PBA Bowling Tour: 2004–05 season

This is a recap of the 2004–05 season of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 46th season and consisted of 21 events. A major change to the tour this season was the move to an "exempt" format for most standard events. In this format, 58 players (previous season titlists, winners of PBA majors who gained multi-year exemptions, or those finishing high enough on the previous season's points list) automatically qualified for the top 64 each week. The other six spots were filled from a Tour Qualifying Round (TQR) held on the first day of the tournament.

PBA Bowling Tour: 2004–05 Season
LeagueProfessional Bowlers Association
SportTen-pin bowling
DurationSeptember 14, 2004 – April 10, 2005
PBA Tour
Season MVPPatrick Allen

Patrick Allen won three titles, including a major at the Denny's World Championship, made the top five at all four majors, and captured PBA Player of the Year honors. Danny Wiseman won his first major title and 11th title overall at the Miller High Life ABC Masters. Chris Barnes was victorious at the 62nd U.S. Open, while Steve Jaros won the season-ending Dexter Tournament of Champions.[1]

After the Professional Women's Bowling Association (PWBA) folded in 2003, the PBA opened its membership to women for the first time this season. Missy Bellinder (now Missy Parkin) was the first woman to become a PBA member. Liz Johnson became the first woman to qualify for a PBA Tournament when she made match play at the Uniroyal Tire Classic. Later in the season at the Banquet Open, she became the first woman to make the TV finals of a PBA event, and the first woman to defeat a man (Wes Malott) in a televised PBA Tour event. Liz was then defeated by Tommy Jones in the championship match, finishing second.[2]

Also during the season, Walter Ray Williams, Jr. became the second bowler in history to reach 40 career PBA titles (joining Earl Anthony), while Parker Bohn III became the fifth bowler to reach 30 career titles.

Tournament schedule

EventCityDatesWinner
Dydo Japan Cup Yokohama, Japan Sep 14–20 Tommy Jones (1)
Miller High Life ABC Masters Milwaukee, Wisconsin Oct 24–31 Danny Wiseman (11)
PBA Chicago Open Vernon Hills, Illinois Nov 3–7 Brian Himmler (3)
PBA Uniroyal Tire Classic Wickliffe, Ohio Nov 10–14 Walter Ray Williams, Jr. (40)
PBA BowlersParadise.com Open Valley Park, Missouri Nov 17–21 Rick Lawrence (2)
PBA Pepsi Open Wichita, Kansas Nov 23–28 Jason Hurd (2)
PBA Denver Open Lakewood, Colorado Dec 1–5 Tommy Jones (2)
PBA Earl Anthony Medford Classic Medford, Oregon Dec 8–12 Mike Wolfe (1)
PBA Storm Orange County Classic Fountain Valley, California Dec 15–19 Brian Voss (23)
PBA GEICO Open Mesa, Arizona Jan 5–9 Mika Koivuniemi (5)
PBA El Paso Classic El Paso, Texas Jan 12–16 Parker Bohn III (30)
PBA Dallas Open Dallas, Texas Jan 19–23 Patrick Allen (3)
PBA Birmingham Open Trussville, Alabama Jan 26–30 Patrick Allen (4)
PBA Atlanta Classic Norcross, Georgia Feb 2–6 Norm Duke (22)
PBA Jackson-Hewitt Tax Service Open Fairlawn, Ohio Feb 9–13 Amleto Monacelli (19)
62nd U.S. Open North Brunswick, New Jersey Feb 13–20 Chris Barnes (6)
PBA Cambridge Credit Classic West Babylon, New York Feb 23–27 Tommy Jones (3)
PBA Baby Ruth Real Deal Classic Indianapolis, Indiana Mar 2–6 Mika Koivuniemi (6)
PBA Banquet Open Wyoming, Michigan Mar 16–20 Tommy Jones (4)
Denny's World Championship Taylor, Michigan Mar 26 – Apr 3 Patrick Allen (5)
Dexter Tournament of Champions Uncasville, Connecticut Apr 6–10 Steve Jaros (7)
gollark: Millibytes per second?
gollark: Technically, any "per second" can be replaced with "Hertz".
gollark: Or, more commonly, k🐝Hz.
gollark: k🐝ps
gollark: kB is technically correct and KB isn't exactly, but unlike b and B it's not ambiguous.

References

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