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  2. Bowling form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowling_form

    A conventional roll of the bowling ball will enter the 1-3 pocket, and continue to roll from right-to-left (right-hander.) The ball only contacts four pins (1, 3, 5 and 9 pins) to achieve a strike. This type of roll/hit applies to strokers, power strokers and crankers. A conventional bowling form is the most commonly used method in 10-pin bowling.

  3. Bowling (solitaire) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowling_(solitaire)

    Bowling Solitaire is a patience or solitaire card game that uses a single deck standard playing cards to simulate a round of ten-pin bowling. Two completely different games of Bowling Solitaire were created independently of each other. One was published in the book A Gamut of Games by Sid Sackson in 1969. [1]

  4. Hook (bowling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hook_(bowling)

    There are two ways to produce a hook. The first method involves bowling technique. At the moment of throwing the bowling ball, the hand should be behind the ball and where the thumb (for a right-hander) is anywhere between 10-o'clock and 12-o'clock, and the two fingers are between 4-o'clock and 6-o'clock.

  5. Spare (bowling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spare_(bowling)

    The symbol for a spare for most bowling sports is a forward slash mark (/), [1] while the unique vertically-oriented scoring system for candlepin bowling is somewhat different. [ 2 ] Though bowling scores are generally linearly proportional to strike frequency, there is substantial variance based on whether the strikes are consecutive, and ...

  6. Five-pin bowling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five-pin_bowling

    Five-pin bowling is a bowling variant which is played in Canada, where many bowling alleys offer it, either alone or in combination with ten-pin bowling. It was devised around 1909 by Thomas F. Ryan in Toronto, Ontario , at his Toronto Bowling Club, in response to customers who complained that the ten-pin game was too strenuous.

  7. Tenpin bowling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten-pin_bowling

    Estimates of the number of total (league and non-league) bowlers in the U.S. have varied, from 82 million (1997, International Bowling Museum) [83] to 51.6 million (2007, research firm White Hutchinson) [86] to 71 million (2009, USBC), [93] the USBC stating in 2019 that bowling is still the #1 participation sport in the U.S. [94] More broadly ...

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  9. Nine-pin bowling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine-pin_bowling

    Nine-pins was the most popular form of bowling in much of the United States from colonial times until the 1830s, when several cities in the United States banned nine-pin bowling out of moral panic over the supposed destruction of the work ethic, gambling, and organized crime. Ten-pin bowling is said to have been invented in order to meet the ...