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Solve the Lane: Theorem Solid Motion Breakdown

2.3K views· 115 likes· 13:33· Aug 15, 2025

Trying to figure out if the Theorem Solid is a true control piece or if it hides some sneaky pop downlane? We hit Center Bowl on a fresh, high-volume house shot and tracked every throw with Specto™ to map shape, speed retention, breakpoint, entry angle, and carry—no comparison balls, just pure Theorem data. Big thanks to Center Bowl for letting us film and test on their lanes. ⏱ Timestamps 0:00 – Ball info (cover, core, layout) 0:53 – On-lane review (Specto numbers, reaction shape, carry) 12:44 – Outro / final thoughts Stay in touch Subscribe for weekly reviews & tips Instagram: @revitupbowling TikTok: @revitupbowling Business email: revitup907@gmail.com Question of the day: On fresh THS, do you trust a calmer control shape or chase angle to open up the lane? Tell us why! #TheoremSolid #BowlingBallReview #RevItUpBowling

About This Video

In this video I’m breaking down the Track Theorem Solid—the third ball in the Theorem line (hybrid, pearl, now solid)—and I’m doing it with pure data. We went to Center Bowl on a fresh, higher-volume house shot and tracked my shots with Specto™ so we can talk about what the ball is actually doing: shape, speed retention, breakpoint, entry angle, and how it goes through the pins. No comparison balls on-lane in this one—just Theorem Solid motion so you can decide if it’s a true control piece or if it’s got some sneaky pop downlane. On the lane, the biggest takeaway for me is this: the Theorem Solid likes volume and it likes to roll forward off the end of the pattern. When I tried playing too straight early (like up 5), it saw friction and hooked way too much. Once I got into that 15–16 to 21 zone (third to fourth arrow area), the shape made more sense—smooth, forward, and predictable, but it can still respond a touch quicker than some other solids because of the asymmetric core. If you’re battling “too much continuation” from symmetrics and you want something that lays off the spot and blends the end of the pattern on medium to slightly heavier volume, this one fills that gap really well—just don’t expect it to be your biggest heavy-oil monster.

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