AboutWhen it comes to youth sports, you have a wide variety of choices. Baseball. Swimming. Soccer. Karate. Football. Basketball. Tennis. Hockey. And the list goes on. But there's a sport you may not have considered that nearly one million kids participated in last year—bowling. USBC Youth bowling is a unique opportunity to get involved with a sport that you can stay with forever and offers more than $6 million in annual scholarships that reward academic, leadership and on-lanes performance skills.USBC Youth bowling is a unique opportunity to get involved with a sport that you can stay with forever and offers more than $6 million in annual scholarships that reward academic, leadership and on-lanes performance skills. USBC Youth also provides opportunities for coaching and instruction, fun and friendly competition, fair play, teamwork, and leadership development. And there are cool new awards that include updated emblems, trophies, and even rings!To be a bowler, you don't have to be the biggest, tallest or strongest to succeed on the lanes. In fact, the world's best bowlers come in all shapes and sizes – short, tall, heavy, thin. Bowling technique is all about leverage and timing, so your physical size and strength does not matter as much as in sports like football or basketball.Bowling has a lot to offer young people. If you or your child wants to get involved with a cool sport that anyone can play and one that helps build their future, give bowling a try! Join USBC Youth bowling today!Read More
New youth processing system is now availableThe United States Bowling Congress launched its new Internet-based system for processing youth league bowlers on Monday, Aug. 17.The new system will process membership, awards and averages for youth bowlers starting with the 2009-10 season. WinLABS will no longer be available to process youth leagues.Because the new method is an Internet-based system, associations and bowling centers will be able to process their youth membership from any computer with Internet access. The system also will allow for a more efficient means of system upgrades throughout the year without the need for software downloads. USBC staff is continuing to evaluate the processing system and more features will be available in the near future.If you have questions or feedback with the online system, contact USBC at 1-800-514-BOWL ext. 8973.Before using the new system, please take time to read the Quick Reference Guide to familiarize yourself with the process. While the guide is not a user reference manual, it should provide answers to several scenarios you might encounter.To view the Quick Reference Guide,
click here.To connect to the new youth processing system,
click here.If you have questions or feedback, contact USBC at 1-800-514-BOWL (2695).If you receive a certificate notice, please accept it and continue.Read MoreThere is a lot more to being a USBC Youth member than a Saturday morning league. As a USBC Youth member, a huge array of opportunities is available to you, from local and state tournaments to the national stage of the Junior Gold Championships and USBC Youth Open. You can even represent your country while bowling with some of the biggest stars on the Lumber Liquidator's PBA Tour as a member of Junior Team USA. And you don't have to be a top notch bowler. No matter what your age or skill level, there's a USBC tournament for all USBC Youth members.
There are lots of benefits to bowling in a USBC Youth national tournament, including:



MembershipThere has never been a better time than now to become a USBC Youth member. With the new, official USBC Youth Jersey, brand new special achievement awards including the return of award rings for a 300 game or 800 series, and a subscription to US Youth Bowler including the special 8-page pullout section, Bowlopolis the Mag!, your USBC Youth membership is more rewarding now than ever before. A USBC Youth membership now also comes with a redesigned membership card, and don’t forget that you can use your certified average for all USBC Youth competitions! Click "Read more" to learn more about all the cool new options available to you as a USBC Youth bowler.Read More




USBC Youth Leaders ProgramIf you're enthusiastic, energetic and ready to take a leadership role in promoting and expanding bowling, then USBC wants you to become a Youth Leader. Put your leadership skills to use and earn scholarship money for college through the USBC Youth Leaders program.As a USBC Youth Leader, you'll be a key part of the USBC's youth bowling efforts, helping to shape the future of our sport and expand USBC Youth membership. By becoming a USBC Youth Leader, you'll learn important skills and have a dynamic role in making important decisions for bowling, including coordinating and leading meetings, coordinating youth programs and recruiting bowlers, fund raising, planning tournaments, awarding scholarships, and coaching, training and mentoring youth bowlers.The best USBC Youth Leaders aspire to win the Youth Ambassador of the Year Award and the $1,500 scholarship that goes with it, only two of which are handed out each year to one male and one female. One winner may be chosen to have a say in what goes on in bowling as a voting member of the USBC Youth Committee for two years. Every local association with an operating Youth Leaders Program should enter a male and female each year into the Youth Leader of the Year competition.Get started on your future as a USBC Youth Leader today by contacting Association Services.Local Bylaws: USBC Youth Leaders Chapter
Ana KoffStats
But if you think this means that Ana does not have a competitive streak when it comes to her brother, think again. "I wouldn't go down without a fight," she says when asked who would win a best of five match between herself and her brother—though she does concede that Andrew would be more likely to win because of his 3-hour-a-day practice regimen. When she credits Andrew as an inspiration for her successes as a bowler, Ana undoubtedly has in mind the experience that she calls the best of her life. "To me, all of the awards and trophies that I received are only secondary to the two awards that I won at the Tournament of the Americas," Ana says of representing her country. Like her brother, Ana may be interested in bowling for Wichita State collegiately and shares a great friendship with the PBA's Chris Loschetter and his family. "I love to paint and to make greeting cards. In fact, it was Mrs. Loschetter that got me into making
cards," Ana says. "Chris is very kindhearted, always willing to help youth bowlers." One pleasure Ana has discovered on her own, though, is roller coasters. "Best roller coasters ever," she says of Cedar point in Sandusky, Ohio. "The Dragster is about 420 straight up and then down. This morning I got 1st row!"Read More
Jessica BeachStats
An aspiring accountant who won the Division Two team event at the 2008 Youth Open, one of the fondest memories of Kayla Blanchard's young bowling career occurred when she met two-time Team USA member and 2007 Women's World Champion, Shannon O'Keefe, at the 2009 USBC Queens Tournament in Detroit. "I was waitressing there, and all the bowlers were there," Kayla explains. "The one person I liked the most was Shannon O'Keefe. I thought she was the easiest person to talk to. She was the most personable." Though Blanchard identifies O'Keefe as her favorite professional bowler, the person she credits the most for her success at the Youth Open and in making the All-Conference Team in the American Heartland Intercollegiate Bowling Conference during her Freshman season with the Grand Valley State bowling program is her father." "I have been bowling since I was 2," Kayla explains. "He has been at the bowling alley every night with me,
working with me. I was planning on going to McKendree but when financial aid fell through they could only give me so much. My Dad said 'If you really want to do this I will pay for it,' but I wanted to stay home." Blanchard may have opted to stay closer to home rather than bowling with a high-profile collegiate program, but with another appearance at the USBC Youth open this year, she has no plans of hanging up her bowling shoes anytime soon.Read More
Kayla BlanchardStats
Andy SoukupStats
Jenn BoisselleStats
Jessica EarnestStats
Anthony SimonsenStats