Pete Weber

Pete Weber
Born Peter David Weber
August 21, 1962 (1962-08-21) (age 49)
St. Ann, Missouri
Other names PDW
Occupation Ten-Pin Bowler
Years active 1980–present
Spouse Tracy

Peter David "Pete" Weber, nicknamed “PDW”, [2] (born August 21, 1962 in St. Ann, Missouri), is a famous bowling professional on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. Weber is one of the sport's most popular active players and is well known for his maverick, rebellious personality. Weber is also featured in the ten-pin bowling sports documentary A League of Ordinary Gentlemen.

Contents

Growing up

Pete Weber grew up in Florissant, Missouri, and, as the son of bowling legend Dick Weber, was introduced to the sport at the age of two. At the age of 15, Weber was already winning local bowling tournaments against adult players, and, with the help of his father, was able to join the PBA tour at the age of 17 (the former policy required a minimum age of 18). In 1979, Weber started his first year on the professional circuit and participated in 21 tour events, including making one TV appearance. Weber won Rookie of the Year honors in 1980. By 1982, he had won his first PBA title, winning two that season. By the time he was 24 years old, he had already reached the 10-title plateau (becoming the youngest player in PBA history to reach that mark).[1] At age 26, he won the PBA National Championship, giving him all three jewels of the PBA's "triple crown" (achieved by winning the U.S. Open, Tournament of Champions and PBA National Championship).

Controversy

Despite Weber's talent, he was not popular with his bowling peers and was even denied Player of the Year honors in 1987 despite winning the Tournament of Champions and leading the tour in earnings; the award was instead given to Marshall Holman.[2] By 1989, Weber had won 13 PBA Tour titles and had reached over $1 million (USD) in earnings, but his personal life was plagued with problems. By the mid-1990s, Weber had been through two divorces and suffered from alcoholism.[3] At the same time, the PBA tour itself was in decline.

In 2000, the PBA Tour was sold to three former Microsoft executives; Weber was not on the tour during this transitional phase, as he was still serving a six-month suspension given by the former PBA leadership in 1999 due to behavior related to his drinking problem. The new tour ownership saw Weber's flashiness as a potential tool for marketing the PBA to a new audience. By the 2001-02 season, Weber had his career back on track, winning three titles in all. On December 4, 2005, Weber overcame a year of trying times both personally and professionally by clinching what was, perhaps, the most emotional title of his career at the 2005 Bowlersparadise.com Classic at Stardust Bowl in Hammond, Indiana. This marked the first television appearance for Pete Weber in 666 days, and it was his first title after the death of his father on February 13, 2005. Pete honored his father after the victory by looking into the ESPN cameras and pointing at the "DW" patch on his sleeve.

Achievements

Overall, Weber has won 35 PBA Tour events, including eight major titles. His 35th tour win on April 4, 2010 put him in sole possession of third place on the all-time PBA Tour titles list. (The win also ensured Walter Ray Williams Jr. of his record 7th Player of the Year award, as well as making Williams the oldest ever to win it. Had Weber lost in the final match against Mike Scroggins, then Scroggins would have been named Player of the Year.)[4]

Pete's eight majors place him in a tie with Mike Aulby and Walter Ray Williams, Jr., second all-time to the legendary Earl Anthony, who has 10. Weber has rolled 60 perfect 300 games in PBA competition through the 2009-10 season. He has also won the most modern-day U.S. Open titles (4). Weber is one of five PBA players to have earned the career Triple Crown. If he wins one more Tournament of Champions title, he'll become the first bowler to win all three jewels of the Triple Crown at least twice in a career.

Pete Weber claimed his first career European Bowling Tour title in 2008, in the 30th Trofeu Internacional, July 22-27, 2008, Ciutat de Barcelona at Bowling Pedralbes in Barcelona, Spain.

Pete joined his father in the PBA Hall of Fame in 1998, and he became a member of the United States Bowling Congress Hall of Fame in 2002. His career PBA Tour earnings of over $3.2 million (through the 2010-11 season) place him second all-time, behind only all-time titles leader Walter Ray Williams, Jr. Weber and Williams are the only two PBA bowlers to have topped the $3 million mark in career earnings. He is also second to Williams in career TV appearances (120) and TV match wins (107). Pete owns 46 PBA Regional titles, the most all-time.[5]

Pete was ranked 4th on the PBA's 2008 list of "50 Greatest Players of the Last 50 Years," one place behind his father.

On ESPN's Cold Pizza he mentioned that he has made the 7-10 split four times in his career. He also noted that he is a near-scratch golfer and has six career holes-in-one.

Defeats

Pete Weber was the victim in two momentous victories by Walter Ray Williams, Jr. Williams defeated Weber, 236-213, on March 26, 2006, in the title match of the PBA World Championship to tie Earl Anthony's original all time tour titles record of 41.

Williams also defeated Weber, 289-236, on September 24, 2006, in the title match of the Dydo Japan Cup to break Anthony's all-time tour titles record and establish the all-time mark of 42 titles.

Bowling Style and Personal Information

External links

References

  1. ^ Storm Staff Bowler bios at www.stormbowling.com
  2. ^ Marshall Holman Hall of Fame bio at www.pba.com, official website of the Professional Bowlers Association and Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour
  3. ^ Clark, Tom. "Pete Weber's resurgence has PBA on edge." Article at www.usatoday.com, March 1, 2002.
  4. ^ Vint, Bill. "Weber Re-Writes PBA History with Marathon Open Victory, Hands Williams Player of the Year Title." Article at www.pba.com on April 4, 2010.
  5. ^ Vint, Bill. "Weber Continues Mastery in Illinois Valley Classic, Wins Record 46th PBA Regional Title." Article at www.pba.com on July 27, 2011. [1]