left of my normal strike position, maybe just an inch or two, using the same target on the lane,
14:16make the ball go right between them, and you cover your spares.
14:23That's ten more pins on your average right there.
14:25This is a very common leave for both right-handers and left-handers.
14:29For the right-hander, it's the five, seven. For the left-handers, it's the five, ten.
14:32This is caused when the ball is a little bit behind the head pin, or laid into the pocket, as we call it,
14:37or maybe the ball isn't driving sufficiently enough.
14:39You didn't really get that good lift on the ball, and they could drive in and take the five pin out,
14:43so you've left with the pocket split. Good old five, ten, or five, seven.
14:48Now, we're going to show you how to make this spare.
14:50We'll show you how to stand. We'll give it a try right now.
14:58Again, because you want the ball, because the five pin is farther down the lane,
15:02you want the ball to go farther down the lane, or at a wider angle before it breaks to the pin.
15:07It's farther down the lane than the pocket, is what I'm saying.
15:10Now, so I'm going to stand with my feet, about two boards to the right of my normal strike ball,
15:17and use my same strike target, making the same release as I would to throw a strike ball,
15:22nice and relaxed, and hopefully we'll make the five, ten.
15:31Let's look at that from the other side.
15:34Do it right, just like we showed you there.
15:36Those spares get just as easy as the one pinners.
15:46Because of the hard surface and the oil moving around,
15:49the dominant shot, again, is a lot of turn on the ball and the late break,
15:53very late break, because of the light pins flying as much as they do.
15:57The pins are going to pretty much stay the same, I believe.
15:59Even though there is a lot of movement throughout the industry to try to get heavier pins
16:03with a lower center of gravity and things of this nature,
16:06I really truly believe that the pins aren't going to change that much,
16:08but the lane surfaces definitely are changing.
16:11And what we're going to come back to, I think, in the future,
16:14is a type of surface that's going to be reminiscent of the 50s, 1950s,
16:20where the ball, if you could roll the ball and stroke it and keep it, say,
16:25on a direct line to the pocket with a forward roll,
16:28that's the kind of roll that I think five, ten years from now
16:31is going to be the dominant type thing, the stroke shot, as we call it,
16:34instead of the overpowering crank shot.
16:36I think you're going to see that come into effect more and more.
16:39So I think that the bowlers today, if they're in that stage
16:42where they want to become an advanced player and they want to get to the point
16:45where they can have the kind of shot that's going to be a winning shot in the future,
16:48should not try to learn to crank the ball so much,
16:51especially the younger players coming up, the junior bowlers, people of this nature,
16:55and the bowlers that are in their late teens, early twenties,
16:58that may think in five, six years they'll be ready to bowl in a lot of tournament play,
17:02or maybe they're looking for possibly to become a professional bowler,
17:06whether it be a man or a lady.
17:08I think they should start learning the kind of shot that is a control shot,
17:12the kind of shot that you can make the ball do different things on the lane surface,
17:15break at a different point, farther down the lane, closer to you,
17:19still keep the ball in play in a very small area of the lane,
17:22two or three board area, without making the large adjustments,
17:26not expecting the big break on the back end,
17:28but it's a kind of a control game that takes a lot of mental discipline,
17:32takes a lot of, let's say, practice to learn the different releases,
17:36make the ball break at a different point in the lane.
17:38Some of it you can do with the surface of the ball,
17:40some of it you can do with the balance of the bowling ball,
17:43but it's much better if you can do a lot of it yourself with your hand positions,
17:47and a lot of it yourself with the speed on the ball,
17:50and the number of revolutions you actually apply to the ball
17:53to make it break at a different point on the lane.
17:55If you combine those things,
17:57a very easy thing to remember,
17:59that revolutions plus speed equal the break point on the lane.
18:03Now, again, going back to the winning shot in the future,
18:06which I feel will be the winning shot in the future,
18:09will be the forward roll with a slight break on the back.
18:12A break of only three, four, five boards,
18:14not the huge break that the players are employing today,
18:17but the break that is controllable,
18:19this is going to be the dominant shot of the future,
18:21again, in my opinion.
18:23Okay, now what I'm going to do here
18:33is demonstrate a few different releases,
18:36basically using the area around the second arrow on the lane.
18:40As I mentioned before,
18:42I feel that the shots of the future may be
18:44that you have to stay within two or three boards
18:46of a certain area on the lane
18:48and be able to control that area.
18:49In other words, make it playable.
18:51Not look around for something that you can't play
18:54or you can't find,
18:55but you might come in there and find out
18:56that you can only play one area of the lane
18:58as you cross the center.
18:59If you're bowling a tournament or bowling league
19:01and you're crossing lanes,
19:02you may have to stay around one part of the lane.
19:04So I'm going to show you some different releases,
19:06different ball speeds,
19:08different break points on the lane
19:09to make different things happen using the same bowling ball.
19:12The release itself is a reaction
19:15caused by the position of the feet at the foul line.
19:18In most cases, a player,
19:20if his feet are ahead of the ball,
19:22as I mentioned earlier,
19:23has a tendency to really crank the ball.
19:25In other words, his foot is stopped sliding.
19:27He's there.
19:28The ball's still back here.
19:29He's going to crank.
19:30Doesn't have much choice.
19:32It's either crank it or drop it.
19:33Same thing holds true with the other extreme,
19:35the stroker.
19:36He's here.
19:37His foot is stopped.
19:38The ball is in this position.
19:39All he can do is follow through.
19:40First of all,
19:41we'll start with the cranker,
19:43the bowler who plants his foot
19:45and gets a lot of revolutions
19:47and a lot of turn on the ball.
19:48Now, it doesn't really matter where this ball ends up,
19:50but just watch basically my foot work
19:54and you'll see how far ahead of the ball
19:56I'll be at the foul line.
19:57You'll see that my foot will be stopped.
19:58The ball will still be back here
20:00and I'll have to pull it through
20:01and come around the side
20:02to get a lot of revolutions on it.
20:04Now, here we go.
20:05I'll do it a little slow so you can really pick it up.
20:21See how I have to pull the ball through?
20:23The number of revolutions on the ball
20:25has increased by three or four
20:27from my normal shot going down the lane.
20:29It's a larger break.
20:30The ball obviously will hit harder,
20:32but you can see how much harder that is to control
20:34than what the shot I think you should learn to play
20:36is a good, firm stroke shot.
20:38Now, I'm gonna demonstrate very quickly,
20:41again, what I feel is a good type roll.
20:47This is what we call a stroke shot.
20:49In fact, I think what I'll do
20:50rather than do that right now
20:51is go into just the opposite extreme of the crank,
20:56whereas the ball and the foot get there together
20:58and all you can do is follow through.
20:59Now, watch closely.
21:00I'll do it again slowly so you can see it.
21:02I'll get there together.
21:09So all you can do is let go.
21:11You can't really get a good lift on the ball
21:13because they get there at the same time.
21:15My foot stopped and the ball was already here,
21:17so all I can do is let go.
21:19A lot of us have that problem
21:20because we just won't take the time to walk,
21:23get ourselves set, and get the ball
21:25in a proper position at the point of release.
21:27And this is done by getting up there with a good push away
21:30on your first step.
21:31If you do that with a good push away,
21:33you'll find yourself in position not only to get the lift you need,
21:36but the slight turn you need to make the ball finish into the pins.
21:39Not a lot of turn, but also, not the other extreme, no turn at all.
21:44Now, I'll demonstrate for you now.
21:46The position I think you, ball and foot should be in at the point of release
21:51so that you can get the ball over the foul line with a good lift
21:53and a slight turn on the ball.
21:55Here we go.
21:56Good follow through.
22:09That way you get a good reaction on the back end,
22:12and you can move the ball around by doing this.
22:15As I mentioned before, farther down the lane, closer up,
22:18get different things to happen without changing your timing,
22:21without changing your ball speed that much.
22:23You can change your release by changing the position of your wrist,
22:27which is what I do, and I think that's the way to do it myself,
22:30or you can do it by changing the point of your release.
22:32In other words, where it's at in relationship to your feet,
22:35which is very difficult to do.
22:36So I think, and what I would teach you today,
22:39is that if you keep your wrist firm for your normal shot,
22:42and if you want to cut revolutions down, get less revolutions,
22:45make the ball go a little farther when you want to cut your speed down,
22:48then you want to open your wrist.
22:50In other words, bend it back slightly away from the ball,
22:53so that it's a weak, what we call a weak wrist position.
22:55This gets you in a, obviously, and I'll show you quite easily,
22:59this gets your hand in a position where,
23:02instead of being in a firm, straight position as this is,
23:05you can see that if I go this way with my wrist, which is a weak wrist,
23:09my hand isn't as far around the ball.
23:12The farther around the ball your hand is, obviously,
23:15the more revolutions you can put on it.
23:17So if I weaken my wrist up, I cut down the number of revolutions.
23:20By doing this, I can change my speed to a slower speed,
23:23still keep the ball in play.
23:25If I want more revolutions, obviously, I've got to cup the ball slightly,
23:28get around it farther, around that round surface farther,
23:31so that I can apply more revolutions.
23:33If I do that, I've got to be careful to keep my speed firm,
23:36because the ball will break right off the lane if I don't keep my speed up.
23:40All right, I'm going to demonstrate a cutting down of revolutions with a weak wrist.
23:44Watch the ball, it won't break much, it'll go fairly straight,
23:47and I'll slow my speed down, and it still won't hook very much.
23:50Here we go, an open wrist or a weak wrist position.
23:54Basically, it'll be almost a straight ball.
23:56As you can see, my hand is very open, very weak position on the wrist.
23:59And the ball just rolls end over end, very little break.
24:06Now, the reason I could throw that kind of shot, and what I would use it for,
24:09is if, for example, the back end, in other words, the pin area of the lane,
24:12the ball is breaking very sharply.
24:15It's very hard to control the ball if it's breaking very sharply,
24:18so what you want to do is cut down the break on the back
24:20by creating a weak wrist position to keep the ball in play that way.
24:23The back end, when it's breaking very sharply, it's dry,
24:26it creates a friction you need for the ball to drive into the pins.
24:29You don't have to apply it.
24:30You can do this kind of a shot here.
24:32Again, staying in the same area of the line.
24:35Keeping the ball in play, the lane itself will create the carry for you.
24:39Now, on the other hand, let's say there's a lot of oil on the back end,
24:42and I want the ball to finish a little harder.
24:44To the other extreme, you cut your wrist.
24:50And when you cut your wrist, obviously, as I mentioned,
24:53you're farther around the ball surface.
24:55You're going to get more revolutions.
24:56For more revolutions, you have to keep your speed up a little bit.
24:59You don't want to soften it up.
25:01So to do that, watch what happens with the ball now.
25:03As I cut it a little bit, and you can see more revolutions,
25:09the ball breaks.
25:10If you don't keep your speed up, it breaks through the center of the head pin.
25:13When you do practice, make it pay off.
25:23Don't waste those shots.
25:24Don't just go out there and try to throw strikes.
25:26Anybody, once they get lined up, if you're a reasonably good bowler,
25:29can keep throwing on today's conditions, especially strike after strike,
25:32on one particular lane.
25:34Now, that's really not practicing.
25:36That's just showing off for yourself and maybe some friends that might be there.
25:39So let's make it, when you go out and practice, let's try to learn something.
25:42Always try to learn something.
25:43Always try to learn something.
25:44Never throw the ball that you don't learn something.
25:46Every time you let go of that bowling ball,
25:48whether it's a good shot or a bad shot,
25:50you can learn something by how the ball reacts on the lane.
25:53So never just throw the ball and turn your back on it.
25:55Now, when you go to practice, if it's possible,
25:58try to get at least a pair of lanes.
26:00If you can, try to get four of them.
26:02Take two to four bowling balls down there with you.
26:05All of you, if you're really serious about your game,
26:07are going to have at least a couple of bowling balls,
26:10maybe three or four that are balanced a little different,
26:13or they might have a different ferocity or a different kind of hardness in the shell,
26:17things of this nature.
26:18Take all of them down there with you.
26:19Use them all.
26:20Play various angles, things of this nature, using two to four lanes.
26:24Four lanes is what I think is ideal because you can use,
26:27try to get to the center if possible.
26:29Give you a little different shot on each lane.
26:31It's very easy for them to do, especially in the morning before the leagues get in there
26:34and things of this nature, or late at night after leagues.
26:37You can go down there with a towel and take a little oil off one area,
26:40add a little oil someplace else,
26:41and now you've got four different lane conditions you can practice on.
26:44As you practice across the four lanes,
26:46remember to try different angles, try different ball speeds,
26:49try your different surfaces on your bowling balls,
26:51see which one reacts the best for you that you're comfortable with,
26:54and then start moving around, learning to play with the different swings,
26:58the different approach patterns, so that you can become a more,
27:01shall we say, a whole bowler instead of someone that can only play one shot.
27:05I hope you've enjoyed learning the fundamentals of the game of bowling.
27:08I'm sure if you practice what you've seen here,
27:10you'll learn to be a better bowler, your scores will go up,
27:12you enjoy the game more, and that's what it's all about.
27:14Now, I'm going to leave you with that thought.
27:16I really appreciate you taking the time to watch this particular program.
27:19I hope you've enjoyed it.
27:20I've enjoyed making it for you.
27:22And in the future, all the best of luck in your bowling.
27:25I know you're going to be a good player.
27:26Pay attention, and you'll learn, and everything will work out fine.
27:29I'll see you on the tour someday, maybe.
27:52Now, please marry me lastly.
27:55�� girl
28:02Hello, I'm Dawn Morris, President of Morse Video.
28:23And I'm George Morris.
28:25Thank you for watching our program.
28:27We hope you found it helpful and fun to watch.
28:29If you'd like to broaden your horizons, here are some of our other programs to help you
28:34help yourself.
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