To become a successful two-handed bowler, there are some significant obstacles in your path.
Learning this technique requires time, practice and patience. To gain skills in this form, you can not just play in a league and expect results.
You almost certainly need to invest extra time and money to learn two-hand throwing. Paying for your patience, however, may be worth it as this type of throwing is known to generate significantly more spin in throws, leading to controversial aspects of its authenticity in the bowling community.
The usual approach to bowling is to throw a ball with one hand on a ten meter long wooden track to knock down the ten pins at the opposite end (preferably in a throw).
Now, for two-handed bowling, decades of practice and technique are thrown out the window as both hands are used to give the bowling ball a powerful spin.
Instead of aiming with one hand, turn and leave a two-handed bowler, who with his non-dominant hand grips the front of the ball to stabilize and support the ball during the backswing.
When the ball is moved forward, the support hand is also used to guide the ball and generate more spin when the throw is made.
By using two hands, normally more spin is naturally generated by the throw. (Note: The second hand is not used to add more spin to the throw, but to support the bowler's throw, the extra spin naturally occurs when the two-handed throw is in progress.)
When did the two-hand bowling begin?
Considering that bowling is thousands of years old, two-handed bowling is a baby technique compared to the rest of the game.
This throwing style appeared in the American professional bowling community around the year 2009.
Over the following years, the two-handed bowling has slowly but surely gained acceptance due to its grip and high spin.
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