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Monday, April 6, 2009
Mirror, Mirror on the WallI once bowled in the U.S. Open. In fact, it was the only PBA Tour stop I’ve ever competed in until
this day. The year was 1992. I was a freshman at UCLA and had just graduated into the adult ranks after an excellent junior
bowling career in Southern California.
I was lucky to make the transition from juniors to the big boys pretty
smoothly, and before long I was enjoying quite a bit of success in some of the local scratch tournaments in the area. I entered
the BPAA’s US Open qualifier at Clairemont Bowl in San Diego. It was a pretty good field if I remember correctly. Some
of the players you might recognize included PBA champs Jim Murtishaw and Mike Devaney, ’95 PBA Rookie of the Year Billy
Myers Jr., and PBA West Region star Marv Sargent and a number of others.
There were two spots available through
the qualifier, which included prize money and an all-expenses paid trip to bowl the big event at Roseland Bowl in Canandaigua,
New York. I ended up winning the qualifier by converting a 3-10 split in the 10th frame of the last game to squeak out a victory
over Chip Pettiford, who earned the other spot. The lanes were pretty tough that weekend…I won with an X-Calibur playing
right down the 1-2 boards and averaged around 210 for two days. I felt pretty good about myself. That would soon change.
When I arrived in New York, I was pumped up to bowl. I didn’t just want to bowl with Walter Ray and company,
I wanted to kick their butts and make the show! In the practice session, I was sure I had a chance. I bowled from the second
they turned on the lights all the way until the shut ‘em off. The lanes were pretty tough, but by the end I’d
figured out a nice little zone to play and I seemed to be throwing a decent number of strikes. I was sure Brian Voss was quaking
in his custom-made shoes when he saw what a good look I had from a few lanes over. Either that or he’d just come in
from the snow (I couldn’t believe there were places where it snowed in April!) and was still a little cold.
Once the tournament started, however, things were a little different. I drew A squad and I crossed with Joe Firpo, Brian
Leclair and Charlie Standish. Mike Aulby was to my left and Steve Hoskins to my right. The lanes were TOTALLY different than
they’d been in practice (they seemed about 20 boards tighter outside of 10 and 20 boards drier inside of that) and the
combination of idolatry and total confusion made me stiffen up like the Statue of Liberty. In the third frame, I got one about
a board wide and picked off the 6-9-10. On the spare I threw a perfect shot and left the bucket. I’d been on a spare
by the way.
After racking up a sweet score of 72 through the 6th, I went up for my shot in the 7th only to be
pulled back off the approach by my belt loops. It was Steve Hoskins telling me that if I double-jumped him one more time he
was going to throw me down the lane. Of course, that settled my nerves right up and I scratched out a nice buck-thirty-something
in game one.
Through the end of the first six-game block I’d put myself safely out of contention with a score
of 180-under or so. When I came back later in the day, I watched guys like Weber and Learn and Williams school the pins for
100 and 200 over blocks. I couldn’t believe anyone could shoot what they were shooting on the junk I’d just bowled
on. Of course, I would later find out that B and C squad were a tad easier (if you think playing 6th to 7th arrow is easy,
that is) but judging by the scores, most of the 450-plus bowlers in the field felt the same way I did.
After shooting
about even on the second shift for day two, I went into the final day with the goal of getting back to even and hoping for
a check. I knew the lanes were a little softer on the late shift (this was back when there were no re-oils between squads)
and I started the block with a shiny burgundy Hammer and shot 230-something. I then lost my line with that ball and went to
a Teal Rhino Pro to shoot two-oh the second game. The third game I started with the front nine and every single person in
upstate New York crowded in behind my pair to see if I could finish off a 300. With a few hundred watching, I hummed one a
half board inside of target with a little extra speed. It entered the pins half pocket and bounced right like John McCain
at a pro-life rally. The 5-8-10 (yes, that is correct) were left standing. Mortification ensued.
But the resulting
263 put me less than double digits under par. Unfortunately, that was as close to par as I would get, limping home the last
three to finish somewhere in the middle of the pack. Walter Ray went on to lead that tournament by more than 500 pins, putting
on a display of touch and accuracy that would lead his fellow competitor to say, “What he’s doing is like dropping
a champagne glass from an extension ladder onto asphalt without breaking it.” It was truly a masterful feat that I carried
with me throughout my college days as the decision of whether or not to go on Tour after college rattled around my brain.
You pretty much know the rest. But the experience definitely taught me how much I had to learn and how great the pros
really are. What they do is truly remarkable.
See you next week!
Contact me at: jason@jasonthomasbowling.com
Click here to check out an interview with Jason Thomas about his book “Livin' The Dream: How to Get What You Want, Find True
Meaning and Save the World by Bowling!” To purchase a copy of the book, click here.
Click here to read “Jason’s TV Recap - Uncensored” on PBA.com.
To check out the latest episode of The Bowling
Show click here.
9:53 am edt
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2009.04.05 |
2009.03.15 |
2009.03.08 |
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2007.12.30 |
2007.12.23 |
2007.12.16 |
2007.12.09 |
2007.12.01

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LIVIN' THE DREAM:
How
to get what you want, find true meaning and save the world by bowling!
AN INTERVIEW WITH THE AUTHOR
Q:
What is the book about?
A: The book is about how the valuable
lessons I learned through my lifelong involvement in bowling saved my life and transformed me from an unhappy cynic into a
blissfully happy optimist.
Q: What made you decide to write it?
A: I had been out of the bowling industry for about two years and I had hit a very low point in my attitude about
life. Through the help of a family member, I was able to rediscover the important lessons about success, spirituality and
connecting with others. I was so excited about this transformation that I decided to write a book that attempts to detail
the metamorphosis while outlining the important lessons I remembered.
Q: How is this
book different from other self-help books?
A: The book is different in a number
of ways. First, I am a very unlikely person to have written a self-help book. If you had known me before I'd written the book,
you'd know precisely what I mean. But that fact alone reveals how strongly I felt about writing it, because I knew that if
I could change for the better, then I felt anyone could do it and that there was a good chance that I could help a lot of
people by describing the process and arranging the pieces in a way that could be easily understood.
The
other key point of difference is the way the book is arranged. The story is structured into three parts, The Method, Some
Cool Tricks and For the Hard-Core Cynics, each of which contain the important lessons I wanted to share. Every chapter is
also broken up with a narrative of my personal story, told for the purpose of detailing my amazing attitude transformation.
It begins with the extremely low point when others felt the need to reach out to help me to remember the important things
in life and goes on to detail the many people that helped me to learn the most important life lessons, including: my childhood
friend Robert Smith, my father (a former President of Disneyland International), PBA Chairman Chris Peters and former PBA
CEO Steve Miller.
Q: Is the book as funny as your blogs?
A: Yes! But there is also a serious side too.
Q: How is your book different from
something like The Secret?
A: My book is similar to The Secret
in that it proposes a method for success, but it is different in a number of ways. First, it is a bit more practical when
it comes to outlining the method for achieving success. The Secret comes very close to describing a similar method
for success in its "Ask, Believe, Receive" mantra. In my book, the first two of these elements ("Ask"
and "Believe") are integral (although I call them "Dream" and "Self-Belief"), but I believe
there has to be some proactive work done to achieve the goal. I call it hard work (which turns a lot of people off, of course)
but to use the model of The Secret, you would simply replace the word "Receive" with "Retrieve."
The best part of all this (and the good news for the folks who don't want to have to work hard) is that once you decide on
what you want and then you begin to believe you can get it, the work is no longer hard, but becomes a fun activity that fills
your days with joy and purpose.
Second, my book spends a significant amount of time discussing
how to deal with your success once you've attained it (and that conducting yourself in this manner before
you reach your goals will actually help you get there even faster). Probably the best way to describe my
book is that it's a cross between The Secret and the late Randy Pausch's book, The Last Lecture.
But I also quote a number of more research-driven books like Malcolm Gladwell's Blink, Sam Harris' The
End of Faith and Steven Pinker's The Blank Slate to help me make my point.
Q: Do you have to be a bowler to like this book?
A: Absolutely
not! Bowling obviously plays a major role (although it really serves more as the setting rather than as the primary focal
point) because of my involvement with the sport my whole life. But the lessons bowling taught me are lessons I could have
learned if I had chosen to be a golfer or a doctor or a writer (oops, I guess that one's a bad example now). My hope is that
the book will find its way into the hands of people who don't bowl and that these people will come away with a new appreciation
for bowlers and the sport of bowling.
Q: What is your goal with the book?
A: That is a simple one. To help as many people as possible to experience the gift of embracing an optimistic way
of life and to help them reap its many rewards.