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USBC INDUCTS EIGHT INTO HALL OF FAME

RENO, Nev. - The accomplishments of eight new members of the United States Bowling Congress Hall of Fame were celebrated Thursday night as the group earned bowling’s ultimate honor.

The eight individuals were formally inducted into the USBC Hall of Fame at the Eldorado Hotel and Casino.

Jason Couch of Clermont, Fla., and Lynda Barnes of Double Oak, Texas, were inducted for superior performance, while Don McCune of Las Vegas was inducted in the Veterans category.

The Outstanding USBC Performance category welcomed four new members - Rick Steelsmith of Wichita, Kan., Sandra Postma of Lansing, Ill., Shirley Levens of Titusville, Fla., and the late Frank Santore of New York City. Tamoria Adams of Charlotte, N.C., was inducted for Meritorious Service.

Couch made history in 2002 by becoming the only bowler in Professional Bowlers Association Tour history to win three consecutive Tournament of Champions titles. His 16 career PBA titles include four majors - the three TOC victories and the 1993 PBA Touring Players Championship.

“When you’re born into a bowling family, you never think of halls of fame and being a pro on the PBA Tour for 21 years; you dream of being a great bowler like your mother and father,” said Couch, who finished in the top 10 at the USBC Masters four times, with his best finish being second in 2001. “I always looked up to my parents in bowling and in life. That’s why I’m so proud to thank my parents for giving me my passion for this great game.”

Barnes, a two-time USBC Queens champion (1998, 2008), had six top-five finishes at the U.S. Women’s Open and has won dozens of international medals competing for Team USA, including the 2005 QubicaAMF World Cup. Barnes owns four USBC Women’s Championships titles and was a standout collegiate bowler at San Jose State.

“I have often wondered what it would feel like to be inducted, and now that it is here it’s very hard for me to put into words what is in my heart,” Barnes said. “It’s truly an honor to be a part of this amazing class of inductees.”

McCune enjoyed success at multiple levels of the game. His 10 top-10 finishes at the USBC Open Championships between 1968 and 1974 included Classic Team (1968) and Classic Doubles (1969) titles, but his biggest impact came on the PBA Tour. He collected eight PBA Tour victories, including six on the way to PBA and International Bowling Media Association Player of the Year honors in 1973.

“In my career, I never in my wildest dreams started out thinking I would make it into the Hall of Fame,” McCune said. “But people do make it, and when they get here, they are really, really thankful for the opportunity.”

Postma won the USBC Queens in 1995, but made a bigger impact at the senior level. She is the only three-time winner of the USBC Senior Queens, taking the title in 2004, 2006, and 2008. She was the first of two bowlers to have won both a Queens and a Senior Queens title. She owns seven city titles and six state crowns.

“I’d like to thank the Hall of Fame committee for giving me this honor,” Postma said. “This is something I never thought I would get, and I’m eternally grateful.”

A former Team USA member and collegiate national champion at Wichita State, Steelsmith was the player to beat in the late 1980s. The four-time All-American was the World Bowling Writers, International Bowling Media Association and Collegiate Bowler of the Year in 1987. He won the USBC Masters in 1987 and returned to the tournament lanes in 1988 to win Regular All-Events and Team All-Events at the USBC Open Championships.

“I think the greatest reward that comes with this induction is the gift of reflection that this night brings with it,” Steelsmith said. “Being a recipient of an award of this magnitude forces you to reflect on what led to this night.”

Levens won three titles at the USBC Women’s Championships - Classic Doubles in 1982 and back-to-back Classic Team titles in 1993 and ‘94 - and was dominant at the state and local level with 16 Florida Queens titles, 14 state championships and 12 city tournament victories. She was the first two-time winner of the USBC Senior Queens (2002, 2005).

“I had a great career spanning 40 some years with many, many wonderful memories,” Levens said. “This sport has not only given me the joy of success and results for hard work but it has also given me a handful of amazing friendships that I have carried on long past my professional career.”

Adams is a USBC Life Member and current USBC board member, and her service to the sport of bowling spans four decades. She has served a number of leadership and delegate roles in local and state associations, and was on the first USBC Board of Directors in 2005 following her time as a Women’s International Bowling Congress Board member and vice president. Her committee assignments over the years include college bowling, legislation, diversity, volunteer services and now USBC National Policy and Legal/Legislative.

“It has said by many people before that one does not arrive at this destination alone,” Adams said. “You are helped along the way by many people. I’ve been very fortunate to have such wonderful folks who mentored me, gave me opportunities, encouraged me and followed me while I was on this journey.”

Santore, who was inducted posthumously, was a New York City and New York State Hall of Famer and a standout individual during the heyday of team bowling. He claimed three individual titles at the USBC Open Championships - Regular All-Events in 1950 and 1953, and Regular Singles in 1953. He also had third-place finishes in Regular Singles and Regular Team in 1950, and a fifth-place team effort in 1949.

With the eight inductees Thursday, there now are 402 members of the USBC Hall of Fame - 267 in Performance, 115 in Meritorious Service and 20 Pioneers.

The USBC Hall of Fame was created in 2005 by merging the former American Bowling Congress and Women’s International Bowling Congress halls of fame.

For more information on the USBC Hall of Fame, visit BOWL.com/HallofFame.

United States Bowling Congress
The United States Bowling Congress serves as the national governing body for the sport. USBC is a membership organization that provides standardized rules, regulations and benefits to make bowling fair and fun for everyone.

The interactive home of USBC is BOWL.com. Go to twitter.com/USBC for the fastest USBC headlines.

 

JOAN FEINBLUM, USBC HALL OF FAMER, DIES AT 8

ARLINGTON, Texas - Joan Feinblum, who was inducted into the United States Bowling Congress Hall of Fame last year, died Monday. She was 81.

Feinblum, of Santa Rosa, Calif., dedicated more than five decades of service to bowling at the local, state and national levels, including four years of work on the committees and task forces that helped develop USBC.

Feinblum spent more than a decade on the Women’s International Bowling Congress Board of Directors, and most recently served as chairperson of the USBC Nominating Committee and the USBC Hall of Fame Committee.

“I stand here humbled and grateful and I just can’t believe it,” Feinblum said at last year’s USBC Hall of Fame inductions. “What a privilege it is to be inducted. This isn’t about me. It’s about the passion of all those who work and volunteer in this industry. I know that bowling has a big future.”

Feinblum caught the attention of WIBC officials through her behind-the-scenes activities with the Redwood Empire and California Women’s Bowling Associations, an organization for which she later served as director. After serving as president of both organizations, she was elected a WIBC director in 1994 and served as a Vice President for five years (1999-2004).

In 1988, while serving California as a mental health administrator, she was honored with an Outstanding Manager Award - a tribute to her experience as a physical education instructor and teacher of emotionally disturbed children.

Feinblum’s ability on the lanes became evident in 1965, when she won the Santa Rosa Women’s Bowling Association Bowler of the Year award. A longtime member of the Bowling Writers Association of America as well as the National Women Bowling Writers, Feinblum has earned the NWBW Dudley Peebles Photography Award as well as the NWBA Jo Ettein Leiber Award.

In addition to being a member of the USBC Hall of Fame, Feinblum was also inducted into the California WBA and the Redwood Empire WBA Halls of Fame.

Services are pending.

United States Bowling Congress
The United States Bowling Congress serves as the national governing body for the sport. USBC is a membership organization that provides standardized rules, regulations and benefits to make bowling fair and fun for everyone.

The interactive home of USBC is BOWL.com. Go to twitter.com/USBC for the fastest USBC headlines.

 

NORTH CAROLINA’S JOE SCARBOROUGH ROLLS FIRST 900 SERIES IN PBA HISTORY

THE VILLAGES, Fla. (April 21, 2013) – Joe Scarborough of Charlotte, N.C., rolled three consecutive 300 games to start the first round of qualifying in the PBA50 Sun Bowl at The Villages at Spanish Springs Lanes Sunday, recording the first 900 series in Professional Bowlers Association history.

Scarborough, who turned 50 in October 2012, is bowling in only his second PBA50 Tour event. He qualified 38th in the re-named PBA Senior Tour’s season-opener in New Port Richey, Fla., last week, but lost his first best-of-three-game single-elimination match.

The self-employed electrical contractor threw another strike to start his fourth game, but his streak ended at 37 in a row when he left a split on his 38th shot. Three straight sub-200 games then toppled him out of the lead and into a tie for 12th place with 1,921 pins, 77 pins behind leader PBA Hall of Famer Mark Williams of Beaumont, Texas, who averaged 249.75 for eight games to lead the field of 159 bowlers with a 1,998 total.

“I’m pretty surprised,” Scarborough said. “I had the shot, I took my time and it worked out. To be honest, no, I wasn’t nervous. I was pretending I was at home practicing, and I blocked out the crowd and focused on executing every shot.

“After the first three games, I moved to the other end of the house where the lanes were drier and I just couldn’t get the ball down the lane the same way. It wasn’t the pressure.

“It’s unbelievable, especially to be the first in the PBA to do it,” he added. Scarborough said his previous high three-game series was an 838 and he had 14 previous 300 games.

“It’s interesting that I used a different ball to start practice, but I switched (to a Storm IQ Tour Pearl) and I threw six strikes in a row to end practice. So I decided to start with that ball. I knew I had something good, but not this good.

“I’m proud of what I’ve done so far,” he added, “but I’ve still got work to do.”

Scarborough’s perfect start set PBA50 Tour records for consecutive 300 games (the previous record was two by Norb Wetzel of Fond du Lac, Wis., in Albany, N.Y., in 1998 and by Rohn Morton of Portland, Ore., in Tucson, Ariz., in 2005), and highest three-game series. He also tied the record for most 300s by an individual in a PBA50 Tour tournament, shared by Ron Mohr of Eagle River, Alaska (Columbus, Ohio, 2010) and Bob Kelly of Dayton, Ohio (Mooresville, N.C., 2010).

Norm Duke of Clermont, Fla., bowled three consecutive 300s in a standard PBA Tour event in North Brunswick, N.J., in 1996, but the performance didn’t count as a 900 series because he ended one round with two perfect games and started the next round with the third perfect game.

Williams, who rolled games of 269, 234, 259, 268, 204, 279, 268 and 217, said he had his only open frame in the 204 game.

“The conditions were really good,” Williams said. “There was a lot of oil in the front, some hold area and the carry was good. But there are a lot of games to go, so we’ll see how things go.”

The PBA50 Sun Bowl in The Villages produced another record when 87-year-old Darrell Ducat of Perrysville, Ohio, became the oldest player to compete in a PBA tournament.

Qualifying continues Monday at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., with the top 32 advancing to match play on Tuesday. Match play rounds are scheduled for 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tuesday, followed by a four-player stepladder final at 7 p.m.

PBA’s online bowling channel Xtra Frame is providing start to finish coverage of the PBA50 Sun Bowl. For subscription and schedule information visit the pba.com homepage and click on the Xtra Frame logo.

PBA50 SUN BOWL AT THE VILLAGES
Spanish Springs Lanes, The Villages, Fla., Sunday

First Round Qualifying (after 8 games)
1, Mark Williams, Beaumont, Texas, 1,998.
2, Ron Dixon, Boynton Beach, Fla., 1,993.
3, Amleto Monacelli, Venezuela, 1,982.
4, Bo Goergen, Sanford, Mich., 1,978.
5, Wayne Webb, Columbus, Ohio, 1,970.
6, Kevin Croucher, Grants Pass, Ore., 1,960.
7, Tom Baker, King, N.C., 1,949.
8, Steve Ferraro, Kingston, N.Y., 1,945.
9, Walter Ray Williams Jr., Ocala, Fla., 1,939.
10, Sammy Ventura, Syracuse, N.Y., 1,934.
11, a-Larry Barwick, Wauchula, Fla., 1,931.
12 (tie), Steve Neff, Homosassa Springs, Fla., and Joe Scarborough, Charlotte, N.C., 1,921
14, Mike Edwards, Tulsa, Okla., 1,920.
15, a-Philip Frey, Lutz, Fla., 1,918.
16, Rick Minier, Houston, Texas, 1,916.
17 (tie), Don Blatchford, Santa Monica, Calif., and Keith Sharp, Orlando, Fla., 1,915.
19, Hugh Miller, Seattle, 1,906.
20, John Petraglia, Jackson, N.J., 1,902.
21, Richard McDaniel, Coconut Creek, Fla., 1,901.
22, Bob Learn Jr., Erie, Pa., 1,898.
23, Paul Lemond, Jasper, Ind, 1,892.
24, Dale Traber, Cedarburg, Wis., 1,886.
25, Marty Berke, Allentown, Pa., 1,882.
26, Pete Weber, St. Ann, Mo., 1,865.
27 (tie), Michael Henry, Brunswick, Ohio, and Bryan Goebel, Shawnee, Kan., 1,860.
29, John Conroy, Mahopac, N.Y., 1,856.
30, John Shreve Sr., Elyria, Ohio, 1,855.
31, Darrell Adams, Flintstone, Ga., 1,853.
32, Gene Morrison, Spring Lake, N.C., 1,848.
33, Christopher Keane, New City, N.Y., 1,844.
34, a-Duane Podgorski, Lakeland, Fla., 1,843.
35, Darryl Bower, Middletown, Pa., 1,842.
36, Don Sylvia, Lady Lake, FL, 1,841.
37, Wayne Bolin, Lumberton, N.C., 1,836.
38, Mike Dias, Lafayette, Colo., 1,834.
39, Timothy Kauble, Marion, Ohio, 1,826.
40 (tie), Ted Staikoff, Black Hawk, S.D., and a-Howard Crowder, Tamarac, Fla., 1,824.
42, Bob Brady, Santa Monica, Calif., 1,815.
43, Bob Handley, Winter Park, Fla., 1,812.
44, Leif Sjoberg, Sweden, 1,810.
45, Gary Hiday, Indianapolis, 1,807.
46, a-Bob Caputo Sr., The Villages, Fla., 1,804.
47, Joel Carlson, Omaha, Neb., 1,803.
48, Daniel Miner, East Moline, Ill., 1,802.
49, Harry Sullins, Chesterfield Twp, Mich., 1,798.
50, Terry Metzner, Kentwood, Mich., 1,797.
51 (tie), Tom Kennedy, Shepherdsville, Ky., and Nick Morgan, Sacramento, Calif., 1,795.
53, Mark Scime, Winter Garden, Fla., 1,793.
54, Patrick King, Yankton, S.D., 1,792.
55 (tie), David Taylor, Seminole, Fla., and Mike Hastings, Millsboro, Del., 1,790.
57 (tie), a-Roger Kossert, Lithia, Fla.; Robert Harvey, Boise, Idaho, and Kevin Foley, Reno, Nev., 1,788.
60, Ron Mohr, Eagle River, Alaska, 1,782.
61, William Peters, Dayton, Ohio, 1,781.
62 (tie), Thomas Ream, Tampa, Fla., and Charlie Tomey, Spartanburg, S.C., 1,780.
64, Tommy Kress, Rochester, N.Y., 1,778.
65 (tie), Gary Morgan, Marietta, Ga.; Kenny Parks, Hammond, Ind., and Henry Gonzalez, Colorado Springs, Colo., 1,777
68 (tie), a-Lucy Sandelin, Tampa, Fla., and Bill McCorkle, Westerville, Ohio, 1,776.
70 (tie), Frank Gallo Jr., Jacksonville, Fla., and Kevin Humble, Lake Mary, Fla., 1,764.
72, Dale Eagle, Tavares, Fla., 1,763.
73, Ron Jacobson, Jupiter, Fla., 1,758.
74 (tie), Fred Ferreira, Kings Park, N.Y., and Pete Couture, Titusville, Fla., 1,751.
76, Andy Ippolito, Forest Hills, N.Y., 1,745.
77, Jim Pitts, Elmira, N.Y., 1,742.
78, Rich Giragosian, Charlotte, N.C., 1,737.
79, Jim Lesiuk, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., 1,734.
80, a-huck Richardson, The Villages, Fla., 1,733.
81, Dan Howsmon, Lutz, Fla., 1,727.
82 (tie), Lennie Boresch Jr., Kenosha, Wis., and Marc Lineberry, Camanche, Iowa, 1,725.
84 (tie), Bob Kelly, Dayton, Ohio, and Dennis Rakauskas, Apopka, Fla., 1,721
86, Dennis Farris, The Villages, Fla., 1,719.
87, Todd Haney, Spartanburg, S.C., 1,716.
88 (tie), Brian Cooper, Henderson, Nev., and Jerry Lau, St. Peters, Mo., 1,714.
90, Ed Cutter, Manassas Park, Va., 1,711.
91, Guppy Troup, Taylorsville, N.C., 1,709.
92, Steve Lang, Indianapolis, Ind., 1,708.
93, Tom Carter, Rockford, Ill., 1,707.
94, Emilio Mora Sr., Defiance, Ohio, 1,706.
95, Danny Gould, Palm Bay, Fla, 1,705.
96 (tie), Vince Mazzanti Jr., Levittown, Pa.; Doug O’Bryant, Jasper, Ga., and Larry Graybeal, Elizabethton, Tenn., 1,704.
99, Bill Argenbright, Fisherville, Va., 1,701.
100, Ron Profitt, Brookville, Ohio, 1,698.
101, Jim Knoblauch, Waukesha, Wis., 1,697.
102, Peter Knopp, Germany, 1,696.
103, Robert Callari, Bloomfield, N.Y., 1,694.
104, Lee Rucker, Fort Myers, Fla., 1,690.
105, Randy Robertson, Evansville, Ind., 1,686.
106, Jim Price, Harrrisburg, N.C., 1,684.
107 (tie), Dan Ahlquist, Sweden, and Tom Howison, Chillicothe, Ohio, 1,683.
109, a-Robert Vega, The Villages, Fla., 1,680.
110, Randy Rose, Gloucester, Va., 1,676.
111, a-Roger Tramp, Deltona, Fla., 1,675.
112, a-Edward Roberts, Braintree, Mass., 1,674.
113 (tie), Steve Bova, Massapequa, N.Y., and William Keenan, Jr., Orlando, Fla., 1,671.
115, a-Widmar Vargas, Riverview, Fla., 1,666.
116, Dave Paquin, Kannapolis, N.C., 1,656.
117, Lee Brosius, Ashburn, Va., 1,654.
118, J.C. Quintana, Miami, 1,641.
119, Chuck Best, Buda, Texas, 1,640.
120, Larry Williams, St. Augustine, Fla., 1,636.
121 (tie), Garry Blanton, Owensboro, Ky., and Larry Felts Jr., Moore, S.C., 1,632.
123, Bob Chamberlain, The Villages, Fla., 1,628.
124 (tie), Bob Andersen, Forest City, N.C., and Steve Stein, Staten Island, N.Y., 1,616.
126, a-Gerald Teel, The Villages, Fla., 1,614.
127, Nick Panicaro, Ocala, Fla., 1,610.
128, Todd Kjell, Roscoe, Ill., 1,601.
129, a-John Pullen, Oyster Bay, NY, 1,598.
130, Steven Boxerman, University City, Mo., 1,594.
131, a-Ed Fenstermacher, Summerfield, FL, 1,589.
132, Michael Owen, Gainesville, Fla., 1,588.
133, Jeffrey Herman, Bonaire, Ga., 1,585.
134 (tie), George Lord, Lakeland, Fla., and Ron Glick, Morganville, N.J., 1,583.
136, a-Patrick Trudeau, St. Petersburg, Fla., 1,578.
137 (tie), Bill Ursillo, Bluffton, S.C., and Dale Lee, Brandon, Fla., 1,568.
139, Timothy Bates, Orlando, Fla., 1,565.
140, Brian Miller, Springfield, Ohio, 1,564.
141, a-Mike Schmid St. Paul, Minn., 1,561.
142 (tie), Dave Bernhardt, Romeo, Mich., and Don Michaelsen Sr., Plant City, Fla., 1,557.
144, a-Gene Masterson Jr., Port Orange, Fla., 1,549.
145, a-Edgar Gomez, Colombia, 1,540.
146, Sal Bongiorno, Hollywood, Fla., 1,527.
147, Larry Montgomery, Safety Harbor, Fla., 1,513.
148, Dennis Amato, Pine Brook, N.J., 1,503.
149, Ken Waters, Kingsport, Tenn., 1,484.
150, Ray Randall, Dearborn, Mich., 1,469.
151, Stephen Lippman, Palm Harbor, Fla, 1,468.
152, Scott Ettinger, Westfield, N.J., 1,066 (WD).
153, Sam Perrotta, Lincoln Park, N.J., 1,436.
154, Lindell Woolard, Tallahassee, Fla., 1,433.
155, Patsy DellaPenna, Palm Harbor, Fla., 1,416.
156, Richard Felten, Rockville, Md., 1,403.
157, a-Ricky Bolatto, Sebring, Fla., 1,362.
158, Dave Schultz, Jackson, Wis., 1,322.
159, a-Darrell Ducat, Perrysburg, Ohio, 1,177.

300 Games: Don Batchford, Wayne Webb, Joe Scarborough (3), Christopher Keane.

a-denotes amateur

About the PBA
The Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) is an organization of more than 3,200 of the best bowlers from 17 countries who compete in PBA Tour, PBA International Tour, PBA Regional and PBA50 Tour events. Nearly one million ESPN viewers watch PBA Tour on Sundays during the tour season and thousands around the world watch PBA activities on Xtra Frame, the PBA’s exclusive online bowling channel. PBA sponsors include Barbasol, Brunswick, Ebonite International, GEICO, Jack Link’s, MOTIV, Storm Products and the United States Bowling Congress, among others. For more information, log on to http://www.pba.com.

 

MONACELLI IS LEADER, AMATEUR SANDELIN THIRD AFTER QUALIFYING IN PBA50 PASCO COUNTY SUNCOAST OPEN

Professional Bowlers Association Hall of Famer Amleto Monacelli retained his lead in the PBA50 Pasco County Suncoast Open benefiting Wounded Warriors after Tuesday’s second round but standout woman amateur Lucy Sandelin of Tampa made a statement by finishing qualifying in third.

Monacelli, the 2012 PBA50 Senior Rookie of the Year, finished qualifying with a 3,819 16-game pinfall total (238.6 average) to outdistance PBA Hall of Famer and four-time PBA50 Player of the Year Tom Baker by 117 pins who was second with 3,702.

In Monacelli’s second eight-game round Tuesday, he bowled games of 276, 269, 245, 255, 239, 235, 181 and 266. He leads a field of 40 players who advanced to Wednesday’s match play rounds.

“Overall I’m bowling real well and I feel good,” said Monacelli, who won the 2012 Senior U.S. Open and is a 19-time PBA Tour champion. “My whole life I’ve worked hard to stay in shape and combine that with the right amount of practice which is working well for me now.

“Another thing that is working well for me is to not wasting time making a change whether it be with my equipment or with ball speed and where to play on the lane,” he added.

Sandelin, a member of the United States Bowling Congress Hall of Fame, qualified third with a 3,651 pinfall total (228.1 average) and will be hoping to add another chapter to Professional Bowlers Association history as she tries to become the first woman to win a PBA50 Tour (formerly known as Senior Tour) tournament. She had games of 236, 224, 211, 242, 216, 257, 258 and 214 in the second round.

Her job will be made easier as she earned byes in three match play rounds as a result of finishing in the top eight in qualifying.

“When I entered the tournament I was hoping to make match play because I thought, hey, I can make it to the top 40,” said Sandelin who was the 1996 women’s national amateur champion and United States Olympic Committee Athlete of the Year for bowling in 1992 and 1996. “But then as qualifying went on I was bowling better and I thought maybe I can make the top 30 or top 20 but here I am in the top eight.

“One thing that really helped today was I studied my equipment and knew when I needed to throw which ball,” she added. “I wasn’t having to fish for what balls would work during the second block. Heading into match play I need to continue to be smart about my equipment and just stay in the moment.”

Sandelin is trying to become the first woman to win a PBA50 Tour tournament. The highest finishes by women in a PBA50 event are ninth place by Linda Kelly in the 2006 Senior Decatur Open and Robin Romeo, who finished 22nd in the 2007 USBC Senior Masters.

Kelly Kulick of Union, N.J. became the only woman to win a PBA Tour event when she won the PBA Tournament of Champions in 2010.

Match play continues all day Wednesday with Championship rounds scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. ET.

PBA’s online bowling channel Xtra Frame is providing start to finish coverage of the Pasco County Suncoast Open. For subscription and schedule information visit the pba.com homepage and click on the Xtra Frame logo.


PBA50 PASCO COUNTY SUNCOAST OPEN BENEFITING WOUNDED WARRIORS

Lane Glo Bowl, New Port Richey, Fla., Tuesday

Second Round Qualifying (after 16 games)
Top 40 advance to match play

a-amateur, s-super seniors out of the regular prize list cashing for $700

1, Amleto Monacelli, Venezuela, 3,819.
2, Tom Baker, King, N.C., 3,702.
3, a-Lucy Sandelin, Tampa, Fla., 3,651.
4, Harry Sullins, Chesterfield Twp, Mich., 3,629.
5, Kenny Parks, Hammond, Ind., 3,579.
6, Don Blatchford, Santa Monica, Calif., 3,560.
7, Pete Weber, St. Ann, Mo., 3,554.
8, Mark Williams, Beaumont, Texas, 3,548.
9, Walter Ray Williams Jr., Ocala, Fla., 3,544.
10, John Petraglia, Jackson, N.J., 3,540.
11, Wayne Webb, Columbus, Ohio, 3,539.
12, Sammy Ventura, Syracuse, N.Y., 3,506.
13, John Shreve Sr., Elyria, Ohio, 3,475.
14, a-Widmar Vargas, Riverview, Fla., 3,465.
15, Bo Goergen, Sanford, Mich., 3,457.
16, Peter Knopp, Germany, 3,445.
17, Ron Mohr, Eagle River, Alaska, 3,442.
18, Nick Morgan, Sacramento, Calif., 3,439.
19, Mike Dias, Lafayette, Colo., 3,386.
20, Bob Learn Jr., Erie, Pa., 3,375.
21, Dave Bernhardt, Romeo, Mich., 3,365.
22, Joel Carlson, Omaha, Neb., 3,358.
23, Timothy Kauble, Marion, Ohio, 3,356.
24, Steve Neff, Homosassa Springs, Fla., 3,351.
25, Dale Eagle, Tavares, Fla., 3,349.
26, William Peters, Dayton, Ohio, 3,347.
27, a-Larry Barwick, Wauchula, Fla., 3,346.
28, Tom Carter, Rockford, Ill., 3,327.
29, Michael Henry, Brunswick, Ohio, 3,324.
30, Robert Harvey, Boise, Idaho, 3,316.
31, Bob Brady, Santa Monica, Calif., 3,300.
32, Kevin Croucher, Grants Pass, Ore., 3,292.
33, Dennis Rakauskas, Apopka, Fla., 3,284.
34, Doug O’Bryant, Jasper, Ga., 3,270.
35, Tom Howison, Chillicothe, Ohio, 3,265.
36, Marc Lineberry, Camanche, Iowa, 3,264.
37, Steve Ferraro, Kingston, N.Y., 3,262.
38, (TIE) Todd Kjell, Roscoe, Ill., and
Joe Scarborough, Mars Hill, N.C., 3,260.
40, Guppy Troup, Taylorsville, N.C., 3,254.

FAILED TO ADVANCE

41, a-Duane Podgorski, Lakeland, Fla., 3,250
42, (TIE) Randy Robertson, Evansville, Ind., and
s-Frank Gallo Jr., Jacksonville, Fla., 3,231, $700
44, David Zelger, Red Lion, Pa., 3,227.
45, s-Bob Kelly, Dayton, Ohio, 3,226, $700.
46, Terry Metzner, Kentwood, Mich., 3,224.
47, s-Bill Henson, Westerville, Ohio, 3,223, $700.
48, (TIE) Lee Rucker, Fort Myers, Fla., and
Michael Owen, Gainesville, Fla., 3,209
50, Jeffrey Herman, Bonaire, Ga., 3,208.
51, a-Jeffery Roberson, Land O’Lakes, Fla., 3,206.
52, Kevin Foley, Reno, Nev., 3,189.
53, (TIE) a-Edgar Gomez, Colombia, and
Ron Dixon, Boynton Beach, Fla., 3,185.
55, s-Rick Minier, Houston, Texas, 3,179, $700.
56, (TIE) Christopher Keane, New City, N.Y., and
s-Thomas Ream, Tampa, Fla., 3,178, $700.
58, Gary Morgan, Marietta, Ga., 3,166.
59, Tom Kennedy, Shepherdsville, Ky., 3,165.
60, s-Lee Brosius, Ashburn, Va., 3,164, $700.
61, a,s-Robert Morrison, New Port Richey, Fla., 3,161, $700.
62, (TIE) Ted Staikoff, Black Hawk, S.D., and
a-Patrick Trudeau, St. Petersburg, Fla., 3,158.
64, Wayne Bolin, Lumberton, N.C., 3,154.
65, s-Nick Panicaro, Ocala, Fla., 3,142, $700.
66, Henry Gonzalez, Colorado Springs, Colo., 3,139.
67, Sal Bongiorno, Hollywood, Fla., 3,134.
68, Richard Esposito, Clearwater, Fla., 3,129.
69, Vince Mazzanti Jr., Levittown, Pa., 3,128.
70, Bob Handley, Winter Park, Fla., 3,127.
71, Dan Ahlquist, Sweden, 3,118.
72, Leif Sjoberg, Sweden, 3,095.
73, Ed Cutter, Manassas Park, Va., 3,088.
74, a-Philip Frey, Lutz, Fla., 3,087.
75, Ron Woods, Hudson, Fla., 3,084.
76, Larry Graybeal, Elizabethton, Tenn., 3,056.
77, Don Sylvia, Lady Lake, FL, 3,048.
78, Dale Lee, Brandon, Fla., 3,044.
79, Ken Waters, Kingsport, Tenn., 3,042.
80, Bill McCorkle, Westerville, Ohio, 3,038.
81, Chuck Gardner, Charlotte, N.C., 3,037.
82, Dave Sill, Titusville, Fla., 3,034.
83, Keith Glasgow, St. Petersburg, Fla., 3,024.
84, Michael Truitt, Orland Park, Ill., 3,022.
85, (TIE) Paul Lemond, Jasper, Ind, and
Andy Ippolito, Forest Hills, N.Y., 3,012.
87, William Keenan, Jr., Orlando, Fla., 3,000.
88, (TIE) Mark Scime, Winter Garden, Fla., and
Brian Cooper, Visalia, Calif., 2,995.
90, Garry Blanton, Owensboro, Ky., 2,988.
91, Peter Brainard, Tampa, Fla., 2,985.
92, Bob Chamberlain, The Villages, Fla., 2,968.
93, a-Dave Titer, Land O’ Lakes, Fla., 2,958.
94, Ron Glick, Morganville, N.J., 2,947.
95, John Younger, Ledyard, Conn., 2,940.
96, Sam Perrotta, Lincoln Park, N.J., 2,934.
97, Timothy Bates, Orlando, Fla., 2,932.
98, Dave Schultz, Jackson, Wis., 2,925.
99, a-Donald Helsel, Tampa, Fla., 2,920.
100, Tommy King, Oakdale, N.Y., 2,909.
101, Danny Gould, Palm Bay, Fla, 2,908.
102, Patsy DellaPenna, Palm Harbor, Fla., 2,907.
103, Steven Boxerman, University City, Mo., 2,903.
104, Daniel Miner, East Moline, Ill., 2,900.
105, Steve Stein, Staten Island, N.Y., 2,899.
106, a-Nicholas Crisafulli, Tarpon Springs, Fla., 2,857.
107, Don Michaelsen Sr., Plant City, Fla., 2,855.
108, Bob Pazur, Venice, Fla, 2,844.
109, Douglas Weese, Carson City, Mich., 2,838.
110, Larry Montgomery, Safety Harbor, Fla., 2,837.
111, Jim Heintz, St. Charles, Mo., 2,801.
112, George Lord, Lakeland, Fla., 2,779.
113, Dan Howsmon, Lutz, Fla., 2,775.
114, Bob Andersen, Forest City, N.C., 2,770.
115, Steve Bova, Massapequa, N.Y., 2,760.
116, Stephen Lippman, Palm Harbor, Fla., 2,749.
117, Lindell Woolard, Tallahassee, Fla., 2,718.
118, Dennis Amato, Pine Brook, N.J., 2,704.
119, Ray Randall, Dearborn, Mich., 2,585.
120, a-Rolando Sebelen, Dominican Republic, 2,490.

300 Games, 1 - Todd Kjell

 

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