AboutThe United States Bowling Congress has a goal of a day when high school bowling will be available in every state. Considering how far high school bowling has come over the years, that goal is closer than ever to becoming a reality.
High school bowling has made incredible strides since the first high school league hit the lanes in the 1930s. Last season more than 50,000 students took to the lanes at thousands of schools across the country offering high school bowling competition.
Today, thousands of dollars in scholarship funds are also available for high school bowlers. USBC High School actively offers guidance to all levels of high school bowling programs by providing rules, instruction, membership, awards and industry resources to ensure the success of high school bowling nationwide. To help achieve those goals, USBC High School maintains strong relationships with the National Federation of High School Associations (NFHS), state athletic associations, the Bowling Proprietors’ Association of America (BPAA) and USBC Coaching, as well as providing a steppingstone to further opportunities such as college bowling and the USBC Junior Gold program.
USBC High School is your ‘go-to’ resourceWhether you’re a student, parent, school administrator, high school state athletic association official, state proprietor association representative or bowling industry leader, USBC High School is your ONE resource that will help you to create and maintain high school bowling programs.
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High School Funding Grant
The High School Grant Program, administered by USBC High School through the Youth Education Servies (YES) Fund, will provide $2,500 to four high school programs annually. The high school teams must show financial need because of budget cuts or other changes, or may request funding to start a new program.
High School Equipment GrantThe Bowling Foundation, BPAA and USBC are working together with help from some industry suppliers and manufacturers to put forth an equipment grant program to high school teams that cannot afford equipment.
To apply, download either the team or individual application and submit to:
The Bowling Foundation
Attention: Tennelle Milligan
621 Six Flags Drive
Arlington, TX 76011
Applications:
Contact UsGary Brown, IBC High School and Collegiate Manager
800-514-BOWL ext. 8427
E-mail: gbrown@ibcyouth.com
Fax: 817-385-8262

USBC High School MembershipUSBC is now offering a membership option to High School interscholastic competitors. This membership offers many exciting benefits to high school bowlers who do not bowl in any other USBC leagues. USBC High School Membership costs $5.
Benefits of the USBC High School Membership:
Membership will be processed using the current USBC Youth processing system with the member being responsible for providing end of season average information to the processor.
Register for FREE USBC High School Coaches ProgramIf you're part of a high school program, we've got a FREE offer you can't refuse: free registration for varsity and club programs through the Coaches Registration Program (this registration is a limited registration, only valid during the high school season and non-transferable to any other USBC league or tournament).
Benefits for athletes:Bowlers receive letter jacket pins for 298, 299 and 300 games as well as 700, 800, 900 series and Baker 300 games. Additional awards for conference and team accomplishments are available for coaches/teams to purchase through USBC High School.
Benefits for coaches:Coaches are also eligible to nominate athletes for boys and girls All-American awards, honoring athletes' academic accomplishments, community service and performance. Coaches register teams online on the high school page of bowl.com. The free USBC High School Coaches Registration is not transferable to regular USBC membership and is only valid for the length of the high school bowling season. There's also the potential for bowlers to earn scholarships and recognition if you are one of the five boys and five girls chosen annually for the Dexter/USBC High School All-American Team.
Click here to join.
Already Registered? Login Here.

2012 North Pointe Junior Gold ChampionshipsJuly 14-20, 2012
Woodland Bowl - Expo Bowl - Western Bowl
Indianapolis, IN
When you're ready to go for the Gold, we have the tournament for you! It's called the North Pointe Junior Gold Championships, an annual national bowling tournament for male and female youth athletes where you'll bowl against the best youth bowlers in the United States for about $250,000 in scholarships and a chance to represent your country internationally as a member of Junior Team USA!
2011 USBC Youth Open ChampionshipsSouth Point Bowling Center
Las Vegas, Nevada
July 8-9; 14-19; 21-23, 2011
The USBC Youth Open is open to ALL USBC Youth members—no qualifying required! Bowlers compete against each other in four divisions based on average, making it possible for ALL to compete. The USBC Youth Open awards over $100,000 in scholarships every year, and bowlers can bowl in team, doubles, singles, and all-events competitions.
Dexter All AmericanView current and past scholarship recipients
Five male and five female USBC High School members are selected annually for the Dexter/USBC High School All-American Team and a $1,000 scholarship.
Coaches or team administrators must nominate eligible contenders; student-athletes and/or family members may not handle nominations. Once nominations are accepted, the student-athlete receives an application packet.
As a high school bowler, your selection to the Dexter/USBC High School All-American Team is based on your bowling accomplishments, academic achievement, letters of recommendation, extracurricular and community involvement, submitted essays and resumes. Minimum requirements for selection include a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale (or equivalent) and at least one letter of recommendation.
All-American Team awards are presented at the USBC Junior Gold Championships, typically held each July in various event host cities.
Click here to download the nomination form.
Read MoreAll Materials can be ordered and shipped to you for free. Place your order by emailing USBChighschool@bowl.com
Offical GuideLooking for information about high school bowling? The USBC High School Guide is what you need. This informative, easy-to-use handbook includes everything you'll need to start a high school bowling program in your area such as: suggested playing rules, certifying post-season events through USBC, future opportunities for high school athletes and more. A great resource for school administrators, coaches and athletes. Click here to take a look.
High School RulesDo you know what constitutes a legal bowling team lineup? Are you familiar with the Baker System? Would you know if you or your athletes are using a USBC-approved bowling ball during competition?
Understanding the rules is essential for coaches and athletes in all sports, including high school bowling.Below you will find suggested playing rules for high school bowling competition (adapted from the United States Bowling Congress general playing rules) and helpful glossary of terms used in the sport of bowling. IMPORTANT NOTE: The USBC does not govern high school bowling. Individual states are responsible for governing their own programs. Click here for Rules.
USBC High School Membership BrochureThis brochure will explain the USBC High School Membership and its benefits to the high school bowler.
Click
here for brochure.
Planning on visiting a high school to promote the addition of high school bowling? Then you will want to bring this piece along. This interactive CD-Rom talks about the benefits of adding a bowling program to a high school, financials involved and interviews with high school bowlers speaking on the great opportunity they have through high school bowling.
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Since High School Bowling is just beginning to be recognized as a serious competitive sport in the high schools, there are very few experienced school staff members trained to either instruct or coach bowling. It is the intent of all high school programs across the country to provide the necessary personnel to the schools to fill this need. Currently certified volunteers from local bowling centers, pro shops and membership organizations are being utilized. It is recommended that coaches be trained and certified by any of the many programs available throughout the country. Some of the programs include, but are not limited to the areas outlined below.
USBC Coaching CertificationIf you're a high school bowling coach, you should earn certification through the USBC Coaching program, which consists of a series of online and in-person courses that will professionally train and certify you to teach the sport of bowling. USBC recommends that you get certified at least through USBC Level One and ideally the Bronze level.
Fundamentals of Team CoachingThis new USBC program focuses on giving you the basic skills needed to successfully coach and motivate your high school athletes. Included in this package are coaching drills that teach fundamentals such as a loose arm swing, timing, choosing the correct equipment and adjusting to lane conditions.
Athlete Development DrillsThis program is designed for high school coaches and contains 29 drills that teach proper techniques in areas such as release, balance, arm swing, timing and more. The kit consists of a manual and DVD. Participants in an on-lane clinic receive the kit plus approximately four hours of instruction on how to execute the drills.
Video Coaching SeriesUse this new USBC program to learn proper coaching techniques through compelling videos featuring top USBC certified coaches. Designed specifically for high school and collegiate coaches, this compilation will give you the skills you need to make a winning season on and off the lanes for your high school bowlers.
Other programs recommended for USBC high school bowling coaches
The USBC wants to ensure that all high school bowlers meet amateur eligibility requirements so they can enjoy the sport. But since rules about eligibility and awards for high school athletes are set at the state level, you should always check with your state organization to make sure you or your team is doing the right thing. Contact your state representative to find out which organization determines rules for high school athletes in your state.
USBC recognition awards are designed to comply with award rules for most, if not all, high school athletes. However, since state rules vary and state high school athletic associations may change their rules at any time, acceptance of a USBC award may compromise your high school eligibility. If necessary, you may decline a USBC award to protect your eligibility.
Those awards may conflict with state high school athletic association award acceptance rules. It's up to you to decide if you want to maintain your high school interscholastic eligibility and follow any state high school athletic association rules regarding acceptable awards.
Purchasable Awards
When you roll an honor score or win a championship in USBC-certified competition, you can
purchase pins, medallions and rings
. While the USBC has worked with the National Federation of State High School Associations and each state's athletic/activities associations to determine which awards are acceptable, some USBC awards may violate state athletic bylaws. To order High School purchasable awards and medallions or for a list of available awards, please send an email to
usbchighschool@bowl.com
.
Click here to see the state programs that are offered.
From humble beginnings more than 60 years ago to recent explosive growth across the country, high school bowling has come a long way.
The first officially recorded competition occurred in 1937 when Chicago's Milt Raymer, an American Bowling Congress Hall of Famer, organized a four-team boys' league at Tilden Technical High School in Chicago. Word of Raymer's program quickly spread to other schools, and soon the Chicago High School Bowling Club was developed to govern high school bowling activities.
Other areas of the country became interested and Raymer began operating the American High School Bowling Congress from his basement in 1941. The program was temporarily discontinued when Raymer entered the military in 1942, but reinstated upon his discharge in 1946.
The National Bowling Council, organized in 1946, took over sponsorship of Raymer's group later that year and renamed it the "American Junior Bowling Congress" in 1947, with the focus changing to include youth of all ages, rather than just high school students. The sport gradually grew in popularity over the years and reached a milestone when New Jersey became one of the first states to recognize high school bowling in 1958.
In 1964, the Bowling Proprietors' Association of America and AJBC began separate youth programs due to philosophical differences. The BPAA created its own Youth Bowling Association in conjunction with the National Federation of State High School Associations, which brought bowling to schools in the form of intramural programs and physical education classes. The AJBC continued under the auspices of the ABC and the Women's International Bowling Congress, and moved its office to Milwaukee. After years of discussions between the groups, the Young American Bowling Alliance was created in 1982, combining AJBC and YBA.
During this time, high school varsity bowling flourished in different parts of the country. While states like New York and New Jersey had recognized varsity bowling for quite some time, major cities such as Miami and Chicago granted varsity status to bowling in the 1960s and '70s.
More recently, the Northern Illinois Bowling Proprietors Association and the Bowling Centers Association of Michigan underscored the importance of high school bowling with their strong programs in the Rockford, Ill., area and statewide in Michigan.
That model was followed in southern Illinois, where the first Illinois High School Boys Club Championship Tournament was started in 1998. Many other states used the framework of the Illinois program to implement their own.
In 1998, The Billiard Bowling Institute of America partnered with the BPAA and the YABA to produce two marketing videos—one each for proprietors and athletic directors—that were an integral part of the newly created "Give Me a B for Varsity Bowling" program. During the 1998-99 school year, four states recognized bowling as a high school sport and about 18,000 students took to the lanes to compete at 1,633 schools.
In January 2001, the BPAA appointed a task force to promote high school bowling throughout the United States. The group rewrote the "Give Me a B" Varsity Bowling Manual as well as recommendations for the duties of the National Director of High School Bowling, a position created to oversee this program. The executive directors of ABC, WIBC and YABA approved a BPAA proposal to create a national program and funded the industry-wide initiative. Today high school bowling continues to enjoy industry support as the United States Bowling Congress High School program, renamed after the 2005 merger of the ABC, WIBC, ABC and USA Bowling to form the USBC.
In the last decade, participation in high school bowling has nearly tripled. Under the guidance of the USBC High School program, varsity high school bowling currently exists in 19 states and at the club level in another 28 states. During the 2007-08 season, more than 52,000 students competed at 4,656 schools that offered high school varsity bowling competition. In fact, bowling was the largest-growing high school sport in the 2007-08 school year, continuing a decade-long trend, according to the most recent National Federation of State High School Associations participation survey.
Each year high school bowling grows as schools elevate club programs to varsity status and new states start programs.
Read MoreThe state contacts can provide you with information on state centers, leagues, and resources.
Click here to expand and select a state.Alabama
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Alabama High School Athletic Association
926 Pelham St .
Montgomery , AL 36104
(334) 263-6994
Alaska
Chris Clapper
Alaska BPA
3717 Minnesota Dr.
Anchorage, AK 99503
(907) 562-2695
email:cclapper@ak.net
Alaska School Activities Association, Inc.
4048 Laurel St . Suite 203
Anchorage , AK 99508
(907) 563-3723
www.asaa.org
Arizona
Jim Nicholson
15008 N. 36th Ave
Phoenix, AZ 85053
awonder@cox.net
www.azhighschoolbowling.com
Arizona Interscholastic Association, Inc.
7007 North 18th St.
Phoenix, AZ 85020
(602) 385-3810
www.aiaonline.org
Arkansas
Bert Botter
P.O. Box 22330
Hot Springs, AR 71903
501-282-8820 cell
501-525-3539 home
BBCBL@aol.com
Arkansas Activities Association
3920 Richards Rd.
North Little Rock, AR 72117
(501) 955-2500
www.ahsaa.org
California
Northern California
Sandi Thompson
Northern California BPA
1048 Serpentine Ln.
Pleasanton, CA 94566
(925) 485-1855
www.norcalbowling.com
email: sandit@norcalbpa.com
Southern California
Scott Frager
Bowling Centers of Southern California
13245 Riverside Dr., Suite 501
Sherman Oaks, CA 91423
(818) 789-0900
www.socalbowling.com
email: bcsc@socalbowling.com
California Interscholastic Federation
1320 Harbor Bay Pkwy.
Alameda, CA 94502
(510) 521-4447
www.cifstate.org
Colorado
Gene Jackson
22050 E. Arbor Dr.
Aurora, CO 80016
(303)-617-9073
genejack11@comcast.net
Colorado High School Activities
Association
14855 E. Second Ave.
Aurora, CO 80011
(303) 344-5050
www.chsaa.org
Connecticut
Carl Paternostro
22 Harris Hill Rd
Wethersfield, CT 06109
(860)-490-1149
email: butchpaternostro@gmail.com
Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference, Inc.
30 Realty Dr.
Cheshire, CT 06410
(203) 250-1111
www.casciac.org
Delaware
Michelle Turner-Billings
Delaware State H.S. Bowling
1001 Daisey Rd.
Clayton, DE 19938
(302) 653-0327
Delaware Secondary School Athletic Association
35 Commerce Way, Suite 1
Dover, DE 19904
(302) 857-3365
www.doe.state.de.us/DIAAsite
Florida
Dave Driscoll
Florida State H.S. Bowling
1017 Elysium Blvd.
Mount Dora, FL 32757
(352) 383-9763
email: bowlbroker@aol.com
Florida High School Activities
Association
1801 NW 80th Blvd.
Gainesville, FL 32606
(352) 372-9551
www.fhsaa.org
Georgia
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email: Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Georgia High School Association
151 S. Bethel St .
Thomaston , GA 30286
(706) 647-7473
Hawaii
Naomi Martin
P.O. Box 700609
Kapolei, HI 96709
(808)-295-3005
email: gotit3005@gmail.com
Hawaii High School Athletic
Association
P.O. Box 62029
1202 Prospect St.
Honolulu, HI 96839
(808) 587-4495
www.sportshigh.com
Idaho
Wally Studer
Idaho State H.S. Bowling
Snake River Bowl
725 Minidoka Ave.
Burley, ID 83318
(208) 679-2695
email: wstuder@pmt.org
Idaho High School Activities
Association
8011 Ustick Rd.
P.O. Box 4667
Boise, ID 83711
(208) 375-7027
www.idhsaa.org
Illinois
Greg Troyer - Executive Director
HSBCI - High School Bowling Coaches of IL
Prospect High School
801 W. Kensington Rd.
Mt. Prospect, IL 60056
(847) 718 - 5502
greg.troyer@d214.org
Illinois High School Athletic Association
Stacey Lambert
2715 McGraw Dr.
P.O. Box 2715
Bloomington, IL 61702
(309) 663-6377
www.ihsa.org
Indiana
Steve Kunkel
Indiana H. S. Bowling
PO Box 66
Camby, IN 46113
260-403-0822
www.ihsb.org
email: steve@indianagobowl.com
Indiana High School Athletic Association
9150 N. Meridian St.
P.O. Box 40650
Indianapolis, IN 46260
(317) 846-6601
www.ihsaa.org
Iowa
Robert Kunkel
Waterloo West High school
425 E. Ridgeway Ave
Waterloo, IA 50702
Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union
2900 Grand Ave.
Des Moines, IA 50312
(515) 288-9741
Iowa (Boys) High School Athletic
Association
1605 S. Story
P.O. Box 10
Boone, IA 50036
(515) 432-2011
www.iahsaa.org
Kansas
Beverly O'Donnell
Mission Bowl
5399 Martway
Mission, KS 66205
(913) 432-7000
Kansas State High School Activities Association, Inc.
601 SW Commerce Place
P.O. Box 495
Topeka, KS 66615
(785) 273-5329
www.kshsaa.org
Kentucky
Kentucky High School Athletic
Association
Angelia Passafiume
2280 Executive Dr.
Lexington, KY 40505
(859) 299-5472
www.khsaa.org
Louisiana
Ricky Bourgeois
Louisiana State H.S. Bowling
10968 Shoreline Dr
Baton Rouge, LA 70809-9000
Home: (225) 272-2508
Work: (225) 291-2891
email: rlmalco@cox.net
Louisiana High School Athletic Association
8075 Jefferson Highway
Baton Rouge, LA 70809
(225) 925-0100
www.lhsaa.org
Maine
Edward F. Cotter
Northern Conference Coordinator
High School Bowling
4182 Union St
Levant, ME 04456-4307
(207) 884-6205
cotter_emusbc@midmaine.com
Maine Principals' Association
50 Industrial Drive
P.O. Box 2468
Augusta, ME 04338
(207) 622-0217
www.mpa.cc
Maryland
Dave Marcoux
318 Beaconpoint Dr.
Perryville, MD 21903
509-990-6752
hsbowlmaryland@hotmail.com
Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association
200 W. Baltimore St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
(410) 767-0376
www.mpssaa.org
Massachusetts
Lou Orazio
Berkshire Bowling Conference
13 Edgemere Rd.
Dalton, MA 01226
(413) 684-3554
www.leaguelineup.com/Berkshirebowling
orazl@aol.com
Massachusetts Interscholastic
Athletic Association, Inc.
33 Forge Pkwy.
Franklin, MA 02038
(508) 541-7997
www.miaa.net
Michigan
Michigan High School Athletic
Association
Randy Allen
1661 Ramblewood Dr.
East Lansing, MI 48823
(517) 332-5046
www.mhsaa.com
Minnesota
Josh Hodney
Minnesota BPA
235 Roselawn Ave. East, Suite 17
Maplewood, MN 55117
(800) 622-7769
www.bpam.org
josh@mhsb.org
Minnesota State High School League
2100 Freeway Blvd.
Minneapolis, MN 55430
(763) 560-2262
www.mshsl.org
Mississippi
Kevin Hartigan
Mississippi State H.S. Bowling
625 Robert E. Lee Dr.
Tupelo, MS 38801
(662) 842-1132
Kevinh3@bellsouth.net
Mississippi High School Activities
Association, Inc.
1201 Clinton-Raymond Rd.
P.O. Box 244
Clinton, MS 39060
(601) 924-6400
www.misshsaa.com
Missouri
Hollie Brennan
Enterprise Park Lanes
1625 South Enterprise
Springfield, MO 65804
(417)-883-0511
enterpriseparklanes@yahoo.com
Missouri State High School Activities
Association
1 N. Keene St.
P.O. Box 1328
Columbia, MO 65201
(573) 875-2870
www.mshsaa.org
Montana
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Montana High School Association
1 South Dakota Ave.
Helena, MT 59601
(406) 442-6010
www.mhsa.org
Nebraska
John Losito
Nebraska H.S. Bowling
321 Victory Ln.
Lincoln, NE 68528
(402) 475-3469
www.nhsbf.com
email: jlosito@nhbf.com
Nebraska School Activities Association
8230 Beechwood Dr.
P.O. Box 5447
Lincoln, NE 68510
(402) 489-0386
www.nsaahome.org
Nevada
Barbara Youngman
Clark County School District
4260 Eucalyptus Ave.
Las Vegas, NV 89121
(702) 799-8695
email: youngbj@interact.ccsd.net
Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association (NIAA)
549 Court St.
Reno, NV 89501
office: 775-453-1012
New Hampshire
Scott Fitzgerald
Stevens High School
175 Broad St.
Claremont, NH 03743
(603)-543-4233 ext. 256
email: sfitzgerald@claremont.k12.nh.us
New Hampshire Interscholastic
Athletic Association, Inc.
251 Clinton St.
Concord, NH 03301
(603) 228-8671
www.nhiaa.org
New Jersey
Larry White
New Jersey State Interscholastic
Association
Route 130
P.O. Box 487
Robbinsville, NJ 8691
(609) 259-2776
Tony Palombo
JFK Memorial HS
200 Washington Ave
Iselin, NJ 08830
(732) 602-8650
anthony.palombo@woodbridge.k12.nj.us
New Mexico
New Mexico Activities Association
Kristin Derr
6600 Palomas NE
Albuquerque, NM 87109
(505) 923-3110
www.nmact.org
New York
New York State Public High School
Athletic Association
Nina VanErk
8 Airport Park Blvd
Latham, NY 12110
(518) 690-0771
www.nysphsaa.org
North Carolina
Chuck Powers
Woodleaf Lanes
1811 Jake Alexander Blvd.
Salisbury, NC 28147
(704) 633-5342
email: poochie62355@yahoo.com
North Carolina High School Athletic
Association, Inc.
222 Finley Golf Course Rd.
UNC Campus
Chapel Hill, NC 27515
(919) 962-2345
www.nchsaa.unc.edu
North Dakota
Nadine Swee
North Dakota BPA
P.O. Box 462
West Fargo, ND 58078
(701)-361-7983
email: nadineswee@yahoo.com
North Dakota High School Activities
Association
134 NE Third St.
P.O. Box 817
Valley City, ND 58072
(701) 845-3953
www.ndhsaa.com
Ohio
Greg Coulles
8719 Cobblecreek Dr.
Centerville,OH 45458
(937) 602-1475 - cell
(937) 438-8122 - home & fax
email: niftys300@yahoo.com
Ohio High School Athletic Association
4080 Roselea Place
Columbus, OH 43214
(614) 267-2502
www.ohsaa.org
Oklahoma
Tommy Gann
Oklahoma H.S. Bowling
5643 South 167 West Ave.
Sand Springs, OK 74063
(918) 245-4762
email: okstrike@aol.com
Oklahoma Secondary School
Activities Association
7300 N. Broadway Extension
P.O. Box 14590
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
(405) 840-1116
www.ossaa.com
Oregon
Jo Zaklan
316 Blackstone St.
Springfield, OR 97477
(541)-726-6694
email: jozaklan@msn.com
Oregon School Activities Association
25200 SW Parkway Ave., Ste. 1
Wilsonville, OR 97070
(503) 682-6722
www.osaa.org
Pennsylvania
Western Pennsylvania
Angelo Bordogna
WPIBL
501 Center St.
East Pittsburgh, PA 15112
(412) 824-6295
(412) 418-0372
www.wpibl.org
email: abor98@verizon.net
Eastern Pennsylvania
Dana W. Brown
Berks County Interscholastic Bowling League
PIAA Coaches Advisory Committee
10 South Waverly St.
Shillington, PA 19607
(610) 775-5089, ext. 2082
email: dbrown@gmsd.k12.pa.us
http://home.comcast.net/~berksbowling
Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic
Association, Inc.
550 Gettysburg Rd.
P.O. Box 2008
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055
(717) 697-0374
www.piaa.org
Rhode Island
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Rhode Island Interscholastic League, Inc.
Bldg, #6, R.I. College Campus
600 Mt. Pleasant Ave
Providence, RI 02908
(401) 272-9844
www.riil.org
South Carolina
Ben DeRosia
200 Summer View Rd
Summerville, SC 29483
843-518-7517 Cell
843-953-5180 W
bderosia@netzero.net
South Carolina High School League
121 Westpark Blvd.
Columbia , SC 29210
(803) 798-0120
South Dakota
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
South Dakota High School Activities
Association
204 N. Euclid, Suite 102
Pierre, SD 57501
(605) 224-9261
www.adhsaa.com
Tennessee
Tennessee Secondary School Athletic
Association
Matthew Gillespie
3333 Lebanon Rd.
Hermitage, TN 37076
(615) 889-6740
www.tssaa.org
Texas
Karen Miller
Texas BPA
5700 Grover Ave.
Austin, TX 78756
(512) 467-9331
www.texasbowling.com
email: k.miller@texasbowlingcenters.org
Texas University Interscholastic
League
1701 Manor Rd.
Austin, TX 78722
(512) 471-5883
www.uil.utexas.edu
Utah
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Utah High School Activities
Association
199 East 7200 South
Midvale, UT 84047
(801) 566-0681
www.uhsaa.org
Vermont
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Vermont Principals' Association, Inc.
Two Prospect Street, Ste. 3
Montpelier, VT 05602
(802) 229-0547
www.vpaonline.org
Virginia
Mary Pancoast
Virginia State H.S. Bowling
173 Alpine St.
Newport News, VA 23606
(757) 930-1346
email: pancoast4@cox.net
Virginia High School League
1642 State Farm Blvd.
Charlottesville, VA 22911
(434) 977-8475
www.vhsl.org
Washington
Greg Olsen
Washington BPA
6333 1st Ave. South.
Seattle, WA 98108
(304) 877-6615
www.wsbpa.com
email: greg@wsbpa.org
Washington Interscholastic Activities
Association
435 Main Ave. South
Renton, WA 98055
(425) 687-8585
www.wiaa.com
West Virginia
David Warman
West Virginia State BPA
114 Martin Ln.
Mount Hope, WV 25880
(304) 877-6615
West Virginia Secondary School
Activities Commission
2875 Staunton Turnpike
Parkersburg, WV 26104
(304) 485-5494
www.wvssac.org
Wisconsin
Pete Riopelle
Wisconsin H.S. Bowling
N86 W18330 Main St.
Menomonee Falls, WI 53051
(262) 255-1580
www.wihsbowlclub.com
priopelle@wi.rr.com
Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic
Association
5516 Vern Holmes Dr.
Stevens Point, WI 54481
(715) 344-8580
www.wiaawi.org
Wyoming
If you would like to be the state contact for this state,
please contact IBC High School/Collegiate at
email:Usbchighschool@bowl.com
Wyoming High School Activities
Association
731 E. 2nd St.
Casper, WY 82601
(307) 557-0614
District of Columbia
USBC High School
5301 S. 76th St.
Greendale, WI 53129
(800) 514-BOWL, ext. 3179
www.bowl.com
District of Columbia Interscholastic
Athletic Association
1401 Brentwood Pkwy. NE
Hamilton School
Washington DC 20002
(202) 698-332