Smallwood, a 32-year-old former assembly line worker who was laid off from his
job with General Motors nearly a year ago, won his first PBA Tour title, his
first “major” title, a $50,000 first prize, a two-year exemption to continue his
PBA Tour career and his first chance to bowl in January’s PBA Tournament of Champions.
The title match was a nail-biter until the 10th frame. Malott started with four
strikes, but then ran into carry problems on the right lane. Smallwood stayed
close, striking on five of his first six shots, but then left a 4-6-7 split in
the seventh frame and the tide turned to Malott’s favor. Malott wasn’t able to
put two strikes together in the final frames, however, and Smallwood answered
with another four strikes in a row – including two in the tense-filled 10th
frame – to seal the victory.
“It’s surreal,” Smallwood said. “It has been a wild ride.”
“I was already so nervous in the 10th frame, I told myself I couldn’t possibly
get any more nervous,” he added. “The right lane was my good lane anyway, so I
figured if I threw a decent shot, I’d be OK.”
Smallwood said he always felt he could compete on the PBA Tour, but with a
wife and two-year-old daughter, he had no desire to go on the road until he got
the bad news from General Motors. He then decided to enter the PBA Tour
Trials in suburban Detroit, where a finish in the top eight meant a full year’s
exemption to bowl. Finishing third meant a new career option.
“I wouldn’t be here otherwise,” he said. “Getting an exemption is so hard to
do.”
Ironically, Smallwood recently got a call from the General Motors jobs bank,
offering him a chance to go back to work.
“The lady who called asked me if I wanted to come back to work, but I told her
no,” he said. “She asked what I was doing. I told her I’m now a professional
bowler and that I’d be on ESPN this weekend. At first she didn’t believe me, but
the lady sitting next to her was a bowler, so I wound up talking to her for a
while. Now I think the people at GM are fans.”
Malott defeated Rhino Page of Wesley Chapel, FL, in the first semifinal round
match, 203-191. Malott started the match with four strikes, but gave Page a
chance when he left the 2-4-8-10 split in the fifth frame and opened, followed
by missing a 10 pin. But Page made a fatal error, leaving the 4-6-10 split in
his ninth frame, and Malott closed the door with a spare/strike in his 10th
frame.
Smallwood, who had lost resoundingly in his first TV appearance earlier in the
season, threw a pair of turkeys at Bill O’Neill of Southampton, PA, en route to
a 211-159 win in the second semifinal match. A pair of splits and open frames in
the second and third, and the absence of a double the rest of the way, ended
O’Neill’s title hopes.
The PBA World Championship was the first live ESPN telecast of the 2009-10
Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour season. The Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour’s next
televised event will be the finals of the Pepsi Red, White and Blue Open presented by BOWL.COM on Sunday, Jan. 10, at 1 p.m. Eastern.
The Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour returns to action Jan. 12-17 in the Earl
Anthony Memorial at Earl Anthony’s Dublin Bowl in Dublin, CA. The Anthony Memorial will also include the final PBA Women’s Series presented by
BOWL.COM singles tournament of the season. Malott and Wendy Macpherson,
Henderson, NV, are defending Earl Anthony Memorial champions.
Information on Bowling branching into: Bowling News, The Professional Bowlers, Bowling Center Operation, Bowling Store Operation, and Coaching.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Smallwood Wins PBA World Champioship
Tom Smallwood of Saginaw, MI, hit a home run for America’s unemployed workers Sunday, upsetting reigning Professional Bowlers Association Player of the Year Wes Malott of Pflugerville, TX, 244-228, to win the PBA World Championship at Northrock Lanes.
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