9.3.1 Pitch suggestion chart (flexibility vs. forward pitch)

Pitch suggestion chart (flexibility vs. forward pitch)

9.3.1   reference

 

This reference chart maps the relationship between a bowler's hand flexibility and the appropriate forward pitch range for the finger holes. Forward pitch is one of the most impactful fitting decisions on a spec sheet — too much forward pitch locks the fingers in, too little (or reverse pitch) causes them to exit too early. Flexibility is the primary physical characteristic that determines where in the pitch range a bowler belongs. This chart gives you a quick starting point for the pitch conversation before measurements are taken and before auto-suggestions are generated.

📐 How to Use This Chart

Assess the bowler's hand flexibility using the simple test described below, then locate their flexibility category in the chart. The chart gives a recommended forward pitch starting range for the finger holes — not a fixed value, but a zone within which the fitting should begin. Auto-suggestions in Spectre Cloud will refine this further once measurements are entered; this chart serves as a pre-measurement orientation and a useful cross-check against those suggestions.

📌 Note: This chart covers finger hole forward pitch only. Thumb pitch, lateral pitch, and oval cut values are not addressed here — see the related sections at the bottom of this page for those references.

✋ Assessing Hand Flexibility

A quick flexibility assessment takes under thirty seconds and requires no tools beyond the bowler's hand. Ask the bowler to extend their fingers straight out, then curl them toward the palm as if gripping a ball. Observe how naturally and completely the fingers curl:

Flexibility category What you observe Typical bowler profile
Very flexible Fingers curl fully and easily past 90° — knuckles bend well beyond a right angle with no resistance Younger bowlers, bowlers with naturally hypermobile joints, some women and junior bowlers
Flexible Fingers curl easily to 90° and slightly beyond with minimal resistance Most recreational and league bowlers without joint stiffness; standard adult range
Average Fingers curl comfortably to approximately 90° — normal, unrestricted grip position The majority of adult bowlers; typical starting assumption for an unknown bowler
Stiff Fingers curl to approximately 90° but with noticeable effort or slight resistance Older bowlers, bowlers with early-stage arthritis, bowlers returning after a hand injury
Very stiff Fingers do not reach 90° comfortably — significant resistance before the grip position is reached Bowlers with moderate to severe arthritis, significant joint stiffness, or restricted range of motion

📊 Forward Pitch Starting Range by Flexibility

Flexibility category Fingertip — forward pitch range Conventional — forward pitch range Notes
Very flexible 0 to 1/8" forward 0 to 1/8" forward Very flexible bowlers often need minimal forward pitch — too much creates a locked, uncomfortable release. Zero pitch or slight forward is the common fit.
Flexible 1/8" to 1/4" forward 1/8" to 1/4" forward Standard range for most comfortable, unrestricted grips. Auto-suggestions typically fall here for average adult measurements.
Average 1/4" to 3/8" forward 1/4" to 3/8" forward Most common range for recreational and league bowlers. IBPSIA standard suggestions for typical measurements land in this range.
Stiff 3/8" to 1/2" forward 3/8" to 1/2" forward Higher forward pitch compensates for reduced flexibility by making the hole more accessible at the grip position.
Very stiff 1/2" to 3/4" forward 1/2" to 3/4" forward Significant forward pitch required for comfort. Oval holes may also be beneficial to further ease grip entry and exit.

⚠️ Verify with Spectre team: Confirm these pitch ranges against the IBPSIA standard values used as the basis for Spectre Cloud's auto-suggestion algorithm, and update the chart if the app's reference values differ from those used here.

⚖️ Factors That Shift the Starting Range

The chart above is a starting point. Several bowler-specific factors push the appropriate pitch value toward the lower or upper end of the range — or outside it entirely:

Factors that push toward less forward pitch (lower end or below range)

Factors that push toward more forward pitch (upper end or above range)

🔄 Using This Chart Alongside Auto-Suggestions

This chart and Spectre Cloud's auto-suggestion system approach pitch from different directions — the chart starts with physical observation, the auto-suggestion starts with measurements. When used together they provide a useful cross-check:

📌 Quick Reference — Pitch Starting Points by Bowler Type

Bowler type Typical starting forward pitch
Junior bowler (under 18, typical flexibility) 1/8" to 1/4" forward
Adult recreational bowler, fingertip 1/4" to 3/8" forward
Adult recreational bowler, conventional 1/4" to 3/8" forward
Competitive league bowler, fingertip 1/4" to 3/8" forward — adjust per release
Senior bowler (65+), average flexibility 3/8" to 1/2" forward
Senior bowler with arthritis 1/2" to 3/4" forward
High rev rate cranker, fingertip 1/8" to 1/4" forward — sometimes zero
Two-handed bowler, no thumb 1/8" to 1/4" forward — start conservatively
Bowler returning after finger injury Start at upper end of flexibility range — adjust from bowler feedback

🎳 A Note on Reverse Pitch

Reverse pitch — where the bottom of the hole tilts away from the palm — is not covered by this chart because it is rarely a starting point for a fitting. It typically emerges as an adjustment for specific bowlers whose release characteristics make forward pitch counterproductive. The situations where reverse finger pitch may be appropriate include:

Reverse pitch on finger holes is an advanced adjustment — it should be reached by deliberate fitting progression rather than used as a default starting point for any bowler profile.

✨ Tip: Keep a laminated copy of the quick-reference table at the fitting counter. A bowler who walks in without an appointment and without a previous spec sheet can be oriented to a starting pitch range in under a minute using only the flexibility test and this chart — giving you a confident starting point for the fitting conversation before a single measurement has been taken.


Revision #2
Created 11 May 2026 16:05:18 by Admin
Updated 2 June 2026 20:30:40 by Art