Showing posts with label Professional Bowlers Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Professional Bowlers Association. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

PBA and The CW Network Announce 2026 Tour Schedule

 PBA and The CW Network Announce 2026 Tour Schedule


2026 PBA Championship Sundays on The CW Schedule 

All broadcasts will air live at 4 p.m. ET on The CW Network

  • February 22: PBA Players Championship – Arlington, Texas – International Training and Research Center
  • March 1: PBA Pete Weber Missouri Classic – St. Peters. Mo. – Bowlero St. Peters
  • March 8: U.S. Open – Indianapolis, Ind. – Royal Pin Woodland
  • March 15: PBA Illinois Classic – Decatur, Ill. – David Small’s Victory Lanes
  • March 22: PBA Indiana Classic – Fort Wayne, Ind. – David Small’s Pro Bowl West
  • March 29: USBC Masters – Allen Park, Mich. – Thunderbowl Lanes
  • April 5: PBA Ohio Classic – Columbus, Ohio – Columbus Square Bowling Palace
  • April 12: PBA New York Classic – Rochester, N.Y. – ABC Gates Bowl
  • April 19: PBA Roth/Holman Doubles Championship – Portland, Maine – Bayside Bowl
  • April 26: PBA Tournament of Champions – Fairlawn, Ohio – AMF Rivera Lanes
Additional PBA events will air later in 2026 on other platforms. The PBA World Series of Bowling and PBA Commissioner’s Cup will air on CBS and CBS Sports Network, while the Storm Striking Against Breast Cancer Mixed Doubles and the Storm Lucky Larsen Masters will air live on streaming platforms, including BowlTV.

Friday, May 2, 2025

THE CW NETWORK AND THE PBA STRIKE A DEAL FOR MULTI-YEAR BROADCAST AGREEMENT SET TO LAUNCH IN 2026

 APRIL 30, 2025 PROFESSIONAL BOWLERS ASSOCIATION


The CW Continues to Grow Its Sports Portfolio by Adding Ten Live Professional Bowling Events Per Year

BURBANK, CA – The CW Network today announced it has entered into a multi-year broadcast agreement with the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA). Beginning in 2026, the CW will air ten action-packed live professional bowling events annually in dedicated, two-hour windows on consecutive Sunday afternoons. The CW’s national reach and consistent scheduling will amplify bowling’s accessibility to both casual and devoted fans.

“We are thrilled to partner with the PBA and add live bowling to our CW Sports lineup,” said Mike Perman, Senior Vice President of Sports, The CW Network. “Bowling is one of the leading participatory sports in the country, so we are eager to introduce the top players and exciting competitions its professional circuit brings to new audiences nationwide.”

Since its inception in 1958, the PBA’s title events have been a mainstay on American television, defining the legends of the game. Today’s PBA stars, including 3-time Player of the Year EJ Tackett of Indiana, 7-time Player of the Year Jason Belmonte of Australia, and major champions Kyle Troup and Anthony Simonsen, bring electric and diverse playing styles, with personalities to match. When the best bowlers in the world face off in the most prestigious events in the sport, big strikes, seemingly impossible spare conversions and high drama are guaranteed.

“We are excited to become a part of the CW’s growing commitment to sports broadcasting,” said Lev Ekster, President of Lucky Strike Entertainment. “The CW’s commitment to consistent, high-visibility broadcasts offers a game-changing platform to grow our fanbase, celebrate the immense talent and big personalities of our athletes, and bring a fresh energy to one of America’s most beloved sports.”

The PBA joins a growing roster of sports on The CW, including the NASCAR Xfinity Series, which has drawn over one million viewers per race for the first ten events of the 2025 season. The CW will also broadcast another season of ACC and Pac-12 college football this fall, as well as three more Grand Slam Track weekend events in 2025 and AVP professional beach volleyball on Saturdays this summer.

A full viewing schedule will be released at a later date.


About The CW Network

The CW is America’s fifth major broadcast network and reaches 100% of US television households. The CW delivers 15 hours of primetime entertainment programming per week in addition to nearly 400 hours of sports per year as the broadcast home to ACC football and basketball games, Pac-12 football games, WWE NXT and NASCAR Xfinity Series. The fully ad-supported CW App, with more than 100 million downloads to date, is available for free to consumers on all major platforms and is home to the latest episodes and seasons of The CW’s primetime programming and a library of entertaining film and television content for on-demand viewing. The CW is 75%-owned by Nexstar Media Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: NXST), a leading diversified media company and largest CW affiliate group. For more information about The CW, please visit www.cwtv.com.

Friday, January 19, 2024

Meet the Gen Z Hothead Burning Up Pro Bowling (from Rolling Stone Magazine)


As bowling pushes closer to cultural relevance, 27-year-old Anthony Simonsen’s dynamic personality and record-shattering talent are tailor-made for him to take the PBA to the next level and become its new face — whether he likes it or not. 

Photograph by Mikayla Whitmore

JAN 19, 2024 9:01 AM

 “Simo’s in this?”

Pfft. Fuck.”

It’s 3 p.m. on a Friday in late July, and it’s 114 degrees outside. I’m 15 minutes off the Las Vegas Strip at South Point Casino, eavesdropping as I follow two twentysomethings up an escalator — I’m here to meet the guy they’re scared of.

South Point is what you would call old Vegas. There are no celebrity chefs or pop-star residencies here, the blackjack odds are better than they are on the Strip, the buffet line is long, and the ornate red and gold carpet will make you dizzy if you look at it for longer than a second.

Up the escalator, past the seniors choking down cigarettes in the hallway outside of the cavernous bingo hall is the South Point Bowling Plaza, a 60-lane center with stadium seating and a wall of massive scoreboards. The Plaza routinely hosts Professional Bowlers Association and Professional Women’s Bowlers Association title events.

The PBA schedule winds down over the summer though, so today is not one of those days. Today’s tournament is the Vegas Valley Open Team Challenge hosted by the Amateur Bowling Tour, and tucked away at the far end of the center on lane 54, Anthony Simonson is Steph Curry in a slide sole pulling up to a pickup run at the park, asking who’s got next. “This is like the fourth time I’ve bowled in two months,” he says with a smirk. “You like Korean barbeque? I’ve got a great spot.”

Simonsen, a.k.a. Simo, is a 27-year-old high school dropout and, depending on who you ask, currently the best bowler alive. Raised in Mesquite, Texas, and now living here in Vegas, Simonsen is coming off one of the most successful years in PBA Tour history, the first bowler ever to finish in the top 10 in every tournament and crack the top four in every major. Simonsen took home three tournament wins in 2023, including a back-to-back victory at the Masters, one of bowling’s five annual major tournaments, outside Detroit, culminating in a viral celebration that saw Simonsen flex a pair of Buffs — Cartier Buffalo Horn sunglasses, the holy grail of Motor City fashion — on live TV. The $100,000 Masters title added to Simonsen’s seven-figure PBA winnings total, and made him the youngest bowler ever to win one, two, three, four, and now five majors.

The PBA’s most polarizing pro, Simonsen has a well-deserved reputation as a hothead. In addition to his accomplishments this season, Simonsen also led the tour in fines, a distinction he’s held for the past few years. Over his career, Simonsen has punched himself in the head midgame; separated scoring computers from their stanchions; kicked ball returns; been turned in to tournament officials by friends on tour for slamming balls on the return, swearing, and generally “acting like an asshole”; told Fox producers that if they wanted him to stop cussing on live TV they should take his mic off; and routinely complained about the quality of bowling-center equipment and the competition format.

As bowling pushes closer to its next high point on the roller coaster of cultural relevance, with a 15 percent bump in PBA TV ratings this year, ink drying on a two-year extension with Fox, a new trading-card deal, a growing parasocial presence online, and wait lists for social and competitive leagues across the country, Simonsen’s combination of brash attitude, youth, and dynamic personality built from equal parts intensity and apathy, paired with his record-shattering talent and explosive creativity is tailor-made to take pro bowling to the next level. Love him or hate him — and there’s plenty of hate, just check the comment sections — Simonsen is the new face of the PBA whether he likes it or not.

SIMONSEN WASN’T PLANNING on bowling today, never mind in an amateur tournament, but his friends Ari, Jessica, and JP need a fourth for their squad, so here he is, waiting until the last five minutes of practice to change out of his Air Max 97s into his Dexters and throw a couple of practice shots to test the lanes. They’re hooking more than he expected, but a quick switch to a ball called Pitch Black gives him more control.

By the end of the first game, Simonsen has found his strike shot, put on a wide, toothy grin for at least 10 photos with fans, and irritated at least a few bowlers, one of whom walked over to see what the fuss was about, spotted Simonsen, and threw up his arms in exasperated frustration, his body language saying it all: “If he’s here, why bother?” Simonsen is used to it. He’s been getting that reaction for as long as he can remember.

When Simonsen was six, his dad, Benjamin, heard about a charity bowling night hosted by a local Dallas sports-radio station and reached out to the organizers, putting his son up as a challenger against DJ Dan McDowell in the final match. Simonsen beat the shock jock so badly that at the next year’s charity event, McDowell replaced the first-grader with a blind woman. “I needed to win one,” McDowell later said on air.

Simonsen’s parents worked too much and never made enough money. Benjamin sold diesel parts, and Simonsen’s mother, Teresa, worked at a grocery store. If Simonsen wasn’t in school, the bowling center played babysitter. Lifelong league bowlers, Teresa and Benjamin spent most nights at the bowling alley, either on the lanes or at the bar.

“It became, ‘We’re in the bar, he’s bowling, everyone in the bowling center knows if we need something here’s where we are, and if we need him that’s where he is,’” Simonsen says.

Between Jupiter Lanes, Plano Super Bowl, and Rowlett Bowl-a-Rama, Simonsen clocked more hours on the lanes as a kid in East Dallas than he did at school or home. He jokes that he was fired from his first job, restocking rental shoes, at the age of five because he got in trouble with his kindergarten teacher. Simonsen’s parents were already struggling to discipline him at home, so like with everything else in their lives, they turned to the bowling center for help.

During the summers, Teresa would drop elementary-aged Simonsen at Jupiter Lanes on her way to work, and then stop by after her shift for Miller Lites and too many cigarettes. Simonsen’s brother Bobby, 10 years his senior, Teresa’s son from a previous relationship, and a gifted competitive bowler in his own right, slowed and eventually stopped bowling as he developed a years-long struggle with opioid addiction.

Simonsen’s childhood was spent running around the centers, hanging out behind the counters and annoying older bowlers. He would set up shop one lane over from the house locals, tournament bowlers 20 years his senior who spent their nights bowling pot games for cash, and practice nonstop, catching rides home at two or three in the morning when the older guys were too tired to throw or ran out of money.

By 12, Simonsen was entering tournaments against bowlers on the nation’s best college teams, including Wichita State — the Duke basketball of college bowling. Two-time PBA-major winner Kris Prather, then a bowler at Wichita, remembers it clearly.

“We’re bowling with other college guys, and I’m bowling next to this kid who’s bowling two-handed — he was one of the first two-handers I saw,” Prather tells me. “He’s striking like every single shot and walking around like he owns the building. I wish I had that kind of confidence when I was that age.”

At 15, five months into his freshman year, Simonsen dropped out of high school. Well, he never formally dropped out — in Texas, you have to be 17 with a parent’s signature to do that — he just stopped showing up.

“There’d be days we’re driving to school, the gas gauge is broken, and it’s, ‘Well, we put five bucks in yesterday, but then we drove around some,’ so I don’t know if they can drive me there and then pick me up later,” Simonsen says.

Plano Super Bowl used to be open 24 hours, seven days a week, and by his 16th birthday, Simonsen was working the 9 p.m.-3 a.m. shift, learning how to fix every inch of the center and sleeping on couches at friends’ houses or in guest rooms at the houses of older bowlers. He still stopped home a few times a week, but he wasn’t living there anymore. He gave up his amateur standing and moved up to adult competition at 16, bowling in as many tournaments as he could, his entrance fees staked by the same bowlers he’d grown up practicing next to — for a percentage of the winnings in return, of course.

Simonsen’s parents split for good when he was a teenager. Teresa moved in with her mother, and Benjamin was laid off, failed to find another job, and fell into what Simonsen describes as a deep, lasting depression. When his dad was evicted from their family home, Simonsen moved him into an apartment and started paying his rent with tournament winnings. Simonsen continued to support Benjamin financially until his death in 2021.

Driving his dad’s truck without a license, Simonsen started racking up tickets when he was 15. “If there was a bowling tournament within seven hours, I was bowling the tournament, there’s no question about it. I gotta figure out how to get to the tournaments or else I’m not gonna make any money.” Eventually, he started using his bowling winnings to buy cheap used cars. After a disagreement over his constant travel and odd hours with a manager at Plano, Simonsen took a warehouse job stocking shelves and filling orders at Classic Products, a national bowling distributor.

In 2015, shortly after Simonsen’s 18th birthday, his mother passed away unexpectedly. “I think she worked herself to death,” Simonsen says, and then, without flinching, “I get my work ethic from her.”

In December of that same year, Simonsen won his first PBA Tour title, missing Norm Duke’s record for youngest title winner by two days thanks to a months-long delay between the event’s qualifying round and finals. The next year, at 19 years old, Simonsen won the 2016 Masters, taking home a giant novelty check for $50,000, another five-figure incentive check from his ball sponsor, Roto Grip, and a place in the record books as the youngest major-title winner in PBA history. He got his first driver’s license shortly after.

“Bowling is what I’ve got. It’s what I know,” Simonsen says. “If I didn’t have bowling or the bowling industry, I don’t know where I would be.”

Two-handers are known for their power, but Simonsen has found success with finesse.

SIMONSEN HAS ALWAYS BOWLED with two hands. Two-handers are generally known for their power, but Simonsen has found success with finesse. He attacks the lanes with more versatility and guts than anyone on tour, throwing straight up the right side of the gutter one game, and lofting it over the left gutter cap with a boomerang hook the next, tricking the ball like a Cy Young winner, taking gambles with equipment and lane play that would never even occur to most pros.

Listed online at a generous five feet nine, with a stocky build and a baby face hidden behind a bushy beard that adds a few years, Simonsen’s five-step approach to the foul line drifts slightly to the left. On the third step, he does a quick shrug, cocking his forearms like a shotgun as his upper body drops near parallel with the lane. His fourth step plants with power as the ball swings behind him. His fifth step slides to the foul line as his coiled body springs forward, uncorking like a jack-in-the-box as the ball explodes out of his hands.

PBA Commissioner Tom Clark describes Simonsen as a “genius” without a single weakness in his game, besides his famously short fuse. When it comes to playing the lanes, though, Simonsen’s creativity, bag of tricks, and ability to adapt are not just unmatched, they’re downright outlandish. When he was 21, Simonsen won the first PBA title using a backup ball — that is, bowling a reverse hook to roll the ball clockwise on the left side of the lane instead of his natural counterclockwise from the right. He bowled backward. In the championship game, Simonsen defeated lefty Matt Sanders 216-194 on his own side of the lane.

Oh, yeah, and thanks to a drunk prank the night before by Kyle Troup, a 10-time PBA title winner famous for his Bob Ross-like Afro, Simonsen was without his own gear and bowled the second half of the tournament, including the title match, in a pair of borrowed shoes two sizes too big. “He does things that other people do when they’re goofing off to win [PBA] events,” Clark says.

In an era of professional sports defined by helicopter parents, forced specialization, and private coaches for preteens, Simonsen’s self-taught savant — and the daring imagination that comes with it — is a breath of fresh air.

ON THE WAY OUT of the surprise trip to South Point, Simonsen stops for two more photos, joking with a thirtysomething bowler decked out in full Raiders gear who freaks out and fumbles his words in front of his girlfriend as soon as he sees Simonsen.

Simonsen moved to Vegas in 2020 for an opportunity to own and operate the bowling alley inside of a video-game-themed bar on Fremont Street called the Nerd. Flying home between tour stops, he spent the past three years rehabbing and fixing the lanes and running the center. Earlier this year, Simonsen sold his portion of the Nerd because of a clash of personalities with his business partner.

The departure gave him more time to work at Classic’s West Coast warehouse in Henderson, Nevada. Working the same job he had when he was 17, Simonsen clocks in at $15 an hour to unload skids of bowling balls, redesign shelving units, and help build fully functional pin decks and lane machines inside the warehouse. Technically, Simonsen has been employed by Classic for the better part of a decade. When he put in his two-weeks notice at Classic’s Texas warehouse in 2015 to join the PBA Tour full time, national sales manager Jimmy Land, a Dallas local who, along with his wife Jan, has known and cared for Simonsen “since he was knee high to a grasshopper,” never took him off the payroll. Simonsen’s bowling family has always been there.

A number of PBA pros have started spending more time in the gym lately, rejecting the beer-and-bratwurst image of pro bowling’s past and treating their athletic careers like, well, athletic careers. But Simonsen gets his strength training in at the warehouse, moving pallets of bowling balls. His deep knowledge of bowling equipment, learned over years working at Plano, Classic, and the Nerd, at times contributes to his frustration on the lanes. Professional tournaments played in the same centers that host unlimited Wednesday specials just a few days earlier sometimes result in off-center racks and clogged hand driers. Simonsen is often the first and loudest person to call out PBA officials. “When he does complain, I always say we need to listen to him because he’s usually right, I’ll admit that,” Clark says. “The time and place he goes about expressing it might not always be the best, but he’s usually not wrong.”

Like John McEnroe, Tiger Woods, Serena Williams, and pro bowling’s most famous face, Pete Weber, Simonsen’s temper and the intensity that it takes to win are two sides of the same coin. “There are times where because I’ve got a little heated I’ll bowl better, I’m more focused on what I’m doing,” Simonsen says. The PBA has been on an upswing lately, but the tour still has a long way to go to even sniff the money at stake in sports like golf and tennis. At this point, pro-bowling stadiums are still a pipe dream. With the Nerd out of his hands, Simonsen needed a new place to practice in Vegas. South Point is the popular choice for local PBA and regional pros, but Simonsen has found a home at the Compound.


MIKAYLA WHITMORE FOR ROLLING STONE

Twenty minutes off the Strip, past the sun-soaked strip malls and the empty gravel lots that will eventually become strip malls, the Compound is a mansion owned by professional poker player Chris “Huni” Hunichen. The property has a home gym and indoor basketball court, indoor pool, outdoor pool complete with grotto, and a separate covered hot tub, and that’s all before you get in the house. Inside, past the home theater, where we stop for five minutes and watch Hunichen lose $42,000 gambling on an early-morning UFC fight live in London, next to the kitchen and behind the gigantic fish tank are a pair of bowling lanes. Simonsen and Hunichen have become fast friends since his Vegas move, and after Simonsen sold his portion of the Nerd, Hunichen suggested he start practicing here.

We bowl a couple of games, Simonsen kindly humoring my futile yet insatiable desire to test my talent against the best. He beats the brakes off me, bowling over 240 rolling his pink spare ball backup on the left side of the lane. The display is equal parts humiliating and awe-inspiring. On the way out, another UFC fight is finishing up, so we sit for a second and watch Hunichen win back all 42 grand plus more.

When we talk about Simonsen’s childhood and teenage years, he speaks about his parents with reverence and understanding. Life is hard and they tried their best, even if their best didn’t always cut it. Simonsen has never lacked for chosen family though; he drives his girlfriend Morgan to work every morning, and they recently sent their dog Snoop to a trainer to fix his behavioral issues. And he still regularly sees the faces that helped raise him in Dallas bowling centers. Land and his wife still run things at Classic, and they visit the Henderson warehouse often. Simonsen’s brother Bobby has been clean for years, he’s back bowling seriously, and they are each other’s biggest fans. They talk often, and Bobby boasts a photorealistic tattoo of Simonsen raising his PBA Finals trophy on his leg, with the words “Bowl to Kill” written on his arm as a tribute to his brother. “I’ve finally started to slowly transition out of survival mode,” Simonsen tells me. “To, I don’t want to say find more enjoyment in life, but to know ‘Cool, I’ll be all right,’ and now I might actually sit down and try to set some goals — like shit to look forward to, because before it was just day by day. I think I had just been stuck in that mindset.”

On the drive back to the Strip from the Compound, I ask Simonsen if he has any goals for the 2024 PBA season. He thinks about it for a second. “Not really,” he admits. He doesn’t care about Player of the Year, he just wants to win more. I ask about long-term plans. “The Hall of Fame,” but he knows the résumé is already there, so now he just needs the 20 years on tour to be eligible, and that should come in due time. Hell, he’s already coming up on 10 years in, and he’s only 27. Other than that? “Just keep striking.”

From Rolling Stones Magazine To access the entire article and pictures click:  https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/anthony-simonsen-profile-1234928747/

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

2024 PBA ON FOX SCHEDULE



PBA Players Championship - Bowlero Northrock in Wichita, Kansas
Monday, Jan. 15 at 5 p.m. ET on FOX - Finals

U.S. Open - Royal Pin Woodland in Indianapolis, Indiana
Saturday, Feb. 3 at 4 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Elite League
Sunday, Feb. 4 at 4 p.m. ET on FOX - U.S. Open Finals

PBA Classic Tournaments

PBA Illinois Classic - Bowlero Mount Prospect in Mount Prospect, Illinois
Saturday, Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. ET on FS1
PBA Missouri Classic - Enterprise Park Lanes in Springfield, Missouri
Sunday, Feb. 18 at 1 p.m. ET on FS1
PBA Indiana Classic - Dave Small's Championship Lanes in Anderson, Indiana
Saturday, Feb. 24 at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1
PBA Delaware Classic - Mid County Lanes and Entertainment in Middletown, Delaware
Sunday, Mar. 3 at noon ET on FS1

PBA All-Star Weekend - TBA
Friday, Mar. 15 at 6 p.m. ET on FS1
Saturday, Mar. 16 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FS1
Sunday, Mar. 17 at 1 p.m. ET on FOX

PBA Jr. National Championship - Bowlero Northrock in Wichita, Kansas
Saturday, Mar. 23 at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1

USBC Masters - Suncoast Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada
Saturday, Mar. 30 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Elite League
Sunday, Mar. 31 at 1 p.m. ET on FOX - USBC Masters Finals

PBA World Series of Bowling XV - Thunderbowl Lanes in Allen Park, Michigan
Saturday, Apr. 6 at 1:30 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Elite League
Sunday, Apr. 7 at noon ET on FS1 - PBA Elite League
Sunday, Apr. 14 at noon ET on FS1 - PBA Roth/Holman Doubles Championship
Monday, Apr. 15 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Cheetah Championship Finals
Tuesday, Apr. 16 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Scorpion Championship Finals
Wednesday, Apr. 17 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Shark Championship Finals
Saturday, Apr. 20 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA World Championship Semifinals
Sunday, Apr. 21 at noon ET on FOX - PBA World Championship Finals

PBA Tournament of Champions - AMF Riviera Lanes in Fairlawn, Ohio
Saturday, Apr. 27 at 4 p.m. ET on FS1 - PBA Elite League
Sunday, Apr. 28 at noon ET on FOX - PBA Tournament of Champions Finals

PBA Playoffs - Location TBA
Saturday, May 4 at 10:30 p.m. ET on FS1
Sunday, May 5 at noon ET on FS1
Sunday, May 12 at 6:30 p.m. ET on FS1 - Semifinals
Sunday, May 19 at 2 p.m. ET on FOX - Finals

PBA Elite League Elias Cup Playoffs - Bayside Bowl in Portland, Maine

Sunday, Sept. 15 at 5 p.m. ET on FS1 - Quarterfinals
Monday, Sept. 16 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - Semifinals
Monday, Sept. 16 at 9 p.m. ET on FS1 - Semifinals
Tuesday, Sept. 17 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1 - Finals

PBA 2024 Schedule and New Events

 


Click to Learn More

Friday, October 27, 2023

New From Storm Bowling The Journey™ And !Q Tour 78/U

 

NEW PRODUCTS

JOURNEY™

Signature
STREET DATE:  11/17

Click to see Chris Barnes roll the new Journey


Click to see Stu Williams roll the new Journey:



Click to see Chris Via roll the new Journey

!Q™ Tour 78/U

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STREET DATE: 12/15




Thursday, May 18, 2023

2023 PBA SUPER REGIONAL SCHEDULE

 


2023 PBA SUPER REGIONAL SCHEDULE

PBA First State Doubles Classic presented by Anchor Buick/GMC
Mid County Lanes & Entertainment Center (Middletown, DE)
June 28-30
First place - $4,000 ($5,000 added to prize fund)

PBA Rita Justice Classic presented by Bally's Dover Casino Resort
Mid County Lanes & Entertainment Center (Middletown, DE)
June 30-July 2
First place - $6,000 ($10,000 added to the prize fund)

PBA Kremer Roofing Central Classic
Community Lanes (Minster, OH)
August 8-10
First place - $4,000

PBA Bowlerstore.com Classic presented by Moxy's Xtra Pair
Pla Mor Lanes (Coldwater, OH)
August 11-13
First place - $10,000 

PBA Century Lanes/PBA Booster Club of Hampton Roads Open
Century Lanes (Hampton, VA)
August 15-17
First Place - $4,000

PBA Booster Club of Hampton Roads Open
AMF Western Branch Lanes (Chesapeake, VA)
August 18-20
First place - $8,000 

PBA Tony Reyes/Terry Leong Memorial Doubles
4th St Bowl (San Jose, CA)
August 25-27
First place - projected $6,000 ($8,000 Added to prize fund)

PBA50 Jonesboro Southwest Super Open
Hijinx Family Entertainment Center (Jonesboro, AR)
September 15-17
First place - $10,000

The complete PBA Regional Tour schedule is available here.

Friday, December 9, 2022

2023 PBA50 (AND PBA60) NATIONAL TOUR SCHEDULE


The 2023 PBA50 Tour schedule will feature the greatest bowlers in the world aged 50-and-over competing in 12 title events, including five major championships, from early June to the end of August, with a total purse of more than $1 million.

The Professional Bowlers Association also announced fans will be able watch every PBA50 Tour event start-to-finish, livestreamed on BowlTV.

Highlighting the season will be the first-ever PBA50 World Series of Bowling, at JAX60 in Jackson, Mich., July 15-23. The inaugural senior WSOB will feature four title events including the main-event PBA50 World Championship, which will boast a first-place prize of $25,000, the highest on the senior circuit in more than two decades.

Similar to the PBA Tour’s World Series, the PBA50 WSOB will have multiple oil pattern championship stages leading to the World Championship. 

Another exciting addition to the schedule finds the 2023 PBA50 Tour season concluding with the return of the PBA50 Tournament of Champions (TOC), at Orange Bowl Lanes in Lakeland, Fla., Aug. 26-30. Back for the first time this century, the PBA50 TOC and its $15,000 winner’s check will be open to PBA champions over the age of 50 who have won a PBA title of any kind in their careers from the PBA Tour and PBA50 Tour, including PBA and PBA50 Regional Tour titles.

Last season, legendary PBA Hall of Famer Parker Bohn III earned PBA50 Player of the Year honors, winning four titles and leading the Tour in points and earnings.

Lennie Boresch Jr. won the 2022 Senior U.S. Open, and the victory earned the 10-year PBA50 Tour veteran eligibility into the PBA Hall of Fame, based on his senior Tour accomplishments. Boresch was elected to the HOF by vote and will be inducted in March. 

Andres Gomez, the first Colombian to win a PBA Tour title, will cross the age 50 threshold on July 19, and is expected to compete.

In addition to Bohn and Boresch, PBA Hall of Famers Walter Ray Williams Jr., Chris Barnes, Pete Weber, Jason Couch, Amleto Monacelli, Ron Mohr, Tom Baker and Johnny Petraglia once again figure to be regulars on the PBA50 Tour.

Rounding out the major championships on the 2023 PBA50 Tour schedule are the USBC Senior Masters at Sam’s Town in Las Vegas, the Senior U.S. Open at Highland Park Lanes in Greeley, Colo. and the PBA50 Players Championship at Bowl America Dranesville in Virginia. The Players Championship finals and its record-high $20,000 first place prize will be contested on specially-installed lanes at the home of PBA50 player Bill Moore.

Other cities hosting 2023 PBA50 Tour regular events include Hammond, Ind., Morgantown, W.Va., The Villages, Fla., and Fort Myers, Fla.

The PBA50 Tour schedule will also allow for players to participate in the new PBA LBC National Championships at Bowlero Wauwatosa in Milwaukee, Wis. Depending on which division the PBA50 players choose to enter, the National Championships have a $25,000 first-place prize in the Open Classic division, and $5,000 first in the Men’s Senior Classic division. The top three finishers in the Open Classic division and winner of the men’s Senior Classic division will join winners in other divisions earning trips to the FOX Sports presentation of the PBA LBC National Championships Clash, and its $100,000 purse, from Bayside Bowl in Portland, Maine.

The PBA LBC National Championships will run on weekends from June 3-July 17, with June 24-25, July 1-2 and July 8-9 being ideal weekends for the touring PBA50 players to enter.

Two PBA50 Regional events will also be available along the way for touring players, July 24-26 in Wyoming, Mich.; and July 28-30 in Bowling Green, Ohio. Dozens more PBA50 Regionals around the country will be announced soon.

Two PBA60 National Tour events for players age 60-and-over are also on the schedule, including the season-opening USBC Super Senior Classic in Las Vegas, which will kick things off on May 31, prior to the Senior Masters. PBA60 Tour players will also travel to Ohio for the PBA60 Tristan’s T.A.P.S. Memorial Tournament at Wayne Webb’s Columbus Bowl in July.

2023 PBA50 TOUR SCHEDULE RELEASED

May 31-June 4: USBC Super Senior Classic, Sam’s Town, Las Vegas (PBA60)
June 5-11: USBC Senior Masters, Sam’s Town, Las Vegas
June 14-19: Senior US Open, Highland Park Lanes, Greeley, Colo.

July 2-5 (rescheduled from July 4-7): PBA60 Tristan’s T.A.P.S. Memorial Tournament, Wayne Webb’s Columbus Bowl, Columbus, Ohio (PBA60)
July 10-13: PBA50 South Shore Classic, Olympia Lanes, Hammond, Ind.
July 15-23: PBA50 World Series of Bowling, JAX60, Jackson, Mich.
     July 16, 19: PBA50 Ballard Championship
     July 17, 20: PBA50 Monacelli Championship
     July 18, 21: PBA50 Petraglia Championship
     July 16-23: PBA50 World Championship
July 31 – August 3: PBA50 Morgantown Classic, Suburban Lanes, Morgantown, W.Va.
Aug. 6-10: Bud Moore PBA50 Players Championship, Bowl America Dranesville, Sterling, Va.
Aug. 14-18: PBA50 The Villages Classic, Spanish Springs Lanes, The Villages, Fla.
Aug. 20-23: PBA50 Fort Myers Classic, Lightning Strikes Bowling Lanes, Fort Myers, Fla.
Aug. 26-30: PBA50 Tournament of Champions, Orange Bowl Lanes, Lakeland, Fla.


PBA50 majors are bolded

PBA60 torunaments in RED, majors are italicized 

Thursday, December 1, 2022

PBA AND USBC ANNOUNCE PARTNERSHIP MOVING PBA LIVESTREAMING TO BOWLTV FOR 2023 SEASON

 DECEMBER 1, 2022 PROFESSIONAL BOWLERS ASSOCIATIONPBA and USBC Announce Partnership Moving PBA Livestreaming to BowlTV for 2023 Season

ARLINGTON, Texas – The Professional Bowlers Association and United States Bowling Congress have agreed on a partnership to offer exclusive livestreaming coverage of the 2023 Guaranteed Rate PBA Tour season on BowlTV.

The agreement will include comprehensive coverage of the PBA National Tour, as well as PBA50, PBA Jr. and PBA Regional Tour events. BowlTV’s season coverage will feature all PBA Tour qualifying rounds and championship rounds for five PBA Classic series tournaments. The coverage also will include the entirety of the Roth/Holman PBA Doubles Championship and all PBA50 Tour events.

This agreement brings the PBA Tour, Professional Women’s Bowling Association Tour and USBC short-duration tournaments to the same BowlTV livestreaming platform, providing subscribers unprecedented access to top-level bowling with one subscription.

“We are pleased to have all professional bowling come together under the same platform for 2023,” PBA Tour Commissioner Tom Clark said. “BowlTV’s coverage will be tremendous for bowling fans.”

PBA coverage on BowlTV will include multiple channels at each event, so fans can follow their favorite PBA competitors. The broadcasts also will include professional commentary, interviews and analysis featuring top bowling experts.

“We appreciate the PBA partnering with the USBC to create this incredible content offering for bowling,” USBC President Melissa McDaniel said. “This partnership is a big win for all of bowling, including the fans, athletes and USBC members. USBC is committed to making the BowlTV experience outstanding for its subscribers and the PBA.”

BowlTV offers the ability to purchase event tickets, as well as monthly and annual subscriptions. A full 2023 event schedule and updated pricing will be announced later this month.

Go to BOWL.com/BowlTV to learn more about BowlTV. Visit PBA.com for information on the PBA Tour.

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

SUMMER OF PBA TOUR ACTION


PBA Tour competition continues throughout the summer, highlighted by four PBA Super Regionals that will give top national and regional PBA Tour players a chance to compete for a guaranteed $10,000 minimum first-place check in each of the events. The PBA added $32,000 to be dispersed among the prize funds and each Super Regional will be worth double points toward qualification for the season-ending Regional Players Invitational.

Fans will be able to watch the stepladder finals of each Super Regional live on the PBA Facebook page.

Beginning with the Lubbock Sports Open in Lubbock, Texas July 22-24, the Super Regionals will be held in multiple markets across the United States: the PBA Jonesboro Open in Jonesboro, Ark. August 5-7, PBA Bowlerstore.com Central Classic presented by Moxy’s Xtra Pair in Coldwater, Ohio August 12-14 and the PBA Booster Club of Hampton Roads Open in Chesapeake, Va. August 19-21.

Between the first and second Super Regional events, a PBA Tour national title is up for grabs in the Storm PBA/PWBA Striking Against Breast Cancer Mixed Doubles, being held in Houston July 28-31 and live-streamed on BowlTV. The SABCMD has awarded a PBA and PWBA Tour title since 2015 and will feature defending champions EJ Tackett and Danielle McEwan.

Additionally, players will have an opportunity to compete in two PBA Regional events surrounding the Super Regional Summer Tour, August 9-11 in Minister, Ohio and August 16-18 in Hampton, Va.

All PBA Super Regionals and PBA Regional events count toward the 2022 PBA Regional points standings, with the top players at the end of the season advancing to the 2022 PBA Regional Players Invitational. Fans can follow all the PBA action this summer on pba.com and @PBATour’s social media handles across Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

PBA ACTION THIS SUMMER

PBA Lubbock Sports Open, Lubbock, Texas – July 22-24
Storm PBA/PWBA Striking Against Breast Cancer Mixed Doubles, Houston – July 28-31
PBA Jonesboro Open, Jonesboro, Ark. – August 5-7

PBA Ernst Apparel Central Classic, Minister, Ohio – August 9-11
PBA Bowlerstore.com presented by Moxy's Xtra Pair, Coldwater, Ohio – August 12-14
PBA Clean Air Solutions LLC Biz Hampton Open, Hampton, Va. – August 16-18
PBA Booster Club of Hampton Roads Open, Chesapeake, Va. – August 19-21

View the complete PBA Regional Tour schedule here

MAY 17, 2022 -  JEF GOODGER