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Rhino Page
Ryan Jacob "Rhino" Page (born July 10, 1983) is a left-handed bowler on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour, and was the 2008 PBA Rookie of the Year. (See PBA Bowling Tour: 2007-08 season.)
Page is a former U.S. Amateur champion, winning the event in 2005.
Page attended the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. He helped the Jayhawks win the school's first-ever Intercollegiate Bowling Championship in 2004, and was named the MVP of the championships.
Page has won six PBA Tour titles, with one major, including one title in each of his first three years on tour. He began the 2007–08 season as a non-exempt bowler, meaning he had to bowl in the Tour Qualifying Round (TQR) every week just to make the starting field of 64 bowlers. He became the third player in PBA history to win a tournament out of the TQR when he won the Go RVing Classic in March, 2008. Along the way, he set a number PBA rookie records, including:
Page won his second PBA title the next season at the Lumber Liquidators Shark Championship on December 14, 2008.
Page won the PBA Viper Championship on September 5, 2009 in Allen Park, Michigan, 268–246, over Tour rookie Ryan Ciminelli. This was his third PBA title to date. He finished runner-up in the 2008-09 Tournament of Champions, losing the final match in the 10th frame to friend and Tour roommate Patrick Allen, 267–263. The second ball in that frame left a 1-3-4-7-9-10 washout, costing him the game, even though he converted the washout. Page also won the PBA Experience Showdown in April 2010. This was a non-title special event featuring the five winners of the 2009–10 oil pattern championships.
In the 2009 Dydo Japan Cup, Page defeated one of the top Korean bowlers, Jeong Tae-Hwa, with a score of 300-235, and made history for being the first bowler ever to roll a 300 game in the televised final round of the Japan Cup. It was the 20th televised perfect game overall in PBA Tour history. Although he did not win the tournament, Page earned a $100,000 bonus for the 300 game.
On November 9, 2012 Page was the first player selected by the new PBA League.
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Rhino Page
Ryan Jacob "Rhino" Page (born July 10, 1983) is a left-handed bowler on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour, and was the 2008 PBA Rookie of the Year. (See PBA Bowling Tour: 2007-08 season.)
Page is a former U.S. Amateur champion, winning the event in 2005.
Page attended the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. He helped the Jayhawks win the school's first-ever Intercollegiate Bowling Championship in 2004, and was named the MVP of the championships.
Page has won six PBA Tour titles, with one major, including one title in each of his first three years on tour. He began the 2007–08 season as a non-exempt bowler, meaning he had to bowl in the Tour Qualifying Round (TQR) every week just to make the starting field of 64 bowlers. He became the third player in PBA history to win a tournament out of the TQR when he won the Go RVing Classic in March, 2008. Along the way, he set a number PBA rookie records, including:
Page won his second PBA title the next season at the Lumber Liquidators Shark Championship on December 14, 2008.
Page won the PBA Viper Championship on September 5, 2009 in Allen Park, Michigan, 268–246, over Tour rookie Ryan Ciminelli. This was his third PBA title to date. He finished runner-up in the 2008-09 Tournament of Champions, losing the final match in the 10th frame to friend and Tour roommate Patrick Allen, 267–263. The second ball in that frame left a 1-3-4-7-9-10 washout, costing him the game, even though he converted the washout. Page also won the PBA Experience Showdown in April 2010. This was a non-title special event featuring the five winners of the 2009–10 oil pattern championships.
In the 2009 Dydo Japan Cup, Page defeated one of the top Korean bowlers, Jeong Tae-Hwa, with a score of 300-235, and made history for being the first bowler ever to roll a 300 game in the televised final round of the Japan Cup. It was the 20th televised perfect game overall in PBA Tour history. Although he did not win the tournament, Page earned a $100,000 bonus for the 300 game.
On November 9, 2012 Page was the first player selected by the new PBA League.