Sean Rash
Sean Rash | |
---|---|
Born |
Sean Rash August 22, 1982 Anchorage, Alaska |
Occupation | Ten-pin bowler |
Years active | 2005–present |
Spouse(s) | Sara Rash |
Children | 1 |
Sean Rash (born August 22, 1982) is a right-handed ten-pin bowler from Anchorage, Alaska, and is considered one of the top players on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. He currently has eight PBA titles, two of them major championships, and was the 2011–12 PBA Player of the Year. Rash has rolled two of the PBA's 25 televised perfect 300 games, making him the only PBA player in history with multiple perfect games in the TV finals. He now resides in Montgomery, Illinois with his wife Sara, and his daughter Kaylee. He is a member of the Brunswick pro staff.
PBA Career
Rash joined the PBA in 2005. He holds the distinction of being the first PBA player to ever win a title when starting from the Tour Qualifying Round (TQR), which he accomplished in his rookie season at the 2006 West Virginia Championship (see PBA Bowling Tour: 2005–06 season). He won his first PBA major title at the 2007 USBC Masters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The win gave Rash four titles in his first four television appearances, and seven straight match wins on TV to open his career (one short of the record eight wins set by George Branham III). The streak ended when Rash lost to Norm Duke in the semi-final match of the 2008–09 season-opening PBA World Championship. Rash won the 2012 PBA Tournament of Champions for his first championship in five years, and second major title overall. Qualifying as the #1 seed, Rash beat Ryan Ciminelli in the final match 239–205.[1]
Rash led the 2011–12 PBA Tour in average, earnings and points. On May 28, 2012, the PBA announced that Rash had won the 2012 Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year award in an extremely close vote (Rash received 29% of the vote to Jason Belmonte's 26.6%).[2]
Sean won his sixth and seventh PBA Tour titles in the 2012–13 season, in the WBT Kuwait Open and WBT Thailand Open. He later won an additional $20,000 in the World Bowling Tour finals (contested at the 2013 World Series of Bowling), but this did not count as a PBA title. Sean was the top money winner on Tour for the 2012–13 season, with earnings of $248,317.[3]
Sean has won over $850,000 in his PBA career. He has accumulated 15 perfect 300 games in PBA events through the 2014 season.[4] In the finals of the PBA Wolf Open on May 24, 2014 (broadcast nationally on June 3, 2014), Sean rolled the PBA's 23rd televised 300 game in the opening match. He went on to win the tournament for his 8th PBA title.[5]
On February 15, 2015 Sean bowled a 300 game on ESPN while competing in the Barbasol Tournament of Champions in Indianapolis, Indiana, the 25th time a perfect game has been bowled in a televised PBA event. This, combined with his his June 2014 perfect game, made him the only bowler in PBA history to have bowled two televised perfect games in PBA competition. He did not, however, go on to win the tournament.[6]
Before the PBA
Sean Rash was a highly accomplished bowler before turning pro. His amateur accomplishments included:
- Junior Team USA member in 1998, 2002 and 2003.
- Won 2002 Junior Olympic Gold Tournament
- Team USA member in 2002, 2004 and 2005. Was part of the 2004 team that won the World Tenpin Team Cup in The Netherlands.
- Two-time All-American at Wichita State University (2002 and 2003).
- Won the 2003 International Bowling Congress (IBC) National Championship, and was runner-up for IBC Bowler of the Year.
- Won the 2003 USBC Doubles Championship, where he and partner Derek Sapp established an all-time record for pinfall with 1,540 over six games (later broken in 2007 by Jonathan Masur and Jeffrey Butler shooting a 1,544).
Rash also started a tournament in his native Alaska when he was just 13 years old. Frustrated by a lack of scratch tournaments for junior bowlers, he started his own: Sean Rash Stars of the Future. The tournament is in its 18th year as of 2012, and has awarded nearly $25,000 in scholarship money over the years.[7]
Sources
- www.pba.com, official site of the Professional Bowlers Association and Lumber Liquidators PBA Tour
- http://www.bowl.com/tournaments/usbcopen/national/records_general_records.aspx
References
- ↑ ToC Tournament Results at www.pba.com
- ↑ Vint, Bill (May 28, 2012). "Sean Rash Wins Closest PBA Player of the Year Contest in Years; Belmonte Second, Fagan Third". www.pba.com.
- ↑ Schneider, Jerry (January 17, 2014). "Australia's Jason Belmonte Named 2012–13 Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year". pba.com.
- ↑ Sean Rash bio at www.pba.com
- ↑ Vint, Bill (June 3, 2014). "Sean Rash Rolls 300 on His Way to Eighth Career Title in PBA Wolf Open to Kick Off PBA Summer Swing". pba.com. Retrieved June 18, 2014.
- ↑ Vint, Bill (February 15, 2015). "Belmonte Repeats as Barbasol PBA Tournament of Champions Winner; Rash Rolls Historic 300 Game". pba.com. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
- ↑ Bragg, Beth (November 13, 2012). "After no off-season, Rash begins defense of PBA Player of Year title". adn.com.
Awards and achievements | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Jason Belmonte |
Best Bowler ESPY Award 2012 |
Succeeded by Pete Weber |
Preceded by Mika Koivuniemi |
PBA Player of the Year 2011-12 |
Succeeded by Jason Belmonte |