On a roll: Edmonton teen strikes perfect bowling score

Only two other Edmonton youth have accomplished the perfect game in the last 15 years, the teen's former coach says

"It was surreal. My heart was racing but my mind wasn't," Garrett Wong says

Kaylen Small · CBC News ·
Garrett Wong, 18, had a perfect game at Ed's Bowling alley on Saturday. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

Twelve strikes in a row is perfection, as the bowling king pins say.

Garrett Wong achieved a rare feat by shooting a perfect game of 300 points during the Ed's Bowling Youth League Championship at West Edmonton Mall Saturday.

"It was surreal," the 18-year-old said. "My heart was racing but my mind wasn't."Garrett Wong is headed to the Youth National Bowling Championships in Montreal this May. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

Six weeks ago, Wong scored 299 points — one pin short of perfection — and was ready to write off the rest of the season. He said his positive attitude is what spared him.

"It's been rough, but it just gives you more fuel to the fire just to keep pushing. You know you'll get there one day, but you just have to not expect too much of yourself and go with the flow," Wong said.

"To fill the entire scoreboard feels amazing."

Representing Alberta

It has already been a big year for Wong. In March, he made nationals for the first time. The accomplishment comes after he finished second place five times in a row.

On May 31, he'll represent Alberta at the Youth National Championships in Montreal, where $1,000 in scholarship money is up for grabs. Wong, who has been bowling since the age of 10, said finally making nationals has alleviated some stress from his game.

"I've been able to focus more on having fun, and then by having more fun, I've shot higher scores," Wong said.  

In Edmonton's league, he said there is no real competition.

"We're all just bowling against the pins."

Teen bowls perfect game of 300 points at Ed's Bowling Youth League championship. 1:50

The process, not score

When Wong was 14, his coach Ben Hansen died of cancer, sending him into a two-year slump.

"He was like a father-figure," Wong said. "It was pretty rough."

He said his current coach, Matt Dammann, approached him because he wasn't doing so hot. Wong trained at the Kegel Training Center in Florida for a few weeks to learn the sport's intricacies.

"It took a lot to get here," he said. "Every single shot that you throw, it feels like you earned it. It's not necessarily a luck thing."

    Wong said he learned to focus on the process, not the score — though with an average score of 206, he's scoring pretty high. The closest average score of his age group is about 180.  

    "I started with a 120 average and it's just been jumping 10 pins every single year," Wong said. "So just to be able to be consistent is what I enjoy the most, while being able to average that high."

    Rare feat in a challenging game

    Wong said bowling can be physically and mentally challenging, especially when he has to keep his nerves in check. As Wong learned the sport's complexities, he had to teach his supportive parents, Phyllis and Gordon Wong, how it worked along the way.

    "There's a lot more to the game than it looks, because the oil [on the lane] is invisible so it's basically like golf, but the obstacles are invisible," he said. "And then the lanes are always changing as well. So it's like after every single shot, the golf course would change, essentially."  

    It's very, very rare to see a youth bowler — especially in the province of Alberta — do this level of success and have a perfect game.- Troy  Thatchuk , Ed's Bowling league supervisor

    Figuring out one way to roll doesn't guarantee a strike every time because the oil burns up, he said. Players have to think about the physics of energy and managing friction.

    Only two other Edmonton youth have accomplished the perfect game in the last 15 years, said Troy Thatchuk, league supervisor at Ed's Bowling. Thatchuk is one of those people.

    Troy Thatchuk is one of three Edmontonians, including Wong, who has had a perfect game in the last 15 years. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

    Now 28, he is a coach who has been bowling since age two. He holds the record for being the youngest person in Alberta to shoot a perfect game at age 15.

    Thatchuk has coached Wong before.

    "It's very, very rare to see a youth bowler — especially in the province of Alberta — do this level of success and have a perfect game," Thatchuk said.

    "It takes a lot of work to get to that level, and he's put in the hard work. He has dedicated his life to this sport."  

    The popularity of bowling has been on the decline, but Thatchuk hopes Wong's success helps the sport grow.

    "We're hoping it's like vinyl records — eventually, it just starts to resurge," he said.

    'He's got a great future'

    Jules Soetaert, 87, is the oldest person in North America to shoot back-to-back perfect games, earning the title when he was 77.

    The Edmonton man started bowling at 32, after he saw it on black-and-white television.

    Jules Soetaert, 87, is the oldest person in North America to shoot back-to-back perfect games. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

    Soetaert said he was happy for Wong to join the perfect score club.

    "He throws such a nice ball, it's just unbelievable. It seems to come natural for him," he said.

    "To see a young fella like that in our youth program, it's very encouraging to see what he has accomplished. He's got a great future for himself in bowling."

    As for the immediate future, Wong is going into kinesiology at the University of Alberta this fall and plans on saving his spare time for the bowling alley.

    About the Author

    Kaylen Small

    Journalist

    Reporter and Associate Producer at CBC Edmonton. kaylen.small@cbc.ca @KaylenSmall