Shocker senior fought for his success on the bowling team

 
  • Wichita State bowler Ryan Kendall credits time management with helping him earn Academic All-American honors.
  • Kendall, from Alabama, came to Wichita State for its prominent bowling program and its engineering programs.
  • After three years of tryouts, Kendall made Wichita State's top team, which competes for a national title this week in Ohio.

Wichita State鈥檚 new bowlers hear the 鈥淔lower Garden鈥 talk to start the school year. Ryan Kendall heard, but didn鈥檛 understand as a freshman.

The experienced bowlers advise the freshmen on study habits, relationships with professors and how to organize their time.

鈥淎t first, I was like 鈥楽ome people need that and some people don鈥檛,鈥 and I was one of those people who don鈥檛,鈥 Kendall said. 鈥淏y the time finals came around, I was so stressed and in such need of all that advice again.鈥

Fortunately, notes are available.

Four years later, Kendall is a three-time Academic All-American (3.5 grade-point average or better) and a member of the Shockers Selected Team that competes in the United States Bowling Congress Intercollegiate Team Championships that begin on Wednesday in Dayton, Ohio.

The biggest thing I鈥檝e learned through the program is self-motivation and dedication, really what it means to be in pursuit of something big.
Ryan Kendall

The Flower Garden talk paid off for him. Starting with second semester of his freshman year, he organized his life in a daily planner. He did assignments when assigned, as the upperclassmen recommended, to provide time for revisions and questions.

鈥淕etting a planner was definitely good advice,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 always keep my class notes and homework. I put it all in this bin at home, all of my college classes. Notes, homework, tests, everything I kept in this box. When I鈥檓 done with all that, I look through the agenda and I go page by page, looking at all the things crossed off, and it鈥檚 so satisfying.鈥

Kendall, a senior from Pelham, Alabama, is a computer science major who took the long route to Wichita State鈥檚 Selected Team, the top level of competition. He didn鈥檛 make the team as a freshman and spent the past two seasons on the Developmental Team. Wichita State coach Gordon Vadakin estimates around 10 percent of the bowlers who don鈥檛 make the team in their early years continue to try out for a spot on the Selected Team.

鈥淗e has a lot of fight in him,鈥 Wichita State coach Gordon Vadakin said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the kind of story that excites me tremendously, when we see kids that came in at a certain level but just work their way onto the team. He鈥檚 been an inspirational kind of guy.鈥

Kendall improved physically, getting smoother and more consistent with his arm swing. His growing confidence and focus is an even bigger part of the story.

鈥淭o not only stay in engineering, but excel in engineering is impressive,鈥 Vadakin said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to have great structure in your schedule to do what you鈥檙e doing. He is a busy guy who gets a lot done because he鈥檚 busy.鈥

Wichita State coaches, backed by their 20 national titles, tell new bowlers that those who follow the plan will succeed, even after some difficult times. The Flower Garden talk, a Vadakin tradition, is one of those lessons. "Flowers" invest in the program and bloom. "Weeds" are a drag on teamwork. "Dandelions" are in between, looking like part of the program without helping as much as possible.

 "It's a metaphor for leadership," Vadakin said. "The flowers are the believers. They're the one that believe in the organization. That's our goal. It's not really to get rid of all the weeds. It's better creating more leaders, growing more flowers. Moving people from dandelions to flowers." 

Kendall remembers the shock of freshman year when he struggled to compete against talented bowlers from around the world.

鈥淭he biggest thing I鈥檝e learned through the program is self-motivation and dedication, really what it means to be in pursuit of something big,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 came here being the best youth bowler in Alabama. I thought I was really good. Coming here and getting third from last during tryouts was kind of eye-opening.鈥 

He saw Shocker bowlers, such as Team USA member Wesley Low who competed internationally and wanted to chase that goal, even if it took years. Over those years, he learned to get past a bad moment and not let it snowball.

鈥淢entally, I鈥檓 so much stronger than I was when I got here,鈥 Kendall said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 even know bowling was a mental game before I got here. Now, it鈥檚 90 percent of my game. Short-term memory.鈥 

Kendall is considering several paths for his future. He could return to Wichita State, start graduate school, and bowl another season. He said he interviewed with companies such as Google and Twitter for software engineering positions. His bowling coach in Alabama offered him a coaching job.