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How To Get Strikes

Everybody likes to make strikes. I'm no exception. Even after many years spent in wheeling that ball down the lanes, I still get a real thrill out of seeing a perfect strike sweep the pins clean.

Strikes serve a dual purpose. First, they bring a bonus because they count ten points each, plus all you can score on your two
succeeding throws. Then, too, they automatically remove any chance you might have had of either missing a spare or getting a split, or
railroad.

Novices, as well as a good many veteran bowlers, are tremendously impressed by strikes, so much so that they neglect the rest
of their game in a dogged effort to chalk up that magic "x" in the corner of the frame set aside for "Marks." Unfortunately, they con-
centrate so much on this phase of the game that their improvement is slowed down, for anyone who develops an accurate spare delivery automatically improves in the strike department.

It's a good deal like a rookie pitcher in the big leagues. When he first hits the majors, he thinks the idea is to impress everyone by striking out every batter. He looks good, too, for a short time.

Then the wily veterans begin to wait him out and to plaster his fast ball to distant places. A few such hammerings and he begins to perceive that strike-outs are only a means to an end—the real idea is to keep the batters from hitting the ball cleanly. When he smartens up a little, he starts "mixing up" his deliveries, tossing a curve, slow ball, a drop, or other deliveries which he may have evolved, and he saves his "fast one" for a real pinch. Then he is on his way to being a winning pitcher.

This is also true of the bowling beginner. When he learns that strikes are only part of the game and not the entire game, he is on
his way to bigger and better bowling. Many beginners think that blinding speed is the way to score strikes. So they get on the approach, back up as far as they can, rush madly to the foul line and let fly with all their strength. Occasionally they do[Chapter Incomplete]

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