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Mark Roth

American professional ten-pin bowlerFor the biochemist and cell biologist, see Mark Roth (scientist). Mark Roth

Mark Roth (April 10, 1951 – November 26, 2021) was an American professional bowler. He won 34 PBA Tour *les in his career (sixth most all-time), and is a member of the PBA and USBC Halls of Fame. Roth was most dominant from 1975 through 1987, a stretch in which he made 107 televised finals appearances, captured 33 *les, and won four PBA Player of the Year awards. He is also known for having been the first professional bowler to convert a 7-10 split on national television.

Contents

  • 1 Early Life
  • 2 Bowling career
    • 2.1 Awards and recognition
  • 3 Post-career
  • 4 Personal life
  • 5 Notes

Early Life

Mark Stephen Roth was born on April 10, 1951, in Brooklyn, New York. His mother, Hilda (Rocker) Roth, was a legal secretary, and his father, Sidney, was a postal worker and a World War II Army veteran.

Bowling career

Mark Roth in early professional career

Roth made a splash on the PBA Tour with a cranking, hard-throwing style that spawned a generation of imitators for years to come. Often referred to as "The Original Cranker," he won 34 PBA *les, including two major championships which both came in 1984 (the U.S. Open and the Touring Players Championship). His first *le came in 1975, winning the PBA King Louie Open in Overland Park, Kansas with a final match 299 game against Steve Jones. He also holds, to this day, the PBA record for most single season victories, with eight *les in 1978. He won the PBA Player of the Year award in three consecutive seasons (1977 through 1979), and won the honor again in 1984. In addition to his two majors, Roth and partner Marshall Holman won their third PBA Doubles *le in 1984. So dominant were the pair in doubles tournaments, the PBA has hosted an annual event since 2015 called the Roth-Holman Doubles Championship.

Roth is notable for having been the first bowler to pick up the 7-10 split on television, which he accomplished on January 5, 1980 in the ARC Alameda Open at Mel's Souths* Bowl in Alameda, California. Through 2021, he is still the only right-handed bowler to have converted the 7-10 on a PBA telecast. The feat has been accomplished three times since, all three times by left-handers.

Roth captured his 33rd PBA Tour *le in 1987, then went through the longest *le drought in his career before winning his 34th and final *le at the 1995 IOF Foresters Open. Roth made his final television appearance in a PBA Tour event at the 1998 PBA Peoria Open, losing the opening match to Tom Baker, 265–190, to finish in fifth place. After reaching age 50, Roth captured two *les on the PBA Senior Tour (now the PBA50 Tour). In addition, he won one *le on the short-lived Generations Bowling Tour in the 2006-07 season.

Awards and recognition

  • Inducted into PBA Hall of Fame, 1987.
  • Inducted into USBC Hall of Fame, 2009.
  • Inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, 2014.
  • Four-time winner of the Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year award.
  • Holds the PBA record with eight *les in a single season (1978).
  • Ranked #5 on the PBA's 2008 list of "50 Greatest Players of the Last 50 Years".

Post-career

Mark Roth circa 2015

Around 2002, Mark ran a bowling center in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania named "Mark Roth's Hall of Fame Lanes." This lasted about six months, and the partnership dissolved.

On June 4, 2009, Roth suffered a stroke, leaving him partially paralyzed on his left side. Following rehabilitation, he was seen in late March 2010 on his feet and moving around at the GEICO Mark Roth Plastic Ball Championship, a PBA Tournament named in his honor.

He spent a week in intensive care after a heart attack in April 2019.

Personal life

Roth died on November 26, 2021, at the age of 70 in a hospital in Fulton, New York, due to congestive heart failure and complications following a diagnosis of pneumonia.Roth is survived by his wife Denise, and his daughter Stephanie, by his first wife. Stephanie is a figure skater. Denise resides in Fulton, New York. He was Jewish.

Notes