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- #Ten pin championship bowling pro pro
- #Ten pin championship bowling pro series
Andie Albert and Tommy Croskrey was third, with Nolan Croskrey and Richy Marten fourth.ĭakota Adams and Amanda Levandowski took top honors in Division 2 doubles over Kyle Albro and Justin Bruner, while Derek and Madi Bruner won Division 3 doubles. Sisters Kayla and Kendra Underwood are the Division 1 doubles champs, rolling a 1,442 and defeating Matt Jensen and Tiffany Schwenck by 43 sticks. In Division 5, the Bowling Masters - Nowa Marcotte, Ike Marcotte, Madi Bruner and Nate Preston - won team event with a 2,897.
So Lucky was second with a 2,825, and One Queen and Three Jokers was third witha 2,785. The Great Falls USBC Youth City tourney is also history, with the team of Dakota Adams, Amanda Levandowski, Matt Jensen and Richy Marten, also known at One Strike, Three Spares, capturing team event in Division 1 with a total of 2,840 pins in the pit. Dawn Vernon and Mike Baumgartner won the event with a 2,110 score, Dawn and Steve Vernon were second at 2,044, while Barb and Mike Baumgartner finished third with a 1,963. There are a couple of tournaments in the books for another year, including the 40 Frame Mixed Doubles at the Elks.
#Ten pin championship bowling pro series
Lacy Farmer of Chinook had the hagh handicap series for the weekend, an 887, and Shelby Kokkeler of Chinook got the only 300 game. Linda and the aforementioned Bob Azure are third. RESULTS FOR THE SECOND weekend of the Chinook Eagles Lanes’ No-Tap Mixed Doubles tournament are in, and the duo of Pam Darrah and Bob Azure of Chinook have taken a 50-pin advantage over Michelle and Doug Denny of Havre. Juan ‘Ed’ Trujillo passed away Sunday, March 29 in a Billings Hospital at the age of 75. Ed was elected to the Great Falls USBC Hall of Fame in 2000 based on Meritorious Service to the organization.
The Trujillo family - Ed, his wife Judie and daughter Connie, as well as Connie’s husband Tom Croskrey - have been part of the local bowling scene for several years, and have bowled in almost every house in Great Falls, past and present. Granted, I’m not exactly ready to join the PBA Tour, but I’m not in ‘C’ Division anymore, either. I recognized the voice as that of Ed Trujillo.Īnd something clicked with those six words. I didn’t have to turn around to see who it was. I heard a reassuring voice behind me say: “Keep your hand under the ball.” I couldn’t buy a strike with a credit card, and my ability to convert spares wasn’t all that much better. It was during a local USBC championship tournament a few years ago when I was having a particularly bad day. And a lot of bowlers get away with it, albeit with mixed results. Not every bowler - myself included - has a strong wrist, and they often wind up ‘topping’ the ball. Both Ayr men finished in the top half of the final rankings.Those six words are pretty much a credo in the sport of ten pin bowling.
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Trevor finished level in the overall standings with USA pro Patrick Allen who won gold in the doubles.
#Ten pin championship bowling pro full
Jet lag took its toll and they had less time to acclimatise than the USA pro team who practised on the championship lanes for a full week. The two lads felt they could have performed better in Bangkok. “James is a fully qualified BTBA coach and assisted by Trevor every Saturday morning at LA Bowl, they pass on their knowledge and skills to a group of enthusiastic youngsters.” They are a credit to LA Bowl, the town of Ayr and to Scotland. Trevor Reid and James Claxton, who are Ayrshire’s two leading players, qualified after months of tough competition.Īyr’s LA Bowl assistant manager Gary Reeves, himself a former international bowler, said: “For two players from Ayr to make up one third of the Scottish national team is truly exceptional. TWO ten pin bowlers from Ayr are just back from Thailand after playing for Scotland in the men’s world championships.