
On a Tuesday morning at a Bukit Batok bowling alley, the sound of clattering pins echoes off the walls.
At one end, a couple of youngsters celebrates strikes exuberantly. At the opposite, a group of older men are racking up the points in more stoic fashion.
And then there is Mr William Thong.
A familiar fixture – he bowls here multiple times a week – Mr Thong has his own locker, his own bowling shoes and a flask of teh-o to keep him going.
Mr Thong stands out from the other amateur bowlers.
His gait is slower and his technique guided more by feel than vision, but he is no less adept at picking up the odd strike or two.
Eyes locked on the target, Mr Thong sends an eight-pound ball swirling down the lane. This time, there are still a few stubborn pins left standing, but he keeps at it for the next hour or so.
After all, what keeps the 93-year-old going is not the score flashing on the electronic screen, but his love for the sport.
BOWLING WITH HALF AN EYE
In his younger days, Mr Thong was an all-rounder in sports, who ran cross-country and played basketball and football.
His foray into bowling only began in his early 20s, after joining an American firm.
“I wanted to please the president (of the company) that I could I also bowl. I joined him and he was happy,” he recalled.
He eventually grew into the sport and competed at local amateur tournaments.
“I enjoy getting strikes, getting spares. Especially the speed (of the ball),” said Mr Thong.
According to Mr Alfred George Pillay, a fellow bowler who has known Mr Thong for close to a decade, the latter was also a bowling captain in his fourties.
“He used to have national bowlers under his team,” recalled Mr Pillay, who has partnered Mr Thong in several competitions.
But a glaucoma diagnosis about three decades ago threatened to put a stop to things.
Mr Thong would eventually go completely blind in one eye. He was told by a doctor there was a “50-50” chance of going blind in his other eye, if he did not take appropriate care.
“I always prayed that I could see and that it would not deteriorate (further),” he said.
Mr Thong has continued to bowl, relying on his one good eye which he guessed to now have about 55 per cent vision left.
Asked how he does it, he said: “You just estimate … (the pins are) ‘dead’, waiting for you to bowl the ball.”
But it has not been without difficulty. There were three or four times when Mr Thong tripped on the lane. “I had to break the fall (with my hand),” he said.
These days, he stands further away from the foul line so he does not slip on the oiled flooring.
“Closing one eye and bowling is near-impossible. I don’t know how he does it,” said Mr Pillay, 61.
“(Initially) I didn’t know he (was using just) one eye because he used to wear sunglasses … The day he took out his glasses, I got a shock.”