Walter Ray Williams Jr.
Walter Ray Williams Jr. is an American professional tenpin bowler and competitive horseshoes pitcher. He has won 47 ''national PBA Tour career titles, the most in the tour’s history, and has earned over $5 million in total PBA earnings as of 2022. Williams is a seven-time PBA Player of the Year, tied with Jason Belmonte for the most all-time in history, and is one of five bowlers to win the award in three consecutive seasons. Williams has the distinction of being the only bowler to win the PBA Player of the Year award in 4 different decades, and is also the oldest player to win the award. He won at least one PBA Tour title in a record 17 consecutive seasons.
He was also one of four featured bowlers in the ten-pin bowling documentary A League of Ordinary Gentlemen''.
As of June 26, 2022, he is also the all-time leader in PBA50 Tour titles, with 16. Additionally, he is a three-time PBA50 Player of the Year and has won three major championships on that tour. He had rolled 110 career perfect 300 games in PBA competition through 2019.
On December 18, 2016, Williams became the first player in history to reach 100 total PBA titles. Only one player, Pete Weber, has matched this accomplishment. Williams' total is now 131. Williams retired from the regular PBA Tour in 2021 but continues to bowl in PBA50 Tour, PBA60 Tour and PBA Regional Tour events. He owns the most combined Regional titles all-time with 67.
Williams has had multiple sponsors over the years. He is currently sponsored by Brunswick, VISE grips and Dexter shoes.
Williams is also a nine-time world champion in the game of horseshoes.
Bowling career
PBA Tour
Williams is a seven-time PBA Player of the Year, having surpassed Earl Anthony in 2010 for the most Player of the Year awards in PBA history. Jason Belmonte tied Williams with his seventh PBA Player of the Year award in 2022. Williams has won a record eight Bowling Writers Bowler of the Year awards and is also the all-time leading money winner on the PBA Tour. He holds the most PBA money titles.He was the first bowler in history to surpass $2 million in career earnings in 1997. With his win in the 2003 U.S. Open, he also became the first $3 million career winner and the first $4 million career winner in 2008. Williams also set a record for the highest monetary winnings in a single season, with $419,701 during the 2002–03 PBA season. This record would be broken in the 2021 season by Kyle Troup.
On September 24, 2006, Williams eclipsed Earl Anthony's career record of 41 PBA regular tour titles with his 42nd win at the Dydo Japan Cup over Pete Weber in a 289–236 single game pinfall. Anthony's title count was amended to 43 in 2008 when the PBA chose to include ABC Masters titles earned by a PBA member as PBA Tour titles. By that time, Williams had accumulated 44 titles to maintain a lead over Anthony. Williams has been known as "Deadeye" in PBA fan circles, but first got the nickname in horseshoes, when he threw 45 ringers out of a possible 50 in a junior tournament at the age of 10 years old.
In the 2007–08 season, at age 48, Williams established the second-highest average in PBA history for a single season — 228.34. Only Norm Duke's 2006–07 mark of 228.47 was higher at the time, though that has since been broken by Jason Belmonte's 228.81 in the 2012–13 season. Through the 2019 PBA50 season, he has bowled 110 career 300 games in PBA competition, second only to the 114 perfect games tallied by Parker Bohn III.
Upon winning the 2009 Motor City Open championship, Williams extended his record of winning at least one PBA Tour title per season to 17 consecutive seasons, two years more than Earl Anthony's 1970–84 run. Williams' streak ended when he failed to win a title in the 2010–11 season.
FIQ WTBA World Championships
In August 2008, Williams joined Team USA to participate in that year's FIQ World Men's Championships in Thailand. For the first time, professionals were allowed to compete in this international event with over 330 participants from 56 countries. Williams was the most successful bowler in the championships, winning four medals: Gold in Masters, Gold in Singles, Gold in Team and a Bronze medal in Trios.PBA Tour retirement
On March 17, 2021, Williams announced his retirement from the national PBA Tour after being eliminated from the Round of 8 in the final event of World Series of Bowling XII. He stated he would continue to bowl in PBA50 Tour and PBA Regional Tour events.PBA50 Tour
After turning 50, Williams announced that he would participate in the 2010 PBA Senior Tour, but in limited events due to Team USA and other obligations.Williams made his PBA Senior Tour debut on May 3, 2010, at the Miller High Life Classic in Mooresville, NC. He won the tournament three days later. On June 18, 2010, Williams had a chance to become just the second bowler to win the USBC Masters and USBC Senior Masters in a career, and the first to win both in the same year. Williams made the three-game final, but he was denied the title when he fell, 705-628, to fellow PBA Hall of Famer Wayne Webb. Williams did bowl enough on the Senior Tour to earn 2010 PBA Senior Rookie of the Year honour.
In the 2011 PBA Senior season, Williams again had a chance to match Soutar as the only bowler to win both the USBC Masters and Senior USBC Masters. He came in second, falling to Dale Traber in the finals, 707–695.
Williams won two Senior titles in 2012 and earned his first Senior PBA Player of the Year award.
Williams won three PBA50 titles in 2013 and earned his second PBA50 Player of the Year award.
In 2014, Williams won the USBC Senior Masters, making him the second bowler, after Dave Soutar, to have won both the USBC Masters and USBC Senior Masters. On June 11, 2017, Williams won his second USBC Senior Masters, becoming the only player in history to win the USBC Masters and USBC Senior Masters twice each.
At age 59, Williams opened the 2019 PBA50 season with three consecutive victories, including the PBA50 National Championship, giving him three majors among his 14 PBA50 Tour titles. The wins tied him with John Handegard for the most PBA50 Tour titles of all-time. With a third place finish in the second-to-last event of the 2019 PBA50 Tour season, Williams clinched his third career PBA50 Player of the Year award.
After the 2020 PBA50 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Williams won the opening event of the 2021 PBA50 Tour season on April 13. The 708–655 victory over Michael Haugen Jr. in the three-game final at the PBA50 Lightning Strikes Open gave Williams the most PBA50 Tour titles of all time, with 15. Williams extended the record to 16 by winning the 2022 PBA50 Odessa Open on June 26.
Achievements
Williams is known for several PBA achievements:- Record highest season spare percentage and single-pin conversion percentage.
- Second-best strike percentage and match play average.
- Record number of career television appearances, most television appearances in a season, most consecutive television appearances 5, and most consecutive seasons making at least one television appearance.
- Most consecutive seasons winning at least one PBA Tour title.
- Most final match appearances.
- Most games bowled in one season.
- Second-highest pinfall in a nine-game series.
- Tied for most 300 games in one tournament.
- Eight-time winner of the George Young High Average Award and Harry Smith Points Leader Award.
- Seven-time PBA Player of the year, which is tied with Jason Belmonte for the most all-time. Oldest bowler to be named PBA Player of the Year, and the only player to win the award in four different decades.
- First player to reach 100 total PBA titles, accomplished in 2016.
- Only player in history to win the USBC Masters and USBC Senior Masters twice each.
- The only PBA player to convert the 4-6-7-10 split on television.
- Bowled a two-handed 300 game at the 2019 River City Extreme Open.
Later career and standing in the sport
On his longevity and future plans, Williams said in 2009:
Williams was named "Male Bowler of the Decade" in the Winter, 2010 issue of U.S. Bowler. He won his then-unprecedented seventh PBA Player of the Year award in 2010, becoming the oldest player in history to earn that honour.
He is a member of the USBC and PBA Halls of Fame, a member of the World Horseshoe Pitching Hall of Fame, and was a two-time past president of the Professional Bowlers Association.
In the 2008–09 season, the PBA's 50th, the PBA commissioned a panel of bowling experts to recognize the "50 Greatest Players of the Last 50 Years." Williams finished second on the list, behind only Earl Anthony. On an ESPN telecast on January 25, 2009, Nelson Burton Jr. noted that the voting was close, but Anthony reached the #1 spot primarily for having more major titles than Williams. Williams states that:
On December 10, 2016, Williams made it to the final match of the PBA Shark Championship in Reno, NV. A victory would have made Williams the oldest player to ever win a regular PBA Tour event, but he was defeated in the finals by Canadian François Lavoie. John Handegard continues to hold the distinction as the oldest PBA Tour champion at 57 years, 55 days.
In his later career, Williams has experimented with a two-handed "shovel style" delivery, and began using it in some PBA50 tournaments. At the River City Extreme Open in July 2019, he shot a 300 game in qualifying using the two-handed approach.
Through 2019, Williams had bowled in over 1,000 PBA tournaments. From 2016 to 2019, Williams bowled in at least 34 PBA events every year, and cashed over $110,000 in three of the four years.
Despite turning 40 at the turn of the century, Williams ranked #5 on the PBA's 2025 "Best 25 PBA Players of the Last 25 Seasons" list. The ranking was based on a points system that took into account standard titles, major titles, top-five finishes and Player of the Year awards.
Horseshoes
Williams has also won six Men's World Horseshoe Pitching titles. He was invited to pitch horseshoes at the White House with President George H.W. Bush in 1989. After switching his throwing hand from right to left, he finished second in the 2005 World Horseshoe Pitching Championships.Personal life
Williams graduated from Cal Poly Pomona in 1984 with a Bachelor of Science degree in physics and a minor in mathematics. He has stated that if he wasn't a successful bowler, "I would have gone to work for NASA."Williams and his first wife lived in Oxford, FL, and adopted a daughter in 2007 but later divorced in 2017. He now lives in Oxford with his second wife, Fancy Allen.
In addition to his bowling and horseshoes championship accomplishments, Williams plays golf and at one time had a two handicap.
Williams' career PBA Tour titles
Among Williams' 47 career PBA Tour titles are eight majors. He is a three-time winner of the PBA World Championship and has also won two U.S. Open crowns, two ABC/USBC Masters titles, and a Touring Players Championship. He was a Tournament of Champions title short of completing a career "super grand slam."He has also won 16 PBA50 Tour titles, making him the all-time PBA50 titles leader and one of only five bowlers |Pete Weber], Tom Baker to win at least 10 titles on both PBA national tours. Williams is also the only player in history to earn at least 60 combined titles between the PBA and PBA50 Tours.
Standard PBA Tour titles
- 1986 True Value Open, Peoria, Ill.
- 1986 Fair Lanes Open, Baltimore, Md.
- 1986 Hammer Open, Edmond, Okla.
- 1987 Miller Lite Classic, Miami, Fla.
- 1987 Hammer Open, Edmond, Okla.
- 1991 Oronamin C Japan Cup, Tokyo, Japan
- 1993 Flagship City Open, Erie, Pa.
- 1993 Columbia 300 Open, [San Antonio, Texas