Jeez, a good amount of those shots were already starting to face up halfway down the lane. Not enough reverse oil, I'm guessing. Since you seemed to have to move after every shot.
@lockedonlaw Nah. Just looks like a typical wet/dry condition. Sometimes lanes transition poorly or were oiled unevenly in places, causing the ball to over-react or face up too quick.
@@XenoGuru It just looked to me like he was playing hell keeping the ball to the right of the head pin and Walter Ray doesn't generally have that issue. That was why I asked.
Jeez, a good amount of those shots were already starting to face up halfway down the lane. Not enough reverse oil, I'm guessing.
Since you seemed to have to move after every shot.
Is it my imagination or were the lanes bone dry?
If the lanes were bone dry, my spare ball would be in the left gutter at about 25 feet.
Guess it was your imagination.
@@sawnose4775 When I see what appears to be Walter's weakest ball making a left turn, I ask. I don't mind being educated.
@lockedonlaw Nah. Just looks like a typical wet/dry condition. Sometimes lanes transition poorly or were oiled unevenly in places, causing the ball to over-react or face up too quick.
@@XenoGuru It just looked to me like he was playing hell keeping the ball to the right of the head pin and Walter Ray doesn't generally have that issue. That was why I asked.