Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) is the major sanctioning body for the sport of professional ten-pin bowling in the U.S.A..
The PBA currently has over 4,100 members worldwide, including over 700 senior members. The first PBA season started in 1959 and had three sanctioned tournaments. The PBA oversees the PBA Tour, the PBA Senior Tour, and the PBA Regional Tour (a sort of minor-league circuit). The PBA Regional Tour consists of 7 regions: Central, East, Midwest, Northwest, South, Southwest, and West.
From the PBA Tour's inception through the 2003-2004 season, most national PBA events were open to the entire PBA membership. Starting in October 2004, the PBA adopted an all-exempt national tour format. In this format, only 64 bowlers compete each week. Bowlers can earn exemptions by winning a tournament during the previous season, winning one of the four major tournaments (and gaining a multi-year exemption), placing among the top finishers in points, leading a region on the PBA Regional Tour, or finishing in a high position at the PBA Tour Trials (the number of exemptions awarded at the Tour Trials can vary - in 2006, 10 spots will be available).
In total, 58 bowlers receive exempt status for the entire season. One of the remaining spots is awarded to a bowler (often a retired PBA legend or someone who is not exempt, but has enjoyed past success). The five remaining spots are awarded each week through the Tournament Qualifying Round. During the TQR, amateur and PBA bowlers bowl 7 games of qualifying. The top amateur bowler advances (no matter where he or she finishes), along with the top four PBA members.
Only three bowlers have advanced from the TQR round to make the telecast on ESPN. In the 2004-2005 season, Liz Johnson made history by becoming the first person to make a telecast after qualifying through the TQR round, while also setting the mark for being the first female bowler to make a PBA championship round on television. Johnson advanced to the final round, where she was defeated by Tommy Jones. In 2005-2006, Del Ballard Jr. and Sean Rash advanced from the TQR to the PBA telecast. While Ballard lost to Ritche Allen in the final match of the 2006 Motel 6 Phoenix Classic, Sean Rash defeated Mike Devaney to win the 2006 West Virgina Championship. Rash became the first bowler to win a PBA tournament after advancing from the TQR. In addition to winning the $40,000 first prize, Rash also earned an exemption for the 2006-2007 season.
In the 2006 Tour Trials, Kelly Kulick made history becoming the first woman in PBA history to gain a PBA exemption (she will be exempt for the 2006-2007 season). Before it dissolved, Kulick was the 2001 Rookie of the Year in the PWBA, won the 2003 Women's U.S. Open, and was a three time member of Team USA.
The PBA Tour currently has four major championship events: the USBC Masters (known as the ABC Masters prior to 2005), the PBA U.S. Open, the PBA World Championship, and the PBA Tournament of Champions. In the 2004-2005 season, the PBA held twenty tournaments. For that season, Patrick Allen was the Chris Schenkel Player of the Year and PBA points champion. Allen's closest competition came from the Tommy Jones, who won four of the tour's twenty events.
On October 3, 2005, the PBA signed a historic three year sponsorship deal with Denny's, which made the American restaurant chain the PBA Tour's first title sponsor. The 2005-2006 season, which contains twenty one events, began at the end of October 2005 and finished in April 2006.
In late May, the PBA held the 2006 PBA Tour Trials to determine the remaining 10 bowlers who will have exempt status for the 2006-2007 season. At the Tour Trials, non-exempt PBA and international bowlers bowled nine games for five straight days on the five different PBA oil patterns. The ten bowlers with the largest pin totals after 45 games received exempt status for the 2006-2007 season.
The PBA reached new audiences in 2005, when it was featured in the 2005 sports documentary, A League of Ordinary Gentlemen. The documentary, filmed during the 2002-2003 season, enjoyed a limited release in theaters before being released in a DVD format in March 2006.
There have been only 16 perfect games bowled on the nationally-televised final day of regular PBA tournaments. Jack Biondolillo rolled the first one in 1967. Mika Koivuniemi bowled the most recent one in 2003. There have also been two on Senior PBA Tour telecasts, by Gene Stus (1992) and Ron Winger (1993).
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