Finland’s Mika Koivuniemi, who won the richest first prize
in Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) history and
became the first player ever to reach the television finals
in all four PBA major championships in a single season,
has been selected as 2010-11 PBA Player of the Year.
Koivuniemi, who won the $250,000 first prize in the $1
million PBA Tournament of Champions, also finished
second in the U.S. Open, third in the Bayer USBC
Masters and sixth in the PBA World Championship on his way to winning the PBA
Tour earnings title with $330,040 – the third-highest total in PBA Tour history.
The 44-year-old right-hander, who also won Player of the Year honors for
2003-04, was the Tour’s average leader with a 222.50 average for 292 games
bowled.
The PBA also announced Scott Norton of Costa Mesa, CA, is 2011 Harry Golden
Rookie of the Year and Jack Jurek of Lackawanna, NY, has won the Steve Nagy
Sportsmanship Award for the second time.
Koivuniemi, who lives in Hartland, MI, and Venezuela’s Amleto Monacelli (1989
and 1990) are the only international players who have won PBA Player of the Year
honors. Koivuniemi received 334 votes from his peers, easily out-distancing
runner-up Chris Barnes of Double Oak, Texas (63) and Bill O’Neill of
Southampton, PA. (61).
“It’s really a great honor,” Koivuniemi said. “There are only 10 players who had
won Player of the Year more than once, and to be the 11th member of that group
is really special.
“It was an almost perfect season for me,” he added. “Qualifying for TV for all
four majors is a huge deal. No one had ever done that before, and to win the
Tournament of Champions? That’s the one everyone wanted.”
Norton, a practicing California attorney, won his first PBA Tour title in the
Pepsi Chameleon Championship. He was the only rookie to win a title during the
2010-11 Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour season. Norton received 445 votes; no other
player received more than 15.
Jurek, who also won the Steve Nagy Sportsmanship Award in 2006, also was an
overwhelming choice. His most visible act of sportsmanship came during the title
match of the Bayer USBC Masters where he was top qualifier, and was on the verge
of losing to first-time champion Tom Hess of Urbandale, Iowa. Jurek approached
Hess, who had broken down in tears under the emotion of his victory, and helped
him calm down enough to finish the match.
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