On average, 80% of population are right handed, so approx 80 % of the time match based would beat totals based. The remaining occasions, part way through a tournament, when right handed meets left handed, depends if the lanes have opened up for the right handed players or been trashed.
So using totals based system, possible to disadvantage players close to 80/100% of the time as conditions change. Using match based, disadvantage would be possible around 20% of time.
In a world of perfect lane topography, the right/left argument would still exist anyhow, therefore I dismiss it as non-changeable no matter what you do.
You can have lanes mapped and altered in an attempt to have oil patterns play the same each time you put them down. Trouble is then you will need to have a fresh condition laid before each lane change, otherwise following bowlers will not have the same condition depending who bowled what, prior to them arriving at that pair. It remains an impossible goal to create equality through lane topography and will likely only succeed in making someone a lot of money.
The alternative is to look at other sports and create playing rules which negate the need in the first place. Only then will it be possible to solve the current problem. IMHO of course
Topology issues don't create inequality issues - they create equity issues. Sure, lane conditions will breal down, and adjusting to those conditions as they break down is part of what makes elite bowlers elite. But it is reasonable to expect each pair to not have issues that are totally unpredictableto the bowler, and could cost them several frames when they move. A lane hooking differently because it is drier or wetter is easily adjusted to idf it's flat. A lane with a lump in it that the bowler does not know about is not.
With regard to match based tournaments - this is possible without using the x-games system now. In any case, topology issues would be MORE important in such a tournament, due to the fewer opportunities to win a match point and the greater penalty that would thus attach to losing a match due to topology influences.
Back to the original post subject - this part scares me a little:
An important factor to note is that topography impacts slower speeds more and lighter weight balls more, Thompson said.
“The longer the ball spends on a slope the more it’s affected by it,” he said. “
And lighter balls are affected more than heavier balls because it takes more force to move a heavier object. And different axis rotations are affected differently because of the different force vectors."
Speed, fine, rotation, meh, but ball weight? Gravitational force is proportional to weight - the force acting on all balls is exactly in balance with the ball weight. If lighter balls are indeed affected more, it's not directly due to the weight of the ball. Something to ponder; rg factors and drag in lane oil (slowing the ball down faster) are the first things that come to mind. Rotation makes sense from a gyroscopic inertia pov, since the slope places the centre of mass slightly to the side of the contact point, creating torque, and the precession will depend on the axis of rotation and tilt. Hmmm...