cool to watch. They aren't talking about oil patterns or using 50 different balls.. just roll that solid black ball down the lane and write that score with a pen.
Reminds me of starting out bowling in 1978. I had a rubber ball to start with . Then came the Colombiia yellow dot.. The only 300 game bowled I'm 33 years was in 1990. Was a urethane ball. After 1990 Monroe Bowl closed. Back in the days where you had to have a break along the way to shoot a 300 game. Loved it back when I was younger. Ended up bowling 2 perfect games in 99 plus 1 big tournament win.. Cant bowl anymore cause of injuries but have great memorys!
20alphabet It’s kind of funny how one bowler has dominated over the past decade. After all, the pro bowlers all have access to great equipment. Yet the same guy keeps winning most of the majors. Must be luck.
Loved the days when a simple manually written scoresheet explained it all. No FS1 graphics box featuring ball MPH, ball RPM, breakpoint board or position at arrows to clutter the screen, although Bo could easily explain that box himself to today's FS1 bowling viewers as great an analyst he became. Personally, I would've loved to have seen that box come out in the mid-70s and show legendary cranker Mark Roth's ball RPM during his prime.
Yeah I saw that too. He looked just as happy as ever. If you could name one person that would personify bowling it would be Nelson Burton jr. The textbook delivery, the mental capacity and perhaps the best commentator of the sport.
I remember back in the day from about 1960 on, I used to watch Championship Bowling, 'Make That Spare' (which was a 15-minute program, I think on Saturday nights at 9:45 p.m. CST), and later The Professional Bowlers Tour which came on early Saturday afternoons CST. My favorite bowler was Dick Weber and I used his AMF 3 Dot, and Five Star bowling balls. Later I added his wrist brace. I learned to bowl by emulating Dick Weber and later, standing and starting my approach like Dave Davis and finishing like Dick Weber. I got to meet and bowl with Dick Weber on two different occasions in the late 1960s when PBA tournaments came to Milwaukee Wisconsin at the Bowlero Lanes. 72 Lanes. I think they had the second most Lanes in the United States. Before that time St Louis was the main hub of bowling then Milwaukee from about 1965 on before bowling lost it's popularity. R I P Chris Schenckel.
@@irishpogi Apples to oranges in techniques required for the different surfaces. But I'd have to give it to Jr. I knew Sr., though we weren't close, and met Jr. numerous times, bowled with both. If Sr. didn't have a "real job" it might have been different.
Two of the classiest professionals in the history of the sport. That being said, Weber was so pissed at the brooklyn and the nose dive tripped four in the center of Burton's game three 5 bagger he wouldn't shake Bo's hand following the post match interview.
Interesting how much smoother Burton's release was a decade later. He was famous for an effortless style and I always figured it was a natural strength of his, but he must have put in a lot of work improving it.
@@nelsonporter8387 He’s also the son of a former Professional Bowler, Nelson Burton, Sr. Bo’s younger brother, Neil was also on the PBA tour for a couple of years.
Wow! simple black rubber based balls, only one ball used from each bowler, not three or four, no flashy bowling shirts with advertisements plastered all over them worthy of a race car driver, no "he man" shouting from the bowlers, a human hand writing the scores with a marker on paper, no two-handed bowling, and a respectful audience that aren't being obnoxious by hooting and hollering. Very much different from today's standards that's for sure. And yes, I'm old school, but I do like the newer bowling balls. The pin rack machine also appears to be one of the original styles of automated pin setters after pin boys were put out to pasture.
Automatic pinsetters weren't new in 1966. The AMF machines with the arrow indicators to suggest spare shot placement were the new thing here. Pin boys started losing their jobs to automation during the '50s.
@@onemoremisfit Thanks for the reply, but I think you might have misunderstood my comment. I became a junior bowler in 1960 and we had automatic pin setters back then. My comment was about the type of pinsetter I saw on the video that made me think it might have been an original one installed in the 1950s. Check out Top Star Bowling video #1. The announcer remarks about the new pin setting machine and ball return set up. That was in 1954. I learned to bowl from my grandfather and he started out with wooden bowling balls and pin boys.
@@neilsnelling5447 My first game was circa 1967 so I never saw anything but automatic machines. Maybe you're thinking of the way those old AMF machines had no sheetmetal cover on the pin rack like the Brunswick machines had?
Thanks for showing these great videos.. You really needed to pay attention to lane conditions..Back in the day when you were a God if you bowled a 300 game in league play!
I like seeing 1 handed bowling! Belmonte could never have thrown that way back then and been successful. He has about a 6-8 board strike area. On lacquer finish with the balls they had the great ones sometimes had only a half board area to carry a strike. Accuracy and speed with 16 pound balls only to carry those old solid wood pins. Now these pins have 2 voids in the center to make them fly. It was a mans game then. Now guys with the right equipment will average over 200. Those same guys would be lucky to average a buck sixty back then.
I remember that there was a half hour version of the show that aired when it began midway through the second game. From a FYI standpoint, I have a friend that appeared on Championship Bowling who has several 8 X 10 photos from it displaying what the "set" looked like behind the scenes, complete with bogus walls for cameras.
You may be thinking of another bowling show at the time, "Bowling Stars" which was only 30 minutes long. I used to hate that show, because like "CB" the bowlers rolled three games to a match, but "Bowling Stars" would just show you the scores from the first game, then the score of the second game through 7 frames. then you'd see them bowl the rest of the match. What a cheat!!
That's because the USBC won't give anything now for a 300 game, which I can understand with thousands of them being rolled each year. Before, when they were giving out gold rings they wanted to make sure everything was on the up and up.
Old v. New bowling... Old relied on shot making ability only. A consistent game was required to get results. New relies on ability to apply power into these over aggressive balls. I can watch the pros spray the lane with shots and still get results. Rotation and speed is the new game as consistency has taken a back seat.
@@onemoremisfit right... the lanes weren't walled up to the moon... the margin of error in this day was a board.. today i't's 10 boards. Pull your head out of your ass.
I recall watching these matches on TV and the way they posted the score didn't make sense to me. I didn't realize they omitted the single ball pin count on spares and opens probably to reduce clutter. The way they format the 10th frame is also odd. You have 3 boxes and there are maximum possible 3 balls in the 10th, so when I write a score I put the first ball count in the first box, it would be either a numeral or strike. They put a spare mark in the first box and leave the 3rd box blank. It appears as though they are against writing a numeral for a single ball under any circumstances because the space to write the numeral is too small to keep it legible. The only numerals shall be the total score for each frame, total score for the line and the series scores.
i havent looked yet but…if i find out that someone posted every Saturday afternoon abc bowling tourney from whenever it started til it became a farce…id be watching til the day i die.
American born, Pete Weber will be coming to my town in a couple of months for a PBA50 tournament that I'll be bowling in. I've been wanting to talk to him about that fact about his father but, I think I'll bring it up after the finals, in case I have to bowl him or ask him to sign my pin. LOL!
Would love to see Belmo bowl a game on a pair of 1960s'-style wood lacquered lanes using only one black hard rubber ball and wearing classic King Louie gear (just like Dick and Bo did here). Would his two-handed bowling translate to success under such conditions? I say yes...he has performed well in 1970s'-style plastic ball tourneys.
I was thinking same. He was bowling royalty, he forgot more about the game than I will ever know, and I was only 6 when he bowled this match, but I would not want to copy him even throwing a straight ball.
Times are so different. When I bowled in leagues or tournaments I ALWAYS wore a 3- button polo shirt and dress pants. Guys I bowled against wearing Budweiser t shirts and camo cargo shorts.......
I would add Burton on any list of the finest commentator in any sport. Good looking guy, well spoken, entertaining and informative without a hint of being a condescending, arrogant jerk like too many in the broadcast booth are these days.
Burton was a fantastic color guy; he would explain the fine points of the game and the intricacies of scoring in clear and concise language. I learned more about bowling watching the ABC Pro Bowlers Tour telecasts than I could have with ten years of lessons.
Did Dick Weber throw a bit of a spinner shot? I slowed the video down and it looks like his tilt is a bit more than some of the other bowlers at the time. I ask because I throw a semi-spinner myself and am trying to learn how to roll the ball more with increased revolutions.
This is when bowling was bowling! Shot making and skill, no longer the case! It was skill that you averaged 200, now everyone averages 200 with the hook in the box!
So great to watch real professionals. Nowadays you have to make noise at the right time to distract your opponents release and make them mad or spill a large cup of water as I’ve seen in the last few years. They used to be super strict on the pba or you got suspended.
I'd rather watch this old school black and white telecast with one bowling ball than the new telecasts with constantly joking commentary and cringe music playing after every frame.
I'm sure that way too many kids, that after watching this show with its low scores and lack of messengers flying all over the place, would consider themselves the better bowler.
It also appears he has very little lift by his follow through or lack thereof. Of course he must have been doing something right but if I had his release and awkward slide the bowling coaches at my old alley would have jumped my ass.
This was probably one of the last episodes of "Championship Bowling" to be shot in black-and-white. Or was the show being filmed in color by this time with black-and-white prints available for stations that couldn't yet transmit color film?
Watch these shows from 1965 and you can see the lanes are WAY drier for some reason on the 1966 shows. Did they even oil?? Are they trying to limit the $250 bonus for a 5 bagger and then $50 for each after that? That was a lot money back then, makes you wonder why the stark difference in conditions.
Back in those days, it was dry lanes using black rubber balls. Some bowling establishment experimented with oil down in the pocket zone only to be then reprimanded by the ABC for doing so and disallowing some high scores including 300 games.
dick was the pro that i tryed too pattern my bowling after when i started bowling i am now 84 yrs old not much good any more but still swinging and still love the game
After watching this, Weber is NOT the bowler you want to imitate as far as approach and release of the ball. His follow through is non-existant, and he throws his arm to the right on release.
It's like watching Pleasantville...too bad you cut out the cigarette commercials...Is anyone else uncomfortable with the announcer continuously referring to Webber as the kid's "Master?" Seems fetishy to me...
I kept score for a tourney in Allen Park,Mi in 1977 and Nelson Burton Jr was the only bowler that said " thanks for keeping score "
Good ole Thunderbowl
No phones,no food,no problem.
Thunder bowl.
Dick Webers style looks awkward to me. NB JR has a good simple style.
This is the show that got me to fall in love with bowling. Every Sunday at noon when I was a boy. Brings back the best of memories!
The bowlers nowadays compared to the bowlers back then the old bowlers were better
@@jakeo6928 It was tougher back then. No Urethane, No reactive Resin,.
@@louiscsanko3673 It absolutely was. Mopped lanes, Rubber balls. You couldnt hook the lane like that even if you wanted to.
Ha! Me too every Sunday at noon😮 my dream is to bowl a 300 every year to 90 Year young
cool to watch. They aren't talking about oil patterns or using 50 different balls.. just roll that solid black ball down the lane and write that score with a pen.
Reminds me of starting out bowling in 1978. I had a rubber ball to start with . Then came the Colombiia yellow dot.. The only 300 game bowled I'm 33 years was in 1990. Was a urethane ball.
After 1990 Monroe Bowl closed.
Back in the days where you had to have a break along the way to shoot a 300 game. Loved it back when I was younger. Ended up bowling 2 perfect games in 99 plus 1 big tournament win..
Cant bowl anymore cause of injuries but have great memorys!
much more of an exact skill back then, and a much higher maturity level within the common society...
bonnie johnson Yes, and the colored people knew where their place in society was.
Back then it was skill and technique. The participant was the paramount rather than his equipment.
20alphabet It’s kind of funny how one bowler has dominated over the past decade. After all, the pro bowlers all have access to great equipment. Yet the same guy keeps winning most of the majors. Must be luck.
What I love about this, is I saw JUST 2 bowling balls on the ball return rack.
Loved the days when a simple manually written scoresheet explained it all. No FS1 graphics box featuring ball MPH, ball RPM, breakpoint board or position at arrows to clutter the screen, although Bo could easily explain that box himself to today's FS1 bowling viewers as great an analyst he became. Personally, I would've loved to have seen that box come out in the mid-70s and show legendary cranker Mark Roth's ball RPM during his prime.
When Bo was in the TV finals, usually Dick Weber usually filled in as the analyst.
I wonder if technology is such that they could somehow look at the old videos of Roth, Anthony, etc and determine all those stats?
I just watched a video yesterday of Nelson Burton Jr bowling a 300 game at 80 years of age....
Yeah I saw that too. He looked just as happy as ever. If you could name one person that would personify bowling it would be Nelson Burton jr. The textbook delivery, the mental capacity and perhaps the best commentator of the sport.
@@waltergoraj5238 Yes and also one of the first to recognize the importance of incorporating weight training into his bowling preparation.
Two of the classiest acts in pro bowling.
I remember back in the day from about 1960 on, I used to watch Championship Bowling, 'Make That Spare' (which was a 15-minute program, I think on Saturday nights at 9:45 p.m. CST), and later The Professional Bowlers Tour which came on early Saturday afternoons CST. My favorite bowler was Dick Weber and I used his AMF 3 Dot, and Five Star bowling balls. Later I added his wrist brace. I learned to bowl by emulating Dick Weber and later, standing and starting my approach like Dave Davis and finishing like Dick Weber. I got to meet and bowl with Dick Weber on two different occasions in the late 1960s when PBA tournaments came to Milwaukee Wisconsin at the Bowlero Lanes. 72 Lanes. I think they had the second most Lanes in the United States. Before that time St Louis was the main hub of bowling then Milwaukee from about 1965 on before bowling lost it's popularity. R I P Chris Schenckel.
Burton Jr bowling dad in '66 and bowling Pete in '84. Bo Burton Jr is freakin awesome.
A knowledgeable bowler, no doubt.
@@20alphabet who do you think was the better bowler? Nelson Sr or Nelson Jr?
@@irishpogi
Apples to oranges in techniques required for the different surfaces. But I'd have to give it to Jr. I knew Sr., though we weren't close, and met Jr. numerous times, bowled with both. If Sr. didn't have a "real job" it might have been different.
@@irishpogi Some of the people who you saw on the end credits also did the Championship Bridge series
@@irishpogi JR best teacher.
Two of the classiest professionals in the history of the sport. That being said, Weber was so pissed at the brooklyn and the nose dive tripped four in the center of Burton's game three 5 bagger he wouldn't shake Bo's hand following the post match interview.
I always thought Nelson Burton Jr. was one of the best color commentators on the old PBA shows.
I used to love listening to Bo Burton on the Saturday telecasts!
@@mathewhorodner2000 He's a second generation bowler, his father Nelson Burton was on the early days of the pro tour.
That's probably because he's the first you became familiar with, and it's been downhill since then.
Bo was also easy on the eyes
Burton helped me with his tips
Bo Burton stayed in Great Shape for So many years. Bo Burton hit the Gym hard. Dick Weber( RIP) Classy guy & Hall of Famer🙏🙏
i love how the announcers are literally sitting right behind the players
Wow such a different time
The greats of that era were true gentlemen. Not the chest-thumping, screamers of today. I wish civility would return to all sports.
And everywhere else😊
All whiners today, especially Pete Webber
Interesting how much smoother Burton's release was a decade later. He was famous for an effortless style and I always figured it was a natural strength of his, but he must have put in a lot of work improving it.
Check out Burton Jr in the late 70's and early 80's . He had a set of guns!!
@@nelsonporter8387 Nelson Burton Jr. Sure Did. He hit those weights hard.
@@louiscsanko3673 In one of his earlier days on the tour, he wore Buddy Holly glasses.
The age of innocence and basics in bowling no drama just excellent technique. Loved the old bowling shows!
@@nelsonporter8387 He’s also the son of a former Professional Bowler, Nelson Burton, Sr. Bo’s younger brother, Neil was also on the PBA tour for a couple of years.
great bowling by some greats of all time I had never saw before
thanks for shareing those two great bowlers.
Wow! simple black rubber based balls, only one ball used from each bowler, not three or four, no flashy bowling shirts with advertisements plastered all over them worthy of a race car driver, no "he man" shouting from the bowlers, a human hand writing the scores with a marker on paper, no two-handed bowling, and a respectful audience that aren't being obnoxious by hooting and hollering. Very much different from today's standards that's for sure. And yes, I'm old school, but I do like the newer bowling balls. The pin rack machine also appears to be one of the original styles of automated pin setters after pin boys were put out to pasture.
Uhhhh this was like 55 years ago.... you really think shits not gonna evolve?
Automatic pinsetters weren't new in 1966. The AMF machines with the arrow indicators to suggest spare shot placement were the new thing here. Pin boys started losing their jobs to automation during the '50s.
@@onemoremisfit Thanks for the reply, but I think you might have misunderstood my comment. I became a junior bowler in 1960 and we had automatic pin setters back then. My comment was about the type of pinsetter I saw on the video that made me think it might have been an original one installed in the 1950s. Check out Top Star Bowling video #1. The announcer remarks about the new pin setting machine and ball return set up. That was in 1954. I learned to bowl from my grandfather and he started out with wooden bowling balls and pin boys.
@@neilsnelling5447 My first game was circa 1967 so I never saw anything but automatic machines. Maybe you're thinking of the way those old AMF machines had no sheetmetal cover on the pin rack like the Brunswick machines had?
Thanks for showing these great videos.. You really needed to pay attention to lane conditions..Back in the day when you were a God if you bowled a 300 game in league play!
Interesting to hear Nelson Burton Jr. referred to as a "youngster"! 😄
Back then he was in his early 20's and was one of bowling's rising stars.
They referred to him as Nellie too not Bo.
I liked both of these guys very professional always.
Lol bo looks like he's 12. Thanks for the post, funny.
I like seeing 1 handed bowling! Belmonte could never have thrown that way back then and been successful. He has about a 6-8 board strike area. On lacquer finish with the balls they had the great ones sometimes had only a half board area to carry a strike. Accuracy and speed with 16 pound balls only to carry
those old solid wood pins. Now these pins have 2 voids in the center to make them fly. It was a mans game then. Now guys with the right equipment will average over 200. Those same guys would be lucky to average a buck sixty back then.
I remember that there was a half hour version of the show that aired when it began midway through the second game. From a FYI standpoint, I have a friend that appeared on Championship Bowling who has several 8 X 10 photos from it displaying what the "set" looked like behind the scenes, complete with bogus walls for cameras.
You may be thinking of another bowling show at the time, "Bowling Stars" which was only 30 minutes long. I used to hate that show, because like "CB" the bowlers rolled three games to a match, but "Bowling Stars" would just show you the scores from the first game, then the score of the second game through 7 frames. then you'd see them bowl the rest of the match. What a cheat!!
That's because the USBC won't give anything now for a 300 game, which I can understand with thousands of them being rolled each year. Before, when they were giving out gold rings they wanted to make sure everything was on the up and up.
pablo, you're wrong about that. The USBC will give out a 300 ring but only one time.
Old v. New bowling... Old relied on shot making ability only. A consistent game was required to get results. New relies on ability to apply power into these over aggressive balls. I can watch the pros spray the lane with shots and still get results. Rotation and speed is the new game as consistency has taken a back seat.
The only constant is change.
These 2 didn't look terribly consistent here to me, struggling to find pocket, missed headpins, easy spares blown.
@@onemoremisfit right... the lanes weren't walled up to the moon... the margin of error in this day was a board.. today i't's 10 boards. Pull your head out of your ass.
@@onemoremisfit
Everyone has off days.
You more than most, shitfit.
Thanks for that #irishpogi . Aaahh those glory days of the 82-30 pinspotters and the magic circle ball returns.
And the AMF 3-dot lol
I recall watching these matches on TV and the way they posted the score didn't make sense to me. I didn't realize they omitted the single ball pin count on spares and opens probably to reduce clutter. The way they format the 10th frame is also odd. You have 3 boxes and there are maximum possible 3 balls in the 10th, so when I write a score I put the first ball count in the first box, it would be either a numeral or strike. They put a spare mark in the first box and leave the 3rd box blank. It appears as though they are against writing a numeral for a single ball under any circumstances because the space to write the numeral is too small to keep it legible. The only numerals shall be the total score for each frame, total score for the line and the series scores.
So many open frames from these two legends in that first game. Never thought I'd see Dick Weber roll a 172! painful to watch....
Nelson Burton, Jr. vs Dick Weber
Two Legends going head to head, the true definition of “Championship Bowling”.
i havent looked yet but…if i find out that someone posted every Saturday afternoon abc bowling tourney from whenever it started til it became a farce…id be watching til the day i die.
Before the ridiculous ball technology made everyone a star.
Everyone except you?
@@HoffyRS 🤣🤣
@casualobnoxious
Lick my ball technology.
I would love to see the Legends reaction to two handed bowling.
They'd get a good laugh
+irishpogi they'd get beat, XD
Dick weber had the worst follow threw ever but he made it work
American born, Pete Weber will be coming to my town in a couple of months for a PBA50 tournament that I'll be bowling in. I've been wanting to talk to him about that fact about his father but, I think I'll bring it up after the finals, in case I have to bowl him or ask him to sign my pin. LOL!
Would love to see Belmo bowl a game on a pair of 1960s'-style wood lacquered lanes using only one black hard rubber ball and wearing classic King Louie gear (just like Dick and Bo did here). Would his two-handed bowling translate to success under such conditions? I say yes...he has performed well in 1970s'-style plastic ball tourneys.
It's amazing that Dick Weber was so good considering he does not follow through.
I was thinking same. He was bowling royalty, he forgot more about the game than I will ever know, and I was only 6 when he bowled this match, but I would not want to copy him even throwing a straight ball.
Not only does he not follow through, most of the time he steps out at the line, never posting a shot.
I’d give birth for one of those King Louis bowling shirts
Lol
My dad had one of those shirts in 1965. Cool shirt
I had one as a teenager. With blue stars.
Lol, times really have changed. Look how people dressed up to go watch professional bowling back then.
Changed? You mean deteriorated.
Not too different to when Chris Schenkel did The PBA Tournaments on Saturdays on ABC.
@@Jiltedin2007
His tenure covered alot of years. When he began, people dressed like you see in this video.
20alphabet
Oh yes. I remembered Chris Schenkel doing College Football back in the 60’s.
Times are so different. When I bowled in leagues or tournaments I ALWAYS wore a 3- button polo shirt and dress pants. Guys I bowled against wearing Budweiser t shirts and camo cargo shorts.......
He was and is the great Dick Weber; Nelson was also great and carried on the tradition.
Dave in Cleveland
I would add Burton on any list of the finest commentator in any sport. Good looking guy, well spoken, entertaining and informative without a hint of being a condescending, arrogant jerk like too many in the broadcast booth are these days.
Burton was a fantastic color guy; he would explain the fine points of the game and the intricacies of scoring in clear and concise language. I learned more about bowling watching the ABC Pro Bowlers Tour telecasts than I could have with ten years of lessons.
Thx for posting the vid - fun to watch BB’s timeless swing.
Now, please don’t be a tease and post the final 3 games!!
Killing me !
Thx in advance 🤘
When I get them in my position, I will be more than happy to share
Before we had resin we had dirt off the shoe sole.I still have this habit today, makes for messy pants.
It always amazed me that Weber was so good because he stood up at the line so much.
Fred yelling “no no!” on Bo’s 10th frame Brooklyn. Nice....😂.
Can someone give me some insight on who the first person was to utilize the spinning technique that is pretty much standard in bowling today?
Pure bowling skill and talent. No histrionics, no theatrics, no crazy shirts, nor anything else that marks the circus that is pro bowling today.
Bo and Chris the best in the business
Is there a part 2 of this match? I would like to see it if it's on TH-cam.
do u have the video of the 2nd 3game
Did Dick Weber throw a bit of a spinner shot? I slowed the video down and it looks like his tilt is a bit more than some of the other bowlers at the time. I ask because I throw a semi-spinner myself and am trying to learn how to roll the ball more with increased revolutions.
David Knight plastic balls were introduced to the bowling public in the early 60's. 1960 or 1961.
Hard rubber balls that didn't hook much.
This is when bowling was bowling! Shot making and skill, no longer the case! It was skill that you averaged 200, now everyone averages 200 with the hook in the box!
That is why I got out of bowling too easy
It only required a 190 average in 2 leagues to qualify to turn pro back in the 1950s.
@@peterschmidt8287 only 190 was very good back then!! I averaged 190 when I was a senior in high school in 1978. It was tough to throw strikes then.
@@earlcehrs2819 if its too easy then you should be on the pro tour?
If yall say bowling takes no skill now which is fuckin absurd, why arent yall on the pro tour? Should be easy money?
Bo still seemed young in the 90s so it's odd to see him here in black and white!
They said that Nelson Burton, Jr. was born in 1943. He was actually born on June 5, 1942.
They were using the Canadian dating system, eh?
Burton wins 18 pro tournaments, including two majors, and earns about 750 grand over his playing career. How times have changed.
I swear every narrator/host from the 60's and 70's sounded the exact same way lol
When all you had was a good old rubber ball and it was basically down to acctresly.
Great video Irish, you wouldn’t happen to have the next week of this show posted do you? If you do I can’t find it on TH-cam
this is by far the youngest i have ever seen Burton Jr. Couldnt be more than 20 here. Looks like dad taught him young…and very well.
Remember when Adults used to exist n the world. My Grandparents were those.
Next time I go bowling gonna wear cost and tie
So great to watch real professionals. Nowadays you have to make noise at the right time to distract your opponents release and make them mad or spill a large cup of water as I’ve seen in the last few years. They used to be super strict on the pba or you got suspended.
These Men were once referred to as Adults, they were everywhere.
Back when people dressed like human beings not slobs
I'd rather watch this old school black and white telecast with one bowling ball than the new telecasts with constantly joking commentary and cringe music playing after every frame.
I'm sure that way too many kids, that after watching this show with its low scores and lack of messengers flying all over the place, would consider themselves the better bowler.
Love it, Wolfe calls them, "The boys," 😆😆😆
Nelson with the Fabian pompadour
the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Nelson Burton Jr puts a tremendous amount of roll on the ball.
Balls back then had no carry power by eveidence of Weber leaving the 5 7 split.
It also appears he has very little lift by his follow through or lack thereof. Of course he must have been doing something right but if I had his release and awkward slide the bowling coaches at my old alley would have jumped my ass.
Joe, what if you bowled like Din Carter?
The only thing on Weber's ball was the label.
I’ve always said that bowlers are the most intimidating athletes
Did he say he was averaging 221 !
This announcer sounds like Ronald Reagan
lol
Lol
Legends
This was probably one of the last episodes of "Championship Bowling" to be shot in black-and-white.
Or was the show being filmed in color by this time with black-and-white prints available for stations that couldn't yet transmit color film?
Silly, everybody in attendance was required to wear black, white, or grey.
Pamela Cass Yeah, but that one guy with blue eyes...
Watch these shows from 1965 and you can see the lanes are WAY drier for some reason on the 1966 shows. Did they even oil?? Are they trying to limit the $250 bonus for a 5 bagger and then $50 for each after that? That was a lot money back then, makes you wonder why the stark difference in conditions.
Back in those days, it was dry lanes using black rubber balls. Some bowling establishment experimented with oil down in the pocket zone only to be then reprimanded by the ABC for doing so and disallowing some high scores including 300 games.
dick was the pro that i tryed too pattern my bowling after when i started bowling i am now 84 yrs old not much good any more but still swinging and still love the game
Where in Akron is/was Bowlarama?
One ball!!!
Bo looks a lot like Ricky Nelson.
Rick and Bo handsome
Definitely a shot makers condition.
Bo missing spares and splits..who knew lol
Commentators:
Fred Wolf & Bill Bunetta
While a good example of the sport / activity of keggling,, or bowling , if you prefer, for the layman,, those haircuts are a Johnny Unitis nightmare!
What was Nelson Burton Jr's dad's name? 😳
“Dick’s ball seems to be sliding away from the pocket.” Seems like a personal problem to me…
Just realized, how come the bowlers back then, never wiped the balls off, like they do, since the late 70's???
It's because higher volumes of oil were used to protect the lane surfaces once urethane and reactive resin balls were introduced to the public
There was no oil to wipe off!😀
Pete Weber never wiped his ball
The old style bowling equipment did a better job of showing a bowlers skill at consistency.
WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?
I am Mr Weber.
Announcer said Burton was high lol
The good ol days when men were men and women weren't.
Gr ft u of nf
Lol
And the colored people knew their place in society.
@Tone. OK Sooner
And the sheep were nervous.
38 seconds of silence 🤔
to be honest, junior looked pedestrian at best here. his form was all over the place
That one bowler looks a lot like Pete Weber.
pablo lacruz probably because that’s his dad
Pretty sure Pablo knew that.
;)
Announcers sitting feet from Weber and Burton and yakking away. Seems odd.
It’s amazing that Dick Weber had the success that he did with doing virtually everything wrong.
No, he screws up *after* he releases the ball.
Guess y’all are on the PBA tour and won as much money as Dick has 🙄
@@soonerlegendspodcast it’s funny everyones saying how bowling today is so easy, and im like okay shouldnt you be on tour then??
@@HoffyRS Saying that it's much easier today, which it is, doesn't mean that you won't have people who are much better at it than others.
@@dirklerxstpratt2112 bruh this shit 2 yrs old lol
After watching this, Weber is NOT the bowler you want to imitate as far as approach and release of the ball. His follow through is non-existant, and he throws his arm to the right on release.
Yeah, but got his ball to hit as hard as the high rev players in his day. And there is this: 25 PBA titles!
It's like watching Pleasantville...too bad you cut out the cigarette commercials...Is anyone else uncomfortable with the announcer continuously referring to Webber as the kid's "Master?" Seems fetishy to me...
Calls them both boys too.
@@onemoremisfit LOL
did this center become Riviera Lanes? home of FTOC
Bowl a rama went through a series of owners before closing, according to my research.
No. Riviera Lanes is in Fairlawn, a suburb of Akron.
amen. Too bad they turned bowling into the more you spend the better you score. That priced the majority of people right out.
6:59 😂😂😂
Back when you had to be accurate.
dr 6-8-23