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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Family to host Wiffle ball tourney for charity - Richmond County Daily Journal

 The Wiffle ball field built by Stevin Huttenstine and his two sons, Caleb and Dakota, sits on a field adjacent to their house. Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange

The Wiffle ball field built by Stevin Huttenstine and his two sons, Caleb and Dakota, sits on a field adjacent to their house.

Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange

<p>Stevin Huttenstine and his two sons, Caleb (left) and Dakota (right), show off the Wiffle ball field they’ve built.</p> <p>Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange</p>

Stevin Huttenstine and his two sons, Caleb (left) and Dakota (right), show off the Wiffle ball field they’ve built.

Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange

<p>The fence lines the outfield of the Wiffle ball field.</p> <p>Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange</p>

The fence lines the outfield of the Wiffle ball field.

Neel Madhavan | Laurinburg Exchange

LAURINBURG — An idea for a summer project has turned into a local summer charity event.

Stevin Huttenstine and his two sons are planning to host a charity Wiffle ball tournament in the field adjacent to their house on July 10, with proceeds going towards the Scotland County Sheriff’s Office’s youth outreach efforts, including activities like “Shop with a Cop.”

“The kids don’t have a lot to do around here (during the summer),” Huttenstine said. “So we talked about having a tournament and I said well why don’t we do a charity tournament? So we went through a few charities and (the boys) chose “Shop with a Cop” with the Scotland County Sheriff’s Office to help kids in the area during Christmastime.”

The tournament will be open to the public and teams of almost all ages are welcome to join. Huttenstine said he currently has seven teams confirmed to participate, including a team from the Sheriff’s Office, and has received interest from four or five other teams.

The entry fee is $5 per player or $30 per team and each team should have six players. 50% of the total entry fees collected will go towards the Sheriff’s Office, and the other 50% will be pooled together as a prize for the winning team.

Huttenstine said ideally, they’re hoping to have 12 or 16 total teams participate. First pitch will be at 9:30 a.m., and the all-day tournament will be double-elimination. He added that concessions will be sold, with food donations including 30 pounds of barbeque from Revels Barbeque in Bennettsville, SC, 250-300 hot dogs, chili and slaw from Mamie’s in Laurel Hill, NC and 30 cases of water. Also, local businesses have donated gifts and items for a 50/50 raffle and auction with all proceeds raised by concessions, the raffle and auction going towards “Shop with a Cop.”

“We don’t want to put an age group on it, but I’m telling these teams to be mindful of the younger kids,” Huttenstine said. “I’m suggesting 11-12 years old and up. Everybody’s going to be in the same group. It’s going to be a fun, family event. Sheriff Ralph Kersey’s even going to be there to represent the sheriff’s department.”

Huttenstine’s 15-year-old son Caleb first became interested in Wiffle ball after seeing highlights of Major League Wiffle ball (MLW) on YouTube.

“I just started watching it, and it caught my attention immediately,” Caleb said. “I love watching baseball, and it’s a little bit different — it’s a little more enticing.”

Caleb added that the faster pace and more compact action of the Wiffle ball games also helped draw him to the sport.

Huttenstine said Caleb wanted a summer project, and Caleb suggested that they build a Wiffle ball field — a full regulation field in accordance with MLW measurements and specifications.

It took Huttenstine, Caleb and his oldest son Dakota, 17, about a week or two to cut the grass the right length, paint the lines on the field, build the outfield fences and install the other necessary parts of the field.

“We’ve been working on it for a week and we’re trying to get everything else ready and cleaned up,” Huttenstine said. “We’ll probably be working on it nonstop all the way up to probably the day before.”

Huttenstine said the ultimate goal ideally would be for the tournament to spur the creation of a local wiffleball league during the summers.

The North Carolina Wiffle Ball Tournament has been held every year for 40 years, and this year is returning to its original site in Kenly, NC from July 17-18. The professional MLW league currently has eight teams, which are based in the Midwest and northeast — the Coastal Cobras, Midwest Mallards, Downtown Diamondbacks, Pacific Predators, Western Wildcats, Eastern Eagles, Great Lakes Gators and Metro Magic.

“Every kid has taken a bat and ball just and hit around their yards,” Huttenstine said. “If this grows and keeps going like it has gone so far, then maybe it could be something for Scotland County to actually have and do.”

For more information or to sign up for the tournament, contact Stevin Huttenstine at 910-706-7903 or [email protected] There’s also an event page set up on Facebook, “Charity Wiffle Ball Tournament,” that has details and information.

“It’s been fun to build and it’s going to be even more fun to play,” he said.

To support the Laurinburg Exchange, subscribe at https://www.laurinburgexchange.com/subscribe.

Reach Neel Madhavan at 910-817-2671 ext. 2751 or [email protected] Follow on Twitter at @NeelMadhavan.

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Ball State announces changes to face mask policy for summer 2021 commencement - Ball State Daily News

In an email announcement June 30, Ball State announced the schedule for July 24 commencement ceremonies in Worthen Arena and updated its COVID-19 policies for the event.

Fully vaccinated graduates and guests will not be required to wear face masks, but those who are not fully vaccinated will still be required to wear masks — consistent with updated campus guidance implemented June 14. Graduates will no longer be limited to four guest tickets as COVID-19 health conditions are improving, the email said. Tickets will not be required to attend the events.

The schedule for the two different ceremonies are as follows:

  • 10 a.m.—R. Wayne Estopinal College of Architecture and Planning, College of Fine Arts, College of Sciences and Humanities, and Teachers College
  • 1 p.m.—Miller College of Business, College of Communication, Information and Media, and College of Health

If graduates did not register to walk at the commencement ceremony before the deadline of June 28, they are asked to email commencement@bsu.edu. The Commencement Office will provide further details to registered graduates as the ceremony approaches.

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All Five 2021 Home Redbird Football Games To Air On Marquee Sports Network - Illinois State University Athletics - Illinois State Athletics

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ISU Football Marquee

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CHICAGO, Ill. – Illinois State Football will continue to maintain its television footprint in the Chicago media market with a new five-game agreement between Redbird Sports Properties and Marquee Sports Network to broadcast all of home games during the 2021 Redbird football season. All contests will also be simulcast live on ESPN3/+ as part of the Missouri Valley Football Conference's broadcast agreement.

Broadcasts will include the team's season opener against Butler on September 4 (6:30 p.m.), its Family Weekend contest against Missouri State on October 2 (1 p.m.), the Homecoming game against North Dakota State (2 p.m.), a November 2 tilt against Northern Iowa (Noon) and the regular-season finale against Indiana State on November 20 (Noon).

"We're excited to extend our partnership with Redbird Athletics this year and offer five home games - our viewers love live and local content," Marquee Sports Network Programming Manager Allison Bertucci said. "Between ISU football and the Cubs, it's bound to be a very exciting fall at Marquee Sports Network!"

Debuting in February of 2020, Marquee Sports Network is the exclusive television network for Chicago Cubs baseball, except for games selected by national broadcasts. In addition to game broadcasts, the network features pregame and postgame coverage, exclusive Cubs content, local sports programming and original shows geared towards sports fans.

Marquee Sports Network is available on more than 50 cable providers in portions of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Wisconsin, as well as on the streaming platforms AT&T TV and fuboTV. For a full list of providers carrying Marquee Sports Network in your area, check out https://ift.tt/3h5dKrV.

Illinois State Athletics Percy Family Hall of Famer and WMBD Sports Director Kurt Pegler will serve as the play-by-play voice on the telecasts and will be joined in the booth by former Illinois State All-American Chris Highland as the analyst. 

For more game information and updates regarding coverage of Redbird football games, visit GoRedbirds.com and click on the football schedule page.

GoRedbirds.com and the Illinois State Redbirds App:  Your sources for Illinois State tickets, Weisbecker Scholarship Fund gifts, multimedia, Redbird merchandise, photos and more.
 

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DePaul Athletics Unveils Five-Year Strategic Plan - DePaul Blue Demons

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CHICAGO – DePaul Director of Athletics DeWayne Peevy unveiled today a new five-year strategic plan for DePaul Athletics, entitled 'From DREAMS to REALITY.'
 
"Over the past several months, I've worked alongside our student-athletes, coaches, faculty, staff, University partners, supporters, alumni, and fans to develop our plan forward," said Peevy. "Through our new strategic plan, we hope to provide all Blue Demons a transparent view of our goals for the future, how we specifically look to attain them, and how they can help. I want out fans to look at this plan and see what DePaul Athletics looks like when the dreams we have become a reality."
 
DePaul Athletics' strategic plan, which is now outlined on DePaulBlueDemons.com, is guided by a vision to build a championship culture and become the premier program in the BIG EAST Conference by implementing five guiding principles of success.
 
1. Academic Excellence
Elevate academic excellence, promote holistic development, and develop the leaders of tomorrow by enabling student-athletes to achieve their educational, professional, and personal goals.
 
2. Building the DePaul Brand
Raise the national prominence of the DePaul Athletics brand and reestablish ourselves as Chicago's Team. Deepen our community impact by delivering professional, immersive, and engaging fan experiences. Foster a culture of stewardship, align resources with expectations and achieve financial sustainability.
 
3. Championship Experience
Develop a student-first championship experience that optimizes the ability for our student-athletes to work together towards common success and consistently win championships.
 
4. Developing & Equipping Future Leaders
Cultivate a first-class student-athlete experience and workplace culture grounded in diversity, inclusivity, integrity, and compliance while deepening our commitment to DePaul's Catholic, Vincentian, and urban mission.
 
5. External Outreach
Employ bold and innovative approaches to increase annual giving and self-generated funding necessary to accomplish our strategic goals.
 
Looking towards the future, existing strengths were identified, and a new purpose statement was developed to serve as a platform for the department to continue to deliver, grow, and improve. These strengths were branded as DePaul Athletics' competitive advantage.
 
Our Competitive Advantage
  • People: Our people are unique in their character, capacity, and commitment to DePaul Athletics.
  • Passion: We are passionate about representing DePaul's Catholic and Vincentian mission, the city of Chicago, and the BIG EAST Conference.
  • Purpose: We are bound together by our deeper purpose—we transform lives and cultivate the leaders of tomorrow through college athletics. 
The new strategic plan also reaffirms DePaul Athletics' Mission and introduces new operating principles to guide future operational decision making.
 
"A bold vision and unparalleled fan support will be essential to grow into a national leader in college athletics," said Peevy. "Our success relies on all Blue Demons working together collectively. Internally, we've committed to building a culture by design, not one by default. Externally, I ask our Blue Demon family to support our student-athletes and coaches in the stands, consider a donation to support our path forward, and vocalize their pride and support for DePaul Athletics."
 
DePaul Athletics' new five-year Strategic Plan compliments DePaul University's 'Grounded in Mission' Strategic Plan.

Peevy detailed the strategic plan and fielded questions in a webinar on June 29. View the full video below.

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Love Peace & Soul Retreat Celebrates Five Years Of Health & Wellness - The Daily Ridge

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Love Peace & Soul Retreat Celebrates Five Years Of Health & Wellness

by James Coulter

Cortez has been performing yoga for four years. He is a certified instructor with the Veteran’s Yoga Project. In addition, he has been offering yoga instruction at the Cortez Training Center, an affordable holistic health and fitness center in Tampa.

At the center, he teaches yoga and other techniques, including personal training, self-defense, massage, cardio, kickboxing, and other forms of non-traditional forms of health and fitness through a holistic approach.

His mission has been to reach out to veterans and families alike. He knows from first-hand experience how yoga can help decrease stress and increase overall mental health.

Often, he teaches yoga at the center. Sometimes he hosts it at events such as the Love Peace & Soul Retreat in Downtown Auburndale last Saturday.

“This event is amazing,” he said. “I love what this event represents: community [and] bringing people together. all of the vendors are holistic. [We are] really out here having a great time networking with a great sense of community.”

Cortez hosted one of the two outdoor yoga classes at the health and fitness event in Downtown Auburndale City Park last Saturday. The Love Peace & Soul Retreat also showcased several local vendors offering their products to promote holistic health and wellness.

The event also included live music, food trucks serving vegan soul food and Jamaican cuisine, and free haircuts provided by Jairus Rutherford, owner of Second 2 None Barber Shop.

Love Peace And Soul Retreat was hosted by Pieces to Peace Counseling, a local mental health counseling service. Its facility originally opened in Auburndale, but due to a fire, it was moved to Lakeland.

Antoinette Pollard, founder and owner, hosted last week’s event to celebrate their five-year anniversary and educate the community about mental health and men’s health. As June was Men’s Health Month, Pollard wanted to raise awareness about men’s health issues, especially for the black and brown community.

Overall, she appreciated the turnout for the event. She was personally torn between whether she loved the yoga classes or the wellness discussion panel. Either way, she loved seeing her local community come together to be educated on the health issues that affect them and the men in their lives.

“I think this event was a great way to celebrate by giving back to the community,” she said. “Our guest speakers had an attention on men’s health and the importance on mental health, they are doing a good job conveying that message…We are glad the community was interested enough in this topic to show some support and collect resources.”

Also part of the event was a health and wellness discussion panel, where many local experts and individuals offered their perspectives on common health issues.

Larry Moore of Heartland Rural Health from Highlands County and his other panelists discussed the importance of mental health as it pertains to black and brown people and other people of color. They also discussed seeking out mental health assistance, using medication, and “how important it is for your physical [health] to line up with your emotional.”

“We talked about the need to listen to younger generations, what would be best for them,” he said. “The one thing I would like to take away from this event is that young people have a voice and it should be heard.”

Diane Moore, a psychologist, attended the event to help bring awareness about mental health and educate people on the importance of knowing about their mental status.

She appreciated the turnout for the event, and she loved seeing so many people come to learn more about their mental health needs.

“The takeaway point is getting in touch with your mental health,” she said. “We are trying to incorporate the community because the community needs help in this day and age, and it needs to know that it is support in different areas.”

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Let them be your crystal ball - Smoky Mountain News

Years ago during a teeth cleaning, an older dental hygienist offered some advice. She told me to let other people be my crystal ball — to observe their lives and learn from their mistakes, and to also note their successes and triumphs. Doing this would save valuable time.

I was in my early 20s during this visit to the dentist. Even though I’ve never forgotten what she said, I did what most young people do. I fumbled and frolicked through a few decades, falling down, getting up and learning many lessons along the way. Nonetheless, the crystal ball guidance was always on my mind.

My mom’s cancer diagnosis changed her outlook. She viewed life in a new way, knowing that her time on earth was limited. 

When you assume you have all the years in the world, you take things and people and moments for granted, but when you see the end in sight, things clear up quickly. You realize small things matter more than you thought and the “big” things matter less, if at all.

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Weeks before my mom‘s passing, she held onto both of my hands, looked me straight in the eyes and said, “Listen to me, darling. Figure out what makes you happy and do that over and over. I want you to be happy, that’s all I’ve ever wanted.” 

At that time, there were situations and people in my life draining me of love, energy and light. She didn’t mention those specific things, but she and I both knew her point of reference. After her death, I made a number of changes. Although my grief was overwhelming, her encouragement in those final moments led me on a new life journey, one that I adore very much. 

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About a month before my mom passed, my sister‘s father-in-law died of pulmonary fibrosis. He was a wonderful, salt-of-the-earth man. Before his death, he wrote letters to everyone he loved. The letter he wrote to my sister included these words, “Keep life simple and family close.” 

At his funeral, one of the pastors talked about the memories we leave for our children, grandchildren and other family members. We should live in a way we want them to remember us. 

The pastor said, “We think we have a memory, but really, the memory has us.” Every day, every moment is a chance to not only create a memory for us but also a memory for those around us. 

I recently listened to an Audible book by Mel Robbins. She unpacked the concept of worry and regret. She cited a study where researchers asked 1,500 people over age 65 what haunts them the most when reflecting upon their lives. The top eight answers were: 

Not being careful enough when choosing a life partner.

Not resolving a family estrangement. 

Putting off saying how you feel. 

Not traveling enough. 

Spending too much time worrying. 

Not being honest. 

Not taking enough career chances. 

Not taking care of your body. 

Older folks know things. They have wisdom and experience. We must listen and let them be our crystal balls. I often notice how elderly people watch kids and teenagers. They have a wistful, faraway look in their eyes as if they’re remembering their childhoods or their children’s younger years. It’s interesting how the long-term memory stays intact, even when short-term tasks like eating lunch or taking a pill are forgotten. 

As the summer hits its crux, my schedule is maxed out with activities and escapades. Weekends and vacation days are booked with trips, events, concerts, cookouts and more. My boyfriend and I are also training for triathlons. Our packed agenda may look hectic to an outside eye, but to us, it’s exciting. We have numerous opportunities to make new memories, stories we can tell years from now when we’re grandparents. 

In writing and in conversations, I like to espouse the meaning of life. I’m 41-years old, which may sound young to some, but I feel older and older every day. I think about those eight suggestions from the 65 and older crowd. Each day is one less day to see the world, hug people I love or try something new. 

One of my favorite quotes of all time is by the brilliant Mary Oliver. I’m sure you’ve heard it, but let me ask again. “Tell me, what it is you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”

(Susanna Shetley is a writer, editor and digital media specialist with The Smoky Mountain News, Smoky Mountain Living and Mountain South Media. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

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WKU Tennis Announces Five Incoming Players in the Class of 2021 - WKU Athletics

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Head Coach Davis Interview

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — WKU Tennis head coach Greg Davis announced five incoming players for the Lady Toppers' Class of 2021.

Sofia Blanco  /  Caracas, Venezuela
Sofia Cerezo  /  Madrid, Spain
Rachel Hermanova  /  Czech Republic
Paola Cortez  /  Cochabamba, Bolivia  /  Kennesaw State
Taylor Shaw  /  Little Rock, Arkansas  /  Missouri State

"I wanted to put together a team that had more depth," Davis said. "Looking at the national title teams I've had, I felt like we had an opportunity to win and be successful at all nine positions – six singles, three doubles – and that was the goal with the group we've got coming in."

Sofia Blanco comes to The Hill from Caracas, Venezuela, where she was ranked the No. 1 player nationally. She is currently ranked No. 514 in the ITF (International Tennis Federation) and has an 8.60 UTR (Universal Tennis Rating). She competed in singles and doubles tournaments in Venezuela, as well as numerous countries throughout South and Central America. Blanco earned a GPA of 3.6 while studying at Mater Salvatoris. Her sister Carmen played at Ball State and Alabama, while her brother Carlos played collegiately at the University of Findlay. 

Sofia Cerezo is a native of Madrid, Spain, and will start her career with the Lady Toppers after an impressive prep resume. She reached as high as a No. 65 Spanish Open ranking, defeating six players who eventually went on to earn college scholarships. She is a three-time regional singles champion and a national doubles runner-up. Cerezo also helped her regional team to back-to-back championships in 2017 and 2018, as well as a national runner-up finish in 2017.

Rachel Hermanova is originally from the Czech Republic, but spent the previous two years in Spain, training at the Sanchez-Casal Tennis Academy. Her biggest singles accomplishments at the ITF J5 level are a runner-up finish in El Salvador, as well as semifinal appearances in Panama and Costa Rica. She also recorded doubles runner-ups in Panama and the Canary Islands. Hermanova graduated from ES International School with a 3.54 GPA and plans to study journalism at WKU so that she can become a television anchor.

Paola Cortez will play her first year at WKU after transferring from Kennesaw State, where she played two seasons for the Owls. In doubles play, she boasts a career 7-11 record at the No. 1 position and a 2-2 mark at No. 2. She also gained experience competing at the No. 1, 2 and 3 singles spots. Originally from Cochabamba, Bolivia, Cortez ranked as high as No. 415 in the ITF while posting a 10.52 UTR. collected eight career singles and doubles titles in ITF junior action. She played for Bolivia in the WTA Fed Cup and won her singles match against Peru.

Taylor Shaw is an incoming transfer from Missouri State, where she played two seasons for the Bears. As a freshman in 2019-20, she combined for a 7-7 singles record in fall and spring competition. In dual matches, she recorded a 4-5 record playing at the No. 3 and 4 positions. As a sophomore in 2020-21, she continued to play at the same singles spots. Shaw grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas, and was the No. 1 recruit in the state in 2019. She helped lead Little Rock Christian Academy to three conference championships. As a junior, she finished runner-up at state.

The five newcomers will join returning players Laura Bernardos, Alexis Cramer, Samantha Martinez and Cora-Lynn von Dungern to compose the 2021-22 team. WKU's fall competition schedule will be announced in the coming months.

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Mark Cavendish rolls back clock to win Tour stage again, five years since last one - CNN International

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The Briton, who finished outside the time limit in his previous participation in 2018, crashed out in 2017 and hinted at retirement last year. He is now three victories away from the Tour's all-time stage win record held by Belgian great Eddy Merckx.
Cavendish, back in the Deceuninck-Quick Step team this season after a five-year hiatus, powered past his rivals in the final straight to beat France's Nacer Bouhanni to the line.
Belgian Jasper Philipsen took third place while his Alpecin-Fenix team mate Mathieu van der Poel retained the overall leader's yellow jersey.
"I don't know what to say," said a tearful Cavendish, who was a last-minute stand-in on the team for Irishman Sam Bennett.
"Just being here is special enough. I didn't know I would get to come back to this race. I thought I was never coming back (on the Tour) honestly but the stars have aligned somehow. After last year it's just nice to have some good luck.
"We didn't know we were going to get there but we just see what a team this is. So many people didn't believe in me but these guys do."
Mark Cavendish, with Solvakia&#39;s Peter Sagan on his side, crosses the finish line as he wins stage four.
The day had begun with a rider protest -- with all teams putting their collective foot down one kilometer into the 150.4-km fourth stage from Redon to bring the race to a halt for about a minute in a silent protest for safer racing conditions after numerous crashes in the opening stages.
They then rode the next 10 kilometers at a snail's pace.
As the stage came to a conclusion, breakaway rider Brent van Moer was close to upsetting the sprinters. But he was caught by the charging peloton 150 meters from the line, with Cavendish producing a perfectly timed effort to snatch his 49th stage win on a Grand Tour in the town where he also prevailed in 2015.
Cavendish celebrates on the podium.
Wednesday's fifth stage is a 27.2-km individual time trial from Change to Laval, and all eyes will be on the overall contenders.
World champion Julian Alaphilippe, who has an eye on a potential podium finish in Paris after finishing fifth overall in 2019, is second, eight seconds behind Van der Poel. He will be hoping his last-kilometer effort to get Cavendish up into a good sprinting position will not cost him.
Colombian Richard Carapaz is third, 31 seconds off the pace with defending champion Tadej Pogacar a further eight seconds behind.
Carapaz's Ineos-Grenadiers team mate Geraint Thomas, the 2018 Tour champion, lags 1:07 behind Van der Poel while last year's runner-up Primoz Roglic is 1:35 off the pace.

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2021 Golf Ball Buyer’s Guide: 11 new premium value golf balls that won’t break the bank - Golf.com

Premium value golf balls

Check out our reviews of the best premium value golf balls below.

Jeffrey Westbrook; Styling: Miako Katoh

In the second installment of our 2021 Ultimate Golf Ball Buyer’s Guide, we’re focusing on a category of balls popular among all types of players: Premium Value. While not as tipped-out with technology as their Premium counterparts (you can read our reviews of 19 Premium golf ball models here), these balls still pack a powerful performance punch, and at a lower price tag than Tour balls.

Golf balls in this category are designed to balance big distance with Tour-level feel, thanks to innovative covers and cores. These balls won’t let you down, and they won’t hurt your wallet, either. Read our reviews of 11 top Premium Value golf ball models from top manufacturers like Callaway, TaylorMade, Titleist, Srixon, Mizuno, Wilson and Vice below, and if you find the one you like, click the link to purchase them today.

Need help finding the right clubs for your game? Visit the expert fitters at our affiliate partner, True Spec Golf. For more on the latest gear news, check out Wall and Tursky’s latest Fully Equipped podcast.

PREMIUM VALUE GOLF BALL REVIEWS

Callaway ERC Soft

Using a new hybrid cover, high-energy core and high-speed mantle, Callaway calls the ERC Soft its longest golf ball with a soft feel. The ball is made to be high-launching and low-spinning, and it comes with Callaway’s Triple Track visual aid for easy alignment. (Available in white and yellow Triple Track.)

All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy a linked product, GOLF.COM may earn a fee. Pricing may vary.

Callaway ERC Soft Triple Track 21

$34.99

Callaway’s ERC Soft Triple Track 21 golf balls are a Pro Shop favorite.

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Mizuno RB 566V

Unique microdimples in the center of each dimple allow Mizuno to reduce drag on long shots for optimal spin and flight. A thin mantle layer helps provide a soft feel while a firm cover is made to boost ball speed. (Available in white.)

Mizuno RB 566 V

$29.99

The RB 566 V golf balls by Mizuno sport a unique 566 D-dimple pattern that features Micro-dimples for reduced drag and optimized spin. The ball also sports a thin, soft mantle layer that offers an extra soft feel, while the firmer cover generates higher ball speed at impact.

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Srixon Q Star

Q Star balls use two special constructions to heighten all-around performance: 1) The cores have a soft center and firm outer to produce soft feel and ball speed, and 2) The covers of the balls use flexible molecular bonds to help wedge grooves dig into the surface, providing greater spin. (Available in white and yellow.)

Srixon Q Star

$26.99

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Srixon Q Star Tour

Srixon’s proprietary SeRM coating found on the urethane cover increases friction for added control and spin. A new eye-catching “Divide” version features a matte urethane cover with one yellow half and one red half for visibility and alignment purposes. (Available in white, yellow and Divide split colors.)

Srixon Q Star Tour 3

$32.99

The Q-Start Tour 3 golf balls by Srixon boast a new FastLayer Core that provides distance and soft feel without any compromise due to a gradual transition from soft inner core to firm outer edge. In addition, the ball sports a new urethane coating with flexible molecular bonds that dig deep into wedge and iron grooves for increased friction and maximum spin.

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TaylorMade Tour Response

As the name suggests, this ball blends Tour qualities (cast urethane cover) with an ultra-low compression core (40) for an impressive level of feel and greenside spin. The inclusion of a firmer layer sandwiched between the core and cover adds some oomph. (Available in white and yellow.)

TaylorMade Tour Response

$34.99

The Tour Response golf balls by TaylorMade are created with a 100% urethane cover that offers increased groove interaction to generate more backspin around and on the green. The balls also sport soft flexible material with increased elastic components for a better and more natural feel.

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Titleist Tour Speed

This three-piece ball features a new thermoplastic urethane cover and 346 quadrilateral dipyramid dimple design that produces a penetrating, consistent ballflight with efficient greenside spin. An ionomer casing layer, situated just underneath the cover and around the core, is built to generate fast ball speeds without generating unwanted spin. (Available in white and yellow.)

Titleist Tour Speed

$39.99

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Wilson Duo Professional

With a compression of 60, the Duo Professional doesn’t have any problem delivering a soft feel with Tour-level spin. The urethane cover increases spin by as much as 6 percent on approach shots, while the ionomer mantle layer encasing the large core delivers an effective energy transfer when the club meets the ball. (Available in white, yellow, orange and green.)

Wilson Staff DUO Professional

$34.99

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Vice Pro

On the moderate to high side of the swing speed spectrum (95 to 110 mph), the three-piece Vice Pro features a heavier core and mantle to generate more speed. An extra-thin cast urethane cover and lower overall compression (90) elicits a buttery feel with every club in the bag. (Available in white, red and lime.)

Vice Pro

$26.99

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Vice Pro Plus

With low launch and low spin characteristics, the four-piece Vice Pro Plus is geared for golfers with at least 110 mph of driver swing speed. A resilient cast urethane cover ensures that you won’t have trouble generating greensidespin. Distance isn’t an issue here thanks to a thinner inner mantle and thicker outer mantle that work in tandem to, put simply, make the ball go farther. (Available in white, red and lime.)

Vice Pro Plus

$26.99

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Vice Tour

This three-piece model offers an abundance of technology in the form of a durable DuPont surlyn cover and 392 aerodynamic dimple design that helps the ball cut through the wind. An improved KIL-putting line offers sharper edges for optimal alignment on the green. (Available in white.)

Vice Tour

$17.99

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Vice Pro Soft

Designed for golfers with moderate to slow driver swing speeds (below 95 mph), the three-piece Pro Soft combines distance, feel and spin in one package. With a multitude of glossy color options, it’s possible to find something that matches your personality on the course. (Available in white, red and lime.)

Vice Pro Soft

$26.99

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NBA Playoffs 2021: Five big takeaways from Game 4 of Bucks-Hawks - ESPN

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After a tough Game 3 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks, the Atlanta Hawks found their way in Game 4, despite their star guard, Trae Young, being sidelined with a bone bruise after twisting his ankle on an official's foot on Sunday. Lou Williams led all scorers as Atlanta claimed a 110-88 victory Tuesday night to even the series.

The immediate focus after the game is the health of Giannis Antetokounmpo, who exited in the second half with a hyperextended left knee after an ugly fall. In his absence, Milwaukee struggled to find any rhythm on offense, scoring just 36 points after he left the game. For the Hawks' part, center Clint Capela departed late after taking an elbow to the face in the fourth quarter, meaning Atlanta might have two players uncertain for a pivotal Game 5.

Do the Bucks have a shot at winning the series without Giannis? Can the Hawks continue to get contributions from their key reserves? Here are five things our NBA experts took away from Game 4.

Star injuries are swinging the postseason on a daily basis


Can the Bucks survive without Giannis?

The image of an NBA star lying in pain on the hardwood is an all-too-frequent sighting in 2021. The league endured another on Tuesday night approximately five minutes into the third quarter when Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo challenged an alley-oop lob to Hawks center Clint Capela, landed awkwardly on his left leg and immediately tumbled to the floor beneath the basket.

Antetokounmpo, who has averaged 40.6 minutes in each of the Bucks' last eight playoff games coming into Tuesday night, was already hampered with tightness in his left calf that had him listed as probable on the injury report for Games 3 and 4.

Uncertainty around Antetokounmpo's availability would present a serious challenge for a Bucks team already down a starter (Donte DiVincenzo) and with limited depth. Among Milwaukee's reserves, Bobby Portis is the only big man who has played meaningful minutes. Jrue Holiday and Khris Middleton will have to direct an offense that is prone to stagnation when the Bucks are struggling from distance.

Holiday is an excellent pick-and-roll player (18th in point per chance among 101 players with at least 500 pick-and-roll opportunities this season) who receives fewer opportunities as a point guard than he might in a more conventional offense. Whether he's working with Middleton or Brook Lopez, Holiday will have to tap that skill.

Middleton will need to conjure the spirit of Game 4 of last year's conference semis against Miami, when he willed Milwaukee to their only win of the series with 36 points after Antetokounmpo departed after playing only 11 minutes. We've seen glimpses of that Middleton, as recently as Milwaukee's Game 3 win when he scored 38 points. One of the most lethal high-degree-of-difficulty shot makers in the NBA, Middleton's ability to create out of nothing will be vital in a half-court offense with creative challenges.

The Bucks will have to manufacture other streams of offense, be it Lopez in the post, perimeter actions that free up Bryn Forbes or Pat Connaughton, or -- loath as they usually are to do it -- hunt mismatches. Whatever the case, Antetokounmpo's absence will severely limit the Bucks' flexibility because it's hard to experiment with 5-man units when the number of trusted players has dwindled to not much more than that.

Not that Atlanta (minus Trae Young and DeAndre Hunter), the LA Clippers (minus Kawhi Leonard and their two bigs), the Los Angeles Lakers, Brooklyn, Denver or the long list of impact players who have been sidelined this postseason will offer consolation. Loss is the norm in the 2021 playoffs.

-- Kevin Arnovitz


The utility of Lou Williams

In a season defined by injuries to star players, the Hawks were lucky to have Lou Williams make his first career playoff start in place of Trae Young. In a fortuitous deadline deal, Atlanta got Williams and two future second-round picks in exchange for Rajon Rondo, who was ineffective after signing with the Hawks as a free agent last fall.

That trade represented the Clippers' gamble that "Playoff Rondo" would reemerge in L.A. Instead, Rondo has fallen out of the rotation each of the last two rounds. After playing 35 minutes Tuesday, Williams has now seen more action in the playoffs than Rondo.

Atlanta is thrilled Williams reconsidered after pondering retirement following the trade. Without Young, the Hawks badly needed Williams' ability to create his own shot. He set the tone early, scoring seven points in the first five-plus minutes as Atlanta took a 15-5 lead, and finished with a hyper-efficient 21 points on 7-of-9 shooting in addition to handing out eight assists -- three on Young-esque lobs to Clint Capela -- with just one turnover.

At this stage of his career, Williams is no match for Young as a shooter and distributor. For one night, however, he was the understudy Atlanta needed.

-- Kevin Pelton


Middleton? Paging Khris Middleton?

Does Khris Middleton have any more of that magic from Game 3? Milwaukee sure needs some the rest of this series.

He was spectacular in the Bucks' win in Atlanta on Sunday, scoring 20 of his 38 points in the fourth quarter. But Middleton hasn't made much of an impact in the rest of the East finals, averaging 15.3 points on 34% shooting in the other three games, two of which Milwaukee lost.

If that doesn't change, it's hard to see the Bucks beating the Hawks -- assuming that Antetokounmpo will either be sidelined or significantly less than 100% for the rest of the series.

Middleton has played at a superstar level a few times this postseason, putting up 35 or more points in three games, recording double-doubles on each occasion. However, the two-time All-Star had an MVP-caliber running mate in those three wins, all 30-point, 10-rebound performances by Antetokounmpo.

The Bucks never envisioned Middleton as their No. 1 offensive option, not even when he signed his $177.5 million deal. But that's what they need him to be now.

-- Tim MacMahon


Bogi stepping up

Thirteen days ago, Hawks forward Bogdan Bogdanovic began feeling pain in his right knee. The fourth-year sharpshooter, prior to the injury, had been a key cog in the Hawks' explosive offense, averaging 16.4 points, 5.9 rebounds and 3 assists in more than 37 minutes per game.

In the subsequent five games? Just 6.2 points while shooting 25.5% from the floor and an abysmal 5-of-26 from deep.

On Tuesday night, it was the Bogdanovic of old. In the first three games against the Bucks, the 6-foot-6 guard had a combined 20 points. He matched that total Tuesday night, adding five assists, four steals, three rebounds while hitting six 3-pointers.

Atlanta improved to 3-0 in the playoffs when Bogdanovic scores at least 20 points -- and they were 13-7 in such games during the regular season.

If Young is able to return to the lineup in Game 5 and Bogdanovic can continue to play at the level he was prior to injuring his knee, Atlanta's postseason dreams take on a rosier outlook.

-- Andrew Lopez


Atlanta just might have more X-factors

If there is one thing to glean from these attrition-driven playoffs, it's that having a deep roster might be the ultimate X-factor. As star players go down, games are being turned over to role players and complementary pieces.

For the Hawks, they got a boost in the series with the return of second-year wing Cam Reddish, who in just his second game since Feb. 21 played pestering defense on Khris Middleton and added 12 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists and 2 steals in 23 efficient minutes.

Bogdan Bogdanovic is returning to health, adding a considerable offensive boost with his shooting. Kris Dunn saw time at backup point guard after DNPs in the series, playing spot-minutes behind sudden starter Lou Williams.

The grind of the schedule, combined with the oddities of the season, has left teams searching for options. The Bucks will search for a huge one now with Giannis' injury, with the offense set to tilt more toward Middleton, but also needing help from other sources.

Every playoff series finds players that step up and get hot. It's typically for a game, maybe two. Now, with injuries continuing to pile up, the X-factors might be the collective primary options the rest of the way -- and Atlanta just might have more of them than Milwaukee.

-- Royce Young

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Wimbledon 2021 Nick Kyrgios locked in five-set classic as curfew halts play - ESPN

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Nick Kyrgios and Ugo Humbert will have to continue their latest epic battle on Wednesday as play was suspended at Wimbledon on Tuesday due to a curfew with the match standing at 6-4, 4-6, 3-6, 6-1, 3-3.

The two had been due to play on one of the outdoor courts earlier in the day but had their match moved to the covered Court One late in the day due to heavy rain which caused several matches to be postponed.

However, the pair delivered one of the most entertaining games of the championship so far with several big point moments and a crowd who didn't want to leave.

Kyrgios beat Humbert in the Australian Open in February which put the two equal on head-to-head record with Humbert beating him at Acapulco in 2020.

The 26-year-old Australian's serve saw him dominate Humbert in the first set but he grew frustrated in the second and third as the Frenchman gained a foothold in the match.

Kyrgios complained about the surface on Court One -- a topic of debate throughout Wimbledon today as a number of players found it increasingly difficult to keep their footing -- and said the play was slower because of it.

"Guys, for you watching at home, it should be fast in here. It should be fast, That's grasscourt tennis," Kyrgios muttered.

"They've made it slow. This isn't grass anymore. This is slow. Slow.

"Try watering it. Make it a grass court again, thanks."

Humbert went on to take the set but the drama for the evening wasn't finished as Kyrgios served four aces in a row to start the fourth set. He continued to build off the energy of the crowd and sent the match to a fifth set.

With just half an hour left, it looked unlikely that the game would be finished on the night despite Kyrgios' best attempts to serve fast and get the match settled.

Instead, the two will take to the court again on Wednesday with it perfectly poised to go either way with the final set balanced 3-3.

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WATCH: LiAngelo Ball shows off new mansion in house tour - Yahoo Sports

In a piece for SLAM Magazine, LiAngelo Ball showed off his newly-purchased mansion in a house tour video. Running parallel with Ball providing updates on his playing career, the middle brother gave a tour of his mansion.

Ball’s house was shown on the final episode of “Ball in the Family” and was just down the road of the Big Baller estate of father LaVar and mother Tina. The house features an enormous foyer at the entrance, a kitchen, pool table, living room and a half-dozen bedrooms where brothers Lonzo and LaMelo have stayed during the summer.

The main feature, though, was the home theater which LiAngelo showed off before sitting down for the interview portion of the video. He discussed how he used his own money to buy the house, how he plans to continue vying for a spot in the league and an exciting possibility of him teaming up with his brothers and former Chino Hills teammates in the Drew League.

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First-time team wins at Monster Ball Golf Tournament - Herald-Banner

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No, You Can’t Recycle a Bowling Ball (But People Sure Keep Trying) - Curbed

Bowling balls that are part of the daily load of materials that comes to the Sims recycling plant in Sunset Park. Photo: Courtesy of Sims

Every day, collection trucks from Brooklyn and barges from Queens and the Bronx arrive at Sims Municipal Recycling in Sunset Park, loaded up with old phone books and plastic sporks, metal faucets and glass bottles. It’s the country’s largest recycling facility of its kind, sorting more than 1,000 tons of New York City’s metal, glass, plastic, and paper each day on 2.4 miles of conveyor belt. Head into Tom Outerbridge’s office at Sims, and you’ll also see a few discarded bowling balls, lined up and ready to roll.

When Outerbridge, who is the facility’s general manager, started at Sims more than 15 years ago, he started rescuing the wayward balls. He very quickly discovered that he could not keep up, because Sims gets an average of three to four bowling balls a day, or roughly 1,200 per year. It was like “walk[ing] on the beach for the first time,” Outerbridge says, “and you’re like, ‘Oh, look at this shell, it’s amazing!’ before you realize there are shells everywhere.”

The Technicolor spheres arrive at Sims in the same plastic bags with all the soda bottles and soup cans, picked up curbside all over the city. People seem to think that because they are plastic, they are the same as, say, takeout containers. They are not. Breaking bowling balls apart and selling the individual components for scrap isn’t logistically or economically feasible — and so they end up in the approximately 20 percent of material that Sims sends on to landfills.

It’s not clear who exactly is throwing out all these bowling balls. Sims only takes in residential recyclables, so they’re not coming in bulk from bowling alleys. And professional bowlers are too well-versed in the science (and sales pitch) behind their balls to think they’re recyclable. “I noticed a lot of them had quite small holes,” Outerbridge says, suggesting they were the outgrown detritus of “kids who dreamed they were going to be pro bowlers.” Kara Napolitano, education and outreach coordinator at Sims, speculates the adult-size balls are pulled out of cobwebbed attics and basements throughout the five boroughs.

Wherever they come from, at least they make pretty decent trash, says Benjamin Miller, a former New York City Department of Sanitation official and the author of Fat of the Land, a 200-year history of the city’s garbage. Bowling balls don’t emit greenhouse gases; they don’t leach anything into the earth or water. Unfortunately, they’re still a neon sign warning of the harsh realities of recycling.

Bowling balls, steel ball bearings, and a glass ball in Tom Outerbridge’s office at Sims. Photo: Tom Outerbridge

To an amateur bowler, a 6- to 16-pound bowling ball appears virtually indestructible, and the “house balls” filling up the racks at your local bowling alley effectively are. Since the 1970s, most have been covered in polyester, a durable plastic in everything from pillow padding to seat belts. “These things were so hard, they were indestructible,” says Del Warren, a former bowling-ball designer turned coach. “But there was no performance, either.” As a junior-league bowler, Warren’s first ball rolled straight as an arrow and came with a lifetime warranty. In bowling-ball form, polyester can endure 10 or 15 years of daily play, says Tommy Delutz Jr., a two-time national Professional Bowlers Association champion who now runs the pro shop at Herrill Lanes in Nassau County. House balls don’t break. They get stolen.

But elite bowlers, like those on tour with the Professional Bowlers Association, want different equipment. They prefer reactive balls, which combine a different plastic called polyurethane with a liquid plasticizer that creates millions of tiny holes in the cover stock. As a ball rolls 60 feet down an oiled lane, it absorbs some of the grease, giving it a well-timed and powerful “hook” to sweep away pins.

Today, reactive balls are produced by six or seven specialty factories in the United States, Mexico, and Asia. They have weighted cores, which look like “gas masks, hand grenades, guitar bodies, Easter Island statues, [and] Rorschach inkblots,” according to Wired, and are made of a polyester resin filled with varying amounts of calcium carbonate, barium sulfate, and glass microspheres. The cores are then encased in half an inch of urethane cover stock loaded with reactive chemicals, pigments, and, in some cases, scents, such as black cherry and orange coffee cake. The balls come off the line as perfect spheres. It’s the pro shops that later drill custom finger holes.

For all that engineering, the life of a reactive bowling ball is brutally short. At a certain point, a ball can’t absorb any more oil, explains Ronald Hickland Jr., a former ball designer. Many professionals report a corresponding change in their ball behavior in just three games. To win, bowlers throw a few test runs, watch how the ball responds to the unique oil pattern on the lane, and adjust their strategy accordingly. That makes players highly sensitive to the most minute changes in their ball — and willing to dump a poor performer fast. Reactive balls are also inherently more brittle, which makes them more likely to split. “Close your eyes and picture Gondwanaland or the Earth splitting” from the inside out, says Delutz. Once a ball commits “ballicide,” he says, nothing can save it.

All this means that for every ball on the lane, a serious bowler has a half-dozen in a bag. “For a high-end bowler, you really want one per season,” Delutz says. As a professional bowler, “I was personally drilling [200] balls for myself a year.” That’s not totally out of step with other sports: Professional golfers lose about 1.3 balls each round, while baseball players can go through more than 100 balls a game. (New York City won’t recycle those, either.) But only pros, who get their bowling balls free from the brands that sponsor them, can afford to act this way. For everyone else, the average going price for a reactive ball is upwards of $200, which means players will do just about anything, from warming ovens to ultrasonic baths, to keep them in play.

If there’s a way to reuse a bowling ball, someone’s tried it. Pinteresters turn them into lawn ornaments. One Reddit user claims to have used them in target practice. And in 1987, a zoo in Illinois gave them to animals as toys, but they damaged cages, plugged draining holes, and inspired an alarming possessiveness in at least one male lion. Pros often donate old equipment to youth leagues. But most balls end up in the trash, and more than a few make a stop at a recycling plant first.

Recycling moves on conveyer belts at the Sims Municipal Recycling Facility, an 11-acre recycling center on the Brooklyn waterfront. Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

As new materials arrive at Sims, they’re loaded onto an automated Van Dyk processing system, where magnets, optical sorters, ballistic separators, and a few eagle-eyed workers sort recyclables and remove contaminants. Employees pull bowling balls by hand, dropping them down a chute or piling them with other waste to be carted away to landfills. They join the ranks of other materials that seem recyclable but actually aren’t, including three-ring binders, umbrellas, garden hoses, and eyeglasses.

Sometimes, that process can be perilous. Joe Fusco, vice-president of Casella Waste Systems, which serves several states in New England, said one Massachusetts employee once used a bucket truck to scoop recyclables off the sorting floor, when a bowling ball “came rolling down perfectly along the arm of the lifter and smashed through the windshield.” But most of the time, even contaminants move safely through the system.

From a recycler’s perspective, bowling balls pose two problems. The first is that they’re typically made of thermoset plastic, which means the bonds between its molecules are stronger than those in something like a single-use water bottle — making them difficult or impossible to be melted down and reshaped. The second is that they simply contain too many types of materials. Aluminum cans, for example, are made of (mostly) aluminum, while bowling balls are a composite of dozens of plastics, paints, and other chemicals.

To keep the conveyor belts running, organizations like Sims have to find ways to profit off of the materials they take in, typically by finding secondary-use markets. Aluminum cans can be cleaned, sorted, crushed, and resold to manufacturers who shred, remelt, and solidify the material into new containers. But many materials never find a second life. Hickland, the former bowling-ball designer, said he tried to find out if there were ways for old balls to be repurposed. There was. “We could take a bowling ball and grind it down into asphalt,” he says. But the process took more energy — and cost more money — than it was worth.

“Bowling balls are just the tip of the iceberg,” Miller says. Since the 1960s, we’ve produced 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic globally, only 9 percent of which have ever been recycled. It’s getting harder every day: In 2019, China, once a major buyer for the U.S.’s recovered materials, banned the import of 24 types of waste, including plastics. The policy, called National Sword, sent the global recycling economy spinning.

Yet the average New Yorker still treats recycling as something of a municipal miracle, Napolitano says. “People feel a little better when they put something in the recycling bin, as opposed to the trash,” she told me in 2020, before lockdown. When I last talked to her, in spring 2021, after a year of watching pandemic-driven contamination, her tone had changed. “You’re not absolved,” she said, “just because you’re recycling or using recycled materials.”

Finished bowling balls sit in piles before being packaged and shipped at the Ebonite International manufacturing facility in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Photo: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

To make their jobs easier, Outerbridge and many of his peers are pushing for a policy tool called extended producer responsibility, or EPR, which aims to incorporate environmental costs into the cost of products and compel manufacturers to subsidize recycling, landfilling, or other waste-management efforts for the goods they create.

Typically, EPR efforts have focused on materials with 24- or 48-hour life cycles, like single-use plastic water bottles or food packaging. But Outerbridge says he can see the model extending to all kinds of producers, including bowling-ball companies. Such a policy could make it financially feasible for facilities like SMR to recycle products that currently go to waste, including bowling balls. Depending on how the laws are written up, it would also encourage brands to design with sustainability from the outset.

“Listen, it’s been 30 years since somebody has made a huge leap in performance. We’re overdue,” Warren, the former ball designer, says. “Maybe the next technology will also be a little friendlier in terms of recycling and not ending up in a landfill.”

Of course, there are other end-of-life solutions for a bowling ball. Neil Stremmel, the former head of research for the United States Bowling Congress, the national governing body for the sport, says he’s heard of more than one bowler who has gone so far as to throw a bad ball off a bridge after a tournament.

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