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AN IMAGE RIGHT UP THEIR ALLEY; AMF GOING FOR CLEAN SWEEP.


Byline: Jan Cienski Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

If a mention of bowling conjures up an image of a smoky room filled with paunchy paunch·y
adj.
Having a potbelly.
 guys in untucked shirts with team names sewn sewn  
v.
A past participle of sew.


sewn
Verb

a past participle of sew

Adj. 1.
 onto the backs, chances are you haven't bowled lately.

New alleys have glow-in-the-dark balls and pins for late-night bowling, kid-friendly bumpers that keep balls out of the gutters and monitors that play funky funky - Said of something that functions, but in a slightly strange, klugey way. It does the job and would be difficult to change, so its obvious non-optimality is left alone. Often used to describe interfaces.  messages when bowlers roll a strike.

Even the lexicon has changed: The industry prefers bowling centers instead of bowling alleys.

``It adds to the game to see accents like that. It's exciting,'' said Zenia Burnett, 22, who was playing with a group of friends at a Richmond bowling alley.

One of the major forces behind the new image is Richmond-based AMF AMF ACE (Allied Command, Europe) Mobile Force
AMF Autorité des Marchés Financiers (French)
AMF Action Message Format
AMF Arab Monetary Fund
AMF Asian Monetary Fund
AMF Autocrine Motility Factor
 Bowling Worldwide, the biggest player in the industry with 322 bowling centers in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and 87 in 10 other countries.

The company, which owns almost 5 percent of the 6,800 bowling centers in the United States, is aggressively expanding by buying up smaller chains. It also has big plans for growth into countries where bowling is almost unknown.

AMF also is the world's largest supplier of bowling equipment - everything from bowling balls to high-tech machines that pick up the pins after they have been toppled.

The goal is to turn AMF into a global brand associated with bowling - the same way that Kodak is associated with film, McDonald's with fast food and Kleenex with tissues, said Merrel Wreden, the company's vice president in charge of marketing.

``It's an industry that's ripe for consolidation,'' said Sandy Hansell of Sandy Hansell & Associates, a consultant and broker for the bowling industry in Southfield, Mich. ``Most of the centers are mom and pop Mom and Pop

An adjective denoting a small-scale and family-like atmosphere, often used to describe these types of businesses and investors.

Notes:
A mom-and-pop business is typically a small family-run business.
 operations, and many of them are getting ready to retire.''

In the past year, AMF bought 112 bowling centers in the United States and six in Britain.

When AMF buys a bowling center, it typically spends $300,000 to $400,000 to renovate it, Wreden said. Discolored dis·col·or  
v. dis·col·ored, dis·col·or·ing, dis·col·ors

v.tr.
To alter or spoil the color of; stain.

v.intr.
To become altered or spoiled in color.
 lanes are torn out, and aging equipment is replaced with state-of-the-art technology.

Restaurants are modernized, and they are moving away from the traditional fare of tepid tep·id  
adj.
1. Moderately warm; lukewarm.

2. Lacking in emotional warmth or enthusiasm; halfhearted: "the tepid conservatism of the fifties" Irving Howe.
 beer and hot dogs. Wreden said fast-food chains are an option. In many locations, billiard bil·liard  
adj.
Of, relating to, or used in billiards.

n.
See carom.

Adj. 1. billiard - of or relating to billiards; "a billiard ball"; "a billiard cue"; "a billiard table"
 tables and video games See video game console.  are installed.

While AMF's domestic growth potential is great, the market itself is not growing much.

In the past, the industry depended on league members, bowlers who took the game seriously and played regularly for a whole season.

``Lifestyles changed, and it became harder and harder for people to make a commitment to be in one place for 35 weeks in a row,'' Hansell said. ``The number of people participating in leagues began to shrink, and the industry began to widen its thrust to attract more bowlers.''

The fancy marketing has allowed the industry to offset the loss of league bowlers by drawing in more occasional bowlers.

``When you have the core league bowler decline like we've had, it's difficult to replace,'' said Steve Ryan Steve Ryan (19 June 1947 – 3 September 2007) was an American actor.

He was best known for his recurring role on the Fox sitcom, Arrested Development, as J. Walter Weatherman.
 president and chief executive officer of Strike Ten Inc., the industry's new trade group.

For truly rapid growth, AMF is turning to international markets.

The United States has about one lane per 2,000 people - a much denser concentration of bowling lanes than found in other countries with rapidly growing middle classes.

China has one bowling lane for every 300,000 people. Brazil has 450,000 people per lane. Poland has 2 million people per lane. India has 25 million per lane.

``Bowling is one of those recreational activities that a burgeoning middle class will go to,'' Wreden said.

He said that is what happened in the United States in the 1950s The 1950s are noted in United States history as a time of both compliance and conformity and also, to a lesser extent, of rebellion. Major U.S. events during the decade included:
  • The Korean War (1950-1953);
  • The Second World War hero and retired Army Gen. Dwight D.
 and 1960s and in Japan in the late 1970s.

``It becomes a social outing, as well as a recreational or sporting outing,'' he said.

AMF earned $549 million last year - $310 million in the United States and the rest in countries ranging from Japan to Korea to Sweden.

So far, AMF has made big inroads inroads
Noun, pl

make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings

inroads npl to make inroads into [+
 in foreign countries with bowling supplies. In China last year, the company sold more than 1,500 packages that each contains all the equipment needed to set up a single bowling lane. In contrast, AMF sold only about 200 such packages in the United States last year, Wreden said. Each package sells for $35,000.

AMF has its own network of bowling centers in some countries, including Britain and Australia. But in China, Japan and some other countries AMF has only a few alleys, which it uses to showcase equipment for local buyers.

AMF also is setting up joint ventures that will give it 20 centers in Asia and 39 in Brazil and Argentina.

The industry's growth potential has attracted attention from Wall Street. Goldman, Sachs & Co., a merchant bank, bought a two-thirds stake in AMF for $1.3 billion last year.

``They see the business as a high-return-on-investment business and a high-cash-flow business with significant growth possibilities,'' said Stephen Hare, AMF's chief financial officer.

BOWLING FACTS

There are about 6,800 bowling centers in the country.

More than 53 million people bowled at least once last year.

The bowling industry, including bowling centers and equipment manufacturing, earned $4.3 billion in 1995.

Source: Strike Ten

CAPTION(S):

Photo, Box

Box: BOWLING FACTS (See text)

Photo: (Color) Marianne DiRupo rolls the ball at an AMF Bowling Worldwide center in Richmond, Va., where AMF, the biggest company in the industry, is based.

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:BUSINESS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 3, 1997
Words:912
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