The pocket is the "sweet spot" in a Bowling shot. If you are a right handed bowler, it is between the head pin (number one) and number three pin (numbers one and two if you are a lefty). If your speed, rotation, timing, and the bowling gods willing, are all in synch, the results should be a stike (ten pins in one shot).
Energy is transferred to the pins and the deflection and contact of the pins will typically slow the ball momentum.
when the ball(in your hand) hits the ground, then hits the lane when its released.
Answer=Transferred to the pins.
If you are a right handed bowler your natural pocket would be the 1-3. If you throw a ball that hits the 1-2 pocket, that would be considered the 'Jersey' or "Brooklyn' side. It is just the opposite for a lefty. A lefty's pocket would be the 1-2 and if they threw a ball that hit the 1-3 pocket, that would be considered 'Jersey' or 'Brooklyn'.
Yes, by means of run out only! If the bowler hits the wicket at the non-strikers end before he actually bowls the ball then it is not given out!
the red puffle likes to go bowling. I have one and i take it for walks its sometimes shots itself in a cannon and also sometimes pretends that he is a bowling ball and hits all the pins and this happens when you play with him.
No.
Yes, if you want to curve the ball before it hits the pins.
It is called a plant
Hitting the pocket flush is where the ball curves towards the space between headpin and the 3 pin for right handed bowlers or headpin and the 2 pin for left handed bowlers and perfectly hits the center of this gap. If the ball hits more of the headpin instead of centered in that gap, it is a high flush hit.
compresses
All things being equal, the bat, the ball, the force used etc., the same thing that happens when a boy hits a ball with a bat.