<p>It's a simple question, I'm a pro-bowler (but only in duckpin bowling) and I'm not trying to brag about it but do colleges recruit these sorts of people? the ones that play rare sports? If you live on the East Coast of the U.S.A. and you don't know what duckpin bowling is then that;s usually pretty awful...</p>
<p>Are there colleges with duckpin bowling? Recruit for duckpin bowling? Duckpin bowling scholarships? </p>
<p>Duckpin</a> bowling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</p>
<p>Even if they're not any colleges with duckpin bowlind would it still count as a recreational activity that they'd like to see? It's not a school sponsored sport for me either, it's a youth league.</p>
<p>Page</a> 1 Youth League Website</p>
<p>National</a> Duckpin Bowling Congress Home Page</p>
<p>assuming this is a serious question (and I have my doubts) NCAA shows Women’s Bowling, but not Men’s. You’ll have to do your own research into the Ivies, but here’s the NCAA rank list for women as of a month ago. Of course they’re not hitting pins with ducks on them, but the real thing. I guess if this is your passion, and you’re a female, there might be a future for you in college bowling, but not the duckpin kind. PS, I’d never heard of this before- you learn something new every day…</p>
<p>[NCAA.com</a> ? The Official Website of NCAA Championships - Bowling](<a href=“http://www.ncaa.com/sports/w-bowl/all1.html]NCAA.com”>http://www.ncaa.com/sports/w-bowl/all1.html)</p>
<p>I’d shoot for Vanderbilt…</p>