No. The word sanctioned in Bowling means: " Competition in accordance with American Bowling Congress or Women's International Bowling Congress rules. " Since, according to rules, foul line lights and buzzers must be in working order during competition the game would not be sanctioned under the rules of the ABC or WIBC.
Sort of. You can have a current sanction card from one league and bowl in another, non-sanctioned league. Your scores in the non-sanctioned league will not be recognized by the USBC, and you will not be eligible for any awards. However, bowling in the non-sanctioned league will not invalidate your USBC sanction, and you will be eligible for any awards earned in a sanctioned league.
The shot does not count and if it is the last the other team gets the ball
You can not get a foul but you can hit a foul ball when the ball is hit outside of the lines.
yes because it is a type of foul
Trauma - 2009 Foul Lines was released on: USA: November 2009
You have to hit that person doing it on purpose or might be on accident but that will proably count as a foul.
the foul lines come directly to the point on the back of home plate. that is why a ball off the plate is a fair ball
A foul can count as a strike if there is not two strikes. I f your fist pitch is a foul, that's strike one. If you get a strike first and then foul, that's strike two. Or if you gettwo fouls in a row with no strikes, that's strike one and two. If you have two strikes (no matter how you got them) you cannot strike out on a foul. So if you do foul in that situation, it does not count as anything and your pitch count remains the same.
yes
No way, it does not count.
Wrigley Field has the longest foul lines in baseball at 355' to left field, and 353' to right field.
Yes only when the batter has a one strike count.