This installment of The One Board originally appeared in Bowlers Journal International, January, 2018
In the second annual The One Board year-start countup, we prognosticate 18 bowling-related events that will make 2018 a year worth living. At the end of the year, we’ll look back on these items and be shocked at the realization three of them actually came true.
- Jason Belmonte wins the PBA Tournament of Champions, trying him with Earl Anthony and Pete Weber for most career major titles with 10.
- Scores of media show up for the Players Championship to witness record-breaking history, but Belmonte finishes third. That’s okay, because everyone knows he will win the USBC Masters in April, so the media all turn up to that as well for another chance at history.
- Some guy no one has ever heard of wins the Masters. He takes his trophy back to the remote wilderness of the Northwest Territories and is never seen again.
- Las Vegas sets the over/under at nine seconds on how long it will take someone to mention Chris Barnes’ thriftiness during the Hall of Fame ceremony. No one takes the under and Las Vegas goes out of business.
- The hottest song of the summer is “Pin Placement” by Positive Axis Point, a new pop trio hailing from Ecuador, Kenya and Indonesia.
- EJ Tackett wins every single Xtra Frame Tour event over the summer and his second consecutive Storm Cup. The Player of the Year race comes down to Tackett and that guy who wins the Masters. Tackett wins.
- Jesper Svensson’s first right-arm tattoo is an actual-size depiction of a piece of kinesiology tape. After whichever brand he tattoos doesn’t renew their product-registration agreement, Svensson ironically has to tape over his tape tattoo whenever he makes a show. He makes every show.
- As World Bowling scoring catches on in bowling, so does traditional bowling scoring in other sports. Baseball teams that score runs in the first inning now have to wait to see how they do in the second and third innings to determine exactly what their first inning was worth.
- For the 60th consecutive year, an immeasurable number of people are referred to as great guys.
- Someone definitively proves how something being too easy is a legitimate excuse for failure.
- Several intra-bowling romantic relationships struggle because of trust issues. It’s not because the bowlers can’t trust each other, but rather because they can’t trust anything or anyone more than they trust “the process.”
- Someone designs a tournament that is simultaneously a carry contest and a grind, a marathon and a sprint, a leftyfest and a lefties-locked-outfest, match play and no match play, a simple and convoluted format, and does so while maintaining integrity. No one complains.
- Albuquerque emerges as the new live-streaming hotbed. Not sure where they get their equipment.
- “Some guy named (insert undeniably legendary bowler’s name here)” finally becomes cute. Then immediately stops being cute again.
- In October, during an important MLB playoff game, the baseball players rush to the locker room between at-bats to check in on C-squad qualifying scores from the U.S. Open.
- Belmonte wins the U.S. Open, breaking the record for most majors and collecting the one major he hasn’t yet won, joining Mike Aulby as the only two players to have won all five. The media, still smarting over two failed attempts earlier in the year, don’t attend and no one hears about it.
- Lamenting the lack of media attention, the PBA retroactively credits Don Carter with major championships for his World Invitational titles, tying him with Belmonte at 11. This gives Belmonte a chance to break the all-time record, again, at the PBA World Championship. Throngs of media show up. Instead of winning his 12th, Belmonte finishes 12th.
- Pete Weber wins the World Championship at age 56, giving him 11 major titles and creating a three-way tie for the record. The PBA statistician quits and moves deeper into the woods than that guy who wins the Masters.