The rise and fall of bowling in the United States [OC]

Posted by rhiever

39 Comments

  1. I know why my local bowling alley is less crowded. They installed roped pins and made it unaffordable for most.

  2. Too bad bowling in the Chicagoland area costs almost $80-100 for 2 on the weekend … love bowling but that is crazy

  3. I loved bowling. Bowled league for over 10 years and was actively involved in the local scene. Made a lot of friends. And while I was never going to be pro level, I got pretty good at it.

    My men’s league moved to a house about 30 minutes away and the night just got too long, especially when I had a young child at home. The local house closed a few years later when the owner drank himself to death (alcoholics probably shouldn’t own bars, btw) and that was the end of bowling with my wife.

    I’d love to get back to it but it’s just a hassle.

  4. Last time I went bowling on a Saturday afternoon, the alley was completely packed. Had to wait half an hour to get a lane.

  5. Entertainment interests change over time. 

    Bowling, billiards, video arcades, roller skating, bingo, dominoes, card games like bridge or pinclochle. Poker is down from its peak. Tennis is a shadow of its former self (in the US).  Baseball is still healthy but not at the forefront anymore.

    Movie theaters and drinking alcohol at pubs or bars is trending down fast.  Even cable television is dropping rapidly (mostly because of rent seeking behavior on the part of cable companies).

  6. MetaPhalanges on

    I was just telling my wife that we should go bowling soon! We’re gonna do it, too. We also recently played mini-golf again for the first time in ages. Let’s all do our part there. I don’t want these sports to die out.

  7. mountainstosea on

    This was a great article until the end, when the author was too lazy to make his own visual, relying on AI to do it instead.

  8. Love bowling. Don’t do it much. Places always smell of stale smoke. Carpets are greasy and gross. Atmosphere always feels like it’s dying.

  9. The bowling ally near me is always packed out. They decided to expand even and make it like a full fun center including minigolf and gokarts for this year.

  10. I don’t bowl but there is a great guy on YouTube called “one handed bowling” who makes great videos about bowling history and its current struggle it’s going through.

    It’s one of those guys who speaks so passionately about something you listen even if you have no basis or understanding at first what he’s talking about lol

  11. A kid in the 1970s, I avoided bowling due to the noxious clouds of cigarette smoke that filled those spaces

  12. FangornLeghorn on

    When I was a teen it was around three bucks to bowl. Now it’s fucking $27 to get a lane for an hour. I wonder why nobody bowls anymore.

  13. The thing that killed leagues was the 30+ week commitment most still had as the sport was dying off. I bowled for 30 yrs and I just couldn’t make time for that kind of long term league. Going once in a while became so expensive that I lost all interest. Houses also saw that open bowlers were more profitable and didn’t really care about things like lane conditions. It was a perfect storm of of time, money and eventually private equity.

  14. Sufficient-Pin-481 on

    Add to the list of things I liked to do 40 years ago but are now too expensive to bother doing. I still miss putting under a windmill playing mini golf, now a round for two is over $30 and you’re done in 20 minutes.

  15. My hometown of about 13,000 people in Wales had a bowling alley, and although I don’t think we had leagues or clubs it was fairly packed, my stepdad worked there.

    There were a few dotted in small towns across the Welsh coast, too. Now? I think there’s only one in Cardiff and Swansea, but they were a lot more accessible in the 1990s and early 2000s.

  16. Something about bowling just gets me so frustrated. I am so bad at it and just can never seem to figure it out.

  17. Bowling used to be a reasonably affordable activity, now it’s like $60 for two people for an hour. so yeah people aren’t going to go bowling. 

  18. halberdierbowman on

    The number of venues is only one metric, and imho not automatically a very good one for measuring how often people do something. If the industry is consolidating like so many other industries, we might expect the number of venues to decrease as competitors are bought out and closed. But how many bowling *lanes* does each venue have (in other words are venues changing size)? How many customers do they see? How highly do people rank bowling on a list of sports they enjoy? How have prices changed?

  19. Theres only 3 alleys in my area. All 3 have league on Friday and Saturday so its impossible for an average person to get a lane on the weekend when most people would want to go out for a night of bowling. Around here you either commit to a league or you just dont get to play unless youre lucky.

  20. GarbagePailGrrrl on

    Obligatory plug for *Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community* by Robert D Putnam

  21. TheDevilsAdvokaat on

    Bowling is a very boring sport.

    With the rise of consoles, internet and video games bowling was bound to lose out.

    I’m guessing the bowlers left are increasingly older people who git into it when they were young.

  22. GoldieForMayor on

    My grandfather was a ‘pin boy’. He said there was a bar to hang from and lift your legs because some asshole would always try to throw a ball at their feet. His job was replaced by a robot in the 50s.

  23. 313Wolverine on

    I grew up in Metro Detroit. There was at least 8 bowling alleys in a five mile radius. When the indoor smoking ban took effect all the bowling alleys started to steadily close.

    I never realized how many people bowled on leagues just to have a night out with the boys (or gals) so they could smoke and drink without being ‘at the bar’.

    I stopped bowling mid 2000’s mostly because of rising costs. A non sanctioned league with food, a couple beers, and a jackpot or two was costing over $60 weekly. Yikes.