
Five Ways to Improve Your Release – Part 2
Article Contents 1. Speed-dominant versus rev-dominant 2. Optimizing your release 3. Increasing your rev rate 3.1. Creating more leverage 3.2. Putting in the work 3.3.
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Article Contents 1. Speed-dominant versus rev-dominant 2. Optimizing your release 3. Increasing your rev rate 3.1. Creating more leverage 3.2. Putting in the work 3.3.

The Hammer Hazmat Pearl introduces a pearlized coverstock to the symmetrical Hazmat core. This is the third version of the Hazmat, with the original being

The Turbo X returns in name and color scheme to the Ebonite line. This ball uses the Turbo core design, which is a higher RG

The Track Cypher Pearl shares the symmetrical Synergy weight block with the original Cypher. It uses the Prime Response Pearl (HK22) coverstock, finished with 1500

Article Contents 1. Time 2. Travel 3. Cost 4. Homework: the solution 5. Conclusion Note: This article is only available to Bowling This Month subscribers.

The Crown Victory uses the same symmetrical core shape as the Endeavor from 2024. The Tiered Hexagon design has a medium-high RG (2.540″) and a

The Max Thrill Hybrid is the third installment in Motiv’s Max Thrill line. We reviewed the dual release of the Max Thrill Solid and Max

Article Contents 1. The dimensions of the release 1.1. Direction 1.2. Ball speed 1.3. Revolutions 2. Five ways to improve the release 3. Improving release

Specs-wise, the Rally should look familiar to Columbia 300 fans. The asymmetrical Shifter core returns to the C300 High Performance line after previously being used

Article Contents 1. I’m struggling a lot with my ball hitting flat in the pocket. What surface… 1.1. Asking better questions 1.2. Solving flat 10