Factual bowling question: Can a pin fall over & bounce back upright?

Not on Shabbas, though.

And in the next year or so, they’ll be moving from my hometown down to somewhere in Texas.

http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/923440/

I had this happen to a friend of mine. We bowl for fun occationally, and have a bunch of additional house rules. For instance, if everyone strikes in a frame except one person, that person buys everyone a round. Well my friend Byron was last and everyone has a strike so far so he needed to strike or buy the next round, and he did. Every pin was knocked down and one of them bounced back up. It didn’t slide, wobble, or bounce into another pin and reset, but comepletely fell over and became horizontal and then bounced back up. When the pin setter dropped down though it knocked the pin over. Although we teased him about it we went back and counted it as a strike.

That merger never really mattered to me…until I finally beat by average by 100 (bowled my first 300 with a 199 average, thank you very much) a few weeks back. I was expecting the 100 over average watch, all I got was a stinkin’ patch. Come to find out, USBC did away with the watch.

OK, the baseball bat thing sure beats the heck out of the time I saw a flipped coin land on its edge.

I haven’t had a pin fall over and bounce back up, but several times I’ve had a pin get knocked sideways off it’s mark and remain standing. In real life I suppose it would be a similar situation to what racer72 described where the pinsetter would be stuck, but in Wii bowling it just winds up back on it’s original spot for the second ball.

I got a watch from ABC about 10 years ago for a 279. It came with a dead battery. I never bothered to get a new battery for it. It wasn’t the highest quality watch to begin with.

In 20+ years of bowling, I’ve only seen it happen one time. League play, the lanes next to mine. Guy blows 10 into the pit and a pin rebounds out and stays upright in the back row, close enough to the 8-pin position that the pinspotter processed it. The guy that rolled it thought someone was playing a practical joke on him and got really upset when it was determined what happened. As I recall, he was working on either 4 or 5 strikes in a row and it broke his string.

Thanks for the eyewitness account!

I saw a guy bury the ball in the pocket and a pin hit the 3 pin and knocked it about 3 feet in front of the rack. The rack could not pick it up. The rack came down and set 10 pins in back of it.

FYI: I recently read somewhere that a bowling pin will fall when it tilts 7.5 degrees off the verticle axis.

If that happens and you get a strike on the next throw, does it count as 11?