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Up Front


EVERYTHING BOWLING, ALL THE TIME


I NOW PRONOUNCE YOU HUSBAND, WIFE AND . . . PBA


One thing is certain when you look


across a ball return to shake hands with your opponent in the title match of a PBA regional and see your own wife looking back at you: No matter who wins, the money will be coming home. That was just the scenario that unfold- ed in the PBA Shock Top Midwest Region Open at Plaza Lanes in St. Charles, Mo., on July 11. In what the PBA described as “a first,” Mitch Beasley defeated his wife and 19-year veteran of the Venezuelan


LOVE AND MARRIAGE (AND BOWLING:) Inngellimar may have preferred to earn family brag- ging rights by defeating her hubby, Mitch, for the PBA Shock Top Midwest Region Open title, but it had to help to know that her $1,200 runner-up prize also would find its way to the family coffers.


REGIONAL FOES? PBA MIDWEST TITLE MATCH SEES HUSBAND-WIFE SHOWDOWN. ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////


national bowling team, Inngellimar Bea- sley, 224-212, to win the $2,200 top prize. Mitch dug in quickly, blasting the


front six strikes, then held on after leav- ing two splits for open frames down the stretch. Inngellimar, a lefty, kept sending the ball to the pocket only to be faced with three consecutive 7-pins in the 8th, 9th, and 10th frames. A week earlier, In- ngellimar won her first professional title when she claimed the PWBA Gastonia South Open title. Inngellimar may have preferred to


earn family bragging rights by defeating her hubby, himself a 21-year veteran of PBA Tour action who also served 20 years in the Air Force. But it had to help to know that her $1,200 runner-up prize also would find its way to the family coffers. Mitch may owe her a nice night out on the town, though.


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