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Issue Date: September 16, 2007
Originaly published in USAweekend.com
AMERICA BY THE NUMBERS:
Bowling
New life in the fast lanes
Bowling alleys are now like huge sports bars, with elegant dining.
As bowling's gone upscale, leagues have lost out.
This is not your father's bowling alley featuring dingy facilities,
cheap beer and hotdogs spinning on steel rollers.
Martini anyone?
"What we used to call bowling alleys are now like huge sports bars,
with billiard sections and elegant dining rooms," says Tom Doyle,
vice president of information and research for the National Sporting
Goods Association.
The upscale bowling trend, epitomized at national chains such as
Lucky Strike Lanes, has brought Americans back to the joy of
bowling, he says. "With all the changes, and electronic scoring, you
really don't even have to know anything about the game. Just throw
the ball."
Last year, approximately 45 million Americans went bowling, up 32%
over the past 20 years, when 34 million people a year visited
bowling alleys, according to the National Sporting Goods
Association.
Even though more people are bowling now, the biggest rise is among
infrequent bowlers, who bowl just two to nine times per year. In
1986, infrequent bowlers made up 27.5% of those who bowled; last
year, there were 43.6% infrequent bowlers.
The one dark spot: bowling leagues. Mainly, people don't have the
time to commit to weekly games anymore, says Mark Miller, of the
United States Bowling Congress. His group reports that as of last
year, there were 2.7 million bowling league members in the United
States, a huge drop from the heyday of 9 million league bowlers in
the late 1970s.
-- Eve Tahmincioglu
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