Well, your gonna need a fingertip grip ball with a decent coverstock and core. Throwing a large hook isn't always the best thing to do with a ball, but if you really want to throw a big hook you'll need the right equipment then the right technique. The technique is basically, sometime before letting go of the ball, you got to get your hand underneath the ball. By getting your hand under the ball your wrist will be in a cocked position, and after the ball passes your right leg you let your thumb out of the ball and uncock your wrist to create some revs on the ball. Now, when the ball is rev'd up the core in the ball should be enough to create a hooking pattern. If the ball isn't hooking enough, you can change the angle of your hand when uncocking the ball, the simplest way i can describe that angle is if you were to try and spiral a football underhanded. You can get more hook by putting more rev's on the ball, changing the angle of the reving, and changing the ball you are using. Typically it is really hard to get hook on a plastic ball, or a ball from the bowling ally. If you want to hook one of those, you got to throw the ball with your tumb out of the ball by bracing it on your forearm then doing that underhand spiral release. All in all it takes a right ball and a lot of practice, I got my lil bro a nice ball last christmas and have to show him how to do it everytime we go bowling, he still doesn't have it right.
A few other things worth mentioning. If the lane has a lot of oil on it the ball will be harder to hook because they ball will skid on the oil, and the ball will hook more on dry lanes because there is more friction there. Also, I would not get the ball that has the most hook for your first ball, I would go for a ball made for medium oil lanes. You can go on many manufacturer's websights and see the hooking pattern they create on different amounts of oil. The ball I like the most at the moment is ment for medium to dry lanes and I have a length+backend layout on the ball. Layouts are the way the driller puts the holes in your ball and can change the way the ball reacts. Here is the link to the meanstreak.
http://www.bowlwithbrunswick.com/bal...il/meanstreak/
The meanstreak has a pretty high RG value so you would have a harder time putting revs on the ball. If I was you I would try to find a ball that has a low RG, medium/high RG differential and has a pearl coverstock ment for medium oil lanes. This is the closest ball I can find that has those specs. The IQ tour pearl -
http://www.stormbowling.com/products/balls/iqtourpearl
Oh yeah, you need to find a good driller. I would get my ball drilled at an AMF bowling center, and find what layout you want to get put on your ball. bowlingball.com has layouts for balls, here is one for the iq tour pearl
http://www.bowlingball.com/drilling-.../IQ-Tour-Pearl
I would print the layout and bring it to the driller to see how much inch pin you need for the layout. The inch pin is how far the bowling ball pin is from it's center of gravity, and not all layouts can go on all bowling balls. Bowling ball layouts require a minimum to maximum inch pin, and when you order a bowling ball you have to get the inch pin within that range for the desired layout. Then order the ball on a sight like bowlingball.com because if you don't your gonna play like 50-80 bucks more for the same ball if you buy it from a proshop.
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