The Swing:
If you take a rather heavy object such as a bowling ball and simulate an underhand throwing motion, you'll notice the movement takes a momentum of its own.
That is the pendulum principle. It is the essence of what makes a good, consistent swing. If bowlers did not have this "free" energy source, we could hardly get the ball down the lane at all.
In terms of weight use a ball that can be swung back and forth freely and comfortably. The ball is too heavy if it makes the wrist flex back or causes the bowling shoulder to drop during the swing. It is too light if you feel you can "manhandle" the ball. The Steps
New bowlers are encouraged to use a four step approach. Later, a fifth step may be added.
Take each step straight ahead. Simple, walking-type steps in a normal heel-toe manner are the goal. Only the last step, which includes a slide, is different. On the step, the bowling shoe hits the approach with the ball of the foot causing it to glide forward. Then the weight transfers back toward the heel as a means of braking to a stop.
The first step should be the shortest. The last step, because it includes the slide, should be the longest.
Think of a metronome beating 1-2-3-4 to keep a steady tempo. For right-handers the step sequence is right, let, right, left. Left-handers follow a left, right, left, right pattern. |