The World Bowling Tour, a major professional tour, unites bowlers from selected major professional and amateur organizations through a series of events organized by World Bowling.[1]

World Bowling Tour
AbbreviationWBT
Formation2011
HeadquartersArlington, Texas
Parent organization
World Bowling
Affiliations World Tenpin Bowling Association (WTBA)
WebsiteWorld Bowling Tour

The World Bowling Tour's marquee event, the WTBA World Championships, attracts bowlers from over 50 countries. World Bowling Tour events include all the PBA Tour major tournaments. As a stepladder tournament, the season-ending World Bowling Tour Finals features the top three men, and top three women in the World Bowling Tour points standings.[2]

Tour Qualifications edit

To participate in the World Bowling Tour, bowlers must be a member of one of the federations of the World Tenpin Bowling Association. The federations of the WTBA include:

The winner of a WBT tournament can also earn credit for a PBA Tour title, as long as the bowler registered for the tournament beforehand as a professional.[3] International bowlers, bowlers who do not reside in the United States, can also join the PBA under its PBA International program. If a PBA International member wins a WBT tournament, he must upgrade to full membership of the PBA.[4]

WBT Tournaments edit

The entry fee for a WBT tournament is $5,000 USD. Winners of World Bowling Tour events also qualify for the PBA Tournament of Champions.[3]

2019 Schedule [5] edit

Tournaments listed in bold are considered majors by the World Bowling Tour.

Date Event Location Tier
March 2–8, 2019 H.H. Emir Cup   Doha, Qatar Tier 2
March 11–21, 2019 PBA World Series of Bowling   Detroit, MI Tier 1
March 26 - April 4, 2019 USBC Masters   Las Vegas, NV Tier 1
May 15–21, 2019 USBC Queens   Wichita, KS Tier 1 - Women Only
June 16–23, 2019 US Women's Open   Las Vegas, NV Tier 1 - Women Only
July 25–28, 2019 Storm PBA/PWBA Striking Against Breast Cancer   Houston, TX Tier 2
August 16–18, 2019 New Mexico Open   Rio Rancho, NM Tier 3
August 22–30, 2019 World Women's Championships   Las Vegas, NV Tier 2 - Women Only
August 24–31, 2019 FloBowling PBA Summer Swing   Aurora, IL Tier 2
August 24 - September 8, 2019 Lucky Larsen Masters   Helsingborg, Sweden Tier 2
September (TBD), 2019 Thailand Open   Bangkok, Thailand Tier 2
October 23–30, 2019 U.S Open   Mooresville, NC Tier 1
October 31 - November 6, 2019 Kuwait Open   Kuwait City, Kuwait Tier 2

Major tournaments edit

In order for a tournament to qualify as a major, it must offer a minimum prize fund of $200,000 USD.[2] The tournaments that are recognized as majors by the World Bowling Tour include:

World Bowling scoring edit

The World Bowling scoring system, described as "current frame scoring,"[6] is used during the stepladder finals of the World Bowling Tour Finals. Current frame scoring counts 30 pins for each strike (regardless of previous shot), 10 pins for each spare (bonus pins that are added match the first roll of the next frame), and basic pin count for open frames. The tenth frame follows the same format as the first nine frames. That means no bonus, or fill shots, are given. The maximum score is still 300, achieved with ten rather than twelve, consecutive strikes.[7][8] World Bowling scoring is intended to be easier to understand than traditional scoring for fans or bowlers that are new to the sport.[7] The television networks also advertised current frame scoring to increase struggling television ratings.[6][8]

Match play scoring edit

Match play scoring is a 12-frame system that made its first national appearance in bowling at the 2014 World Bowling Tour finals. This system scores by counting frames won rather than counting total pinfall.[9] It resembles match play scoring in golf where players go even, plus one, or minus one as the match progresses. A frame is won if a bowler has a higher pinfall on the first roll of the frame than their opponent. The bowler that wins the most frames will win the match.[9]

Previous World Bowling Tour Champions edit

Year Male Winner Male Runner-Up Female Winner Female Runner-Up
2012   Chris Barnes[10]   Mika Koivuniemi   Missy Parkin [11]   Liz Johnson
2014   Mika Koivuniemi[12]   Sean Rash   Kelly Kulick[13]   Liz Johnson
2015   Dom Barrett[14]   Mike Fagan   Danielle McEwan[15]   Kelly Kulick
2017   Jason Belmonte[16]   Marshall Kent   Diana Zavjalova [17]   Danielle McEwan
2018   E.J. Tackett[18]   Anthony Simonsen   Liz Johnson[19]   Danielle McEwan

References edit

  1. ^ World Bowling Tour (WBT)
  2. ^ a b World Bowling Tour Sees Continued Growth
  3. ^ a b PBA, World Tenpin Bowling Association Unveil International Tour
  4. ^ Become a PBA Member
  5. ^ WORLD BOWLING TOUR SCHEDULE
  6. ^ a b Mackay, Duncan (February 20, 2016). "New scoring system introduced for World Bowling Tour finals to try to help bowling join the Olympic games". InsideTheGames.biz. Archived from the original on November 18, 2016.
  7. ^ a b "Weber to go to World Scoring". Weber Cup. July 29, 2016. Archived from the original on September 13, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Mackay, Duncan (February 21, 2016). "World Bowling Tour final winner backs new scoring system if it helps Olympic campaign". InsideTheGames.biz. Archived from the original on September 13, 2016.
  9. ^ a b "New Scoring System for Competitive Bowling to be Unveiled During World Bowling Tour Finals at WSOB VI". World Bowling. October 2014. Archived from the original on November 7, 2014.
  10. ^ 2012 Final Men
  11. ^ 2012 Final Women
  12. ^ 2014 Final Men
  13. ^ 2014 Final Women
  14. ^ 2015 Final Men
  15. ^ 2015 Final Women
  16. ^ 2017 Final Men
  17. ^ 2017 Final Women
  18. ^ 2018 Men Final
  19. ^ 2018 Women Final