Amateur and international accomplishments Aged seventeen, Belmonte became the first Junior Australian to bowl a
300 game overseas. He also took five gold medals at the 2000 Junior National Championships, was selected for the Youth Australia team, and also held a place in this team in 2002 and 2004. Belmonte was awarded the 2001 Orange Junior Sportsperson of the Year and won the 2002 Senior Award. He also was awarded the Orange Sportsperson of the Year award in both 2002 and 2003. Belmonte won one gold, one silver and two bronze medals at the 2002
Commonwealth Championships in
Scotland. Belmonte competed in Fédération Internationale des Quilleurs (FIQ) tournaments (the governing body of the sport and now known as
International Bowling Federation (IBF)) such as the World Tenpin Bowling Association (WTBA) and Asian FIQ championships. He won a silver medal at the
WTBA World Youth Championships in
Thailand. Later in the year, he was selected in the Australian Open men's team, where he remains to the present time. In 2004, Belmonte took three gold, one silver and one bronze the Asian Youth FIQ in
Hong Kong and followed this up in the World Youth FIQ titles in
Guam with a gold in the singles and a gold in all events. He won the prestigious 2004 Bowler of the Year award, voted by the Board of Directors of the World Bowlers Writers' Association. Belmonte was invited to participate in the 2005
World Tenpin Masters in
England where he was defeated in the semi-finals. In this event, he made history by bowling the first-ever 300 game in the event. The game was filmed by
Matchroom Sport. In 2007, Belmonte was once again invited to take part in the World Tenpin Masters, held at the
Barnsley Metrodome. After defeating the defending champion
Chris Barnes of the United States in the semi-finals, Belmonte went on to defeat
England's
Paul Moor in the finals where he rolled the event's second-ever 300 game. Belmonte rolled 23 out of a possible 24 strikes to win the event with a 566 score for two games, against Moor's 524. Belmonte represented Australia in the 2006 World Youth Championships in
Berlin. He was part of the team to take the gold medal in the Team Event and went on to make the Masters after finishing in sixth place in the All Events. He was defeated in the second step of the Masters by the eventual winner,
Mads Sandbaekken from
Norway. He also competed in the adult version on the same year at Men's World Championship at the Asiad Bowling Center in Busan, Korea and went on to make the Masters match-play after finishing 4th. He lost to eventual winner
Biboy Rivera from
Philippines to take the bronze medal. Belmonte participated in the 2007
World Ranking Masters and after qualifying in second position, was defeated in the quarter finals by eventual runner-up
Peter Ljung from
Sweden, 2–0 (190–258, 158–279), finishing in sixth place. In 2011, in the
World Bowling Tour, Belmonte defeated good friend and PBA Player
Mike Fagan, a two-game match scoring 511–505, to win the PTT World Bowling Tour Thailand 2011. In 2022, Belmonte defeated
Kyle Troup, 259-236, to win the 2022 Devil's Lair Tasmania.
AMF World Cup Jason Belmonte competed in the 2004
AMF World Cup in
Singapore and led all five days of qualifying events. He finished in fifth place after being knocked out in the quarter final. Belmonte competed again in the 2007
AMF World Cup in
St. Petersburg, Russia where he was also lead qualifier. He finished runner-up after he was defeated in the final by Bill Hoffman (USA). As a result, Belmonte won the country rankings for Australia with Ann-Maree Putney, who won the trophy in the women's world cup. In his third appearance in the 2011
AMF World Cup in Johannesburg, South Africa he was crowned as AMF Bowling World Cup champion. His first match was against Mykhaylo Kalika (Ukraine). Belmonte won the first game 237–203 and Kalika won the second game 248–266. Belmonte would win the deciding game 266–185. Jason Belmonte then came up against first seed Tommy Jones (USA). Jones would win the first game 259–279 with Belmonte winning the second, 247–216. After Jones opened in the eighth frame, Belmonte defeated him in the third game 259–236 and became the first Australian man to take the title. His three-game total of 765 was a new finals record, beating the previous mark of 764 by Petter Hansen (Norway), set in Singapore in 2004. Belmonte stated "I was a long way in the lead in 2004 in Singapore, and got knocked in the quarters," he said, "and again I led the field in St Petersburg in 2007 and then I lost in the final. So I was happy to go in as number two seed this time".
PBA Tour 2008–09: Rookie of the Year In 2008, then-deputy PBA Commissioner Tom Clark granted Belmonte a one-time "commissioner's exemption", guaranteeing his entry into a PBA tournament.
2010–11 In the 2010–11 season, Belmonte appeared in 10 of 12 PBA events, making match-play nine times and appearing on TV four times. Without a victory, he had earnings of 62,950, Belmonte also rolled a nationally televised 300 game in the quarterfinals of the
PBA World Championship, broadcast on 8 January 2012 in North America; however, he did not go on to win the tournament. With his home crowd watching, Belmonte defeated Sean Rash in a best-of-three final (174–172, 223–255, 256–243) for his fifth PBA title at the 2012 Australian Masters in
Sydney, Australia.
2012–13: Player of the Year On 24 February 2013, Belmonte won his sixth PBA Tour title and first PBA major at the
USBC Masters in
North Brunswick, NJ. Belmonte finished with six consecutive strikes in the dramatic final match to top
Wes Malott, 258–245. Belmonte won a second title on the 2012–13 season, his seventh overall, at the PBA Lucas Oil Bear Open in
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. He was runner-up to Wes Malott in the 2013
U.S. Open. It marked his seventh appearance in the TV finals of a major over the last eight major tournaments. On 17 January 2014, Belmonte was named the
Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year for the
2012–13 season. Along with two titles for the season, including a major title and runner-up finishes at three other major championships, Belmonte won the George Young High Average Award ( a PBA record 228.81) and the Harry Smith Points Leader Award (238,903). He became only the third PBA player born outside the USA (after
Amleto Monacelli and
Mika Koivuniemi) to win PBA Player of the Year.
2014: Major success, Player of the Year Repeat Belmonte won the first tournament of the
2014 PBA season, the
Barbasol Tournament of Champions in
Allen Park, Michigan, which marked his second major tournament win and eighth title overall. As he did in his first major championship win, Belmonte defeated Wes Malott, this time in a 219–218 single game match. On 23 February 2014, he became the first player to repeat as USBC Masters champion in nearly 50 years, and also the first player in history to win a major as the 5th seed, defeating every rival in the championship stepladder final. (
Billy Welu won back-to-back Masters in 1964–65.) This was Belmonte's ninth PBA title and third major. He captured his tenth title winning the Oklahoma Open during the PBA's Summer Swing. His three titles (two majors) in the 2014 season made him an easy choice to win his second consecutive Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year award. In doing so, he became the first bowler to repeat as Player of the Year since
Walter Ray Williams, Jr. won three consecutive awards from 1996 to 1998. Belmonte led all bowlers in season earnings ($163,788), average (226.71) and competition points (136,454).
2015: Player of the Year Three-Peat Belmonte again won the USBC Masters on 8 February 2015, defeating amateur A.J. Johnson, a surprise #1 seed, in the final match, 202–157. In doing so, he joined
Mike Aulby as the only three-time winners of this tournament, while becoming the only player to win the Masters in three consecutive seasons. On 15 February 2015, in
Indianapolis, he captured his 12th PBA title by winning the Barbasol Tournament of Champions for the second consecutive season. As in the USBC Masters, Belmonte won from the #2 seed position, knocking off #4 seed Sean Rash in the semifinals, 235–203, before defeating top seed
Rhino Page in the final match, 232–214. It was Belmonte's tenth appearance in the TV finals over the last 12 PBA major tournaments, and his fifth win in a major. On 20 January 2016, Belmonte was named the Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year for 2015, the third consecutive season he won the award. In addition to his two major tournament wins, he had nine other Top Five finishes, led the PBA Tour in earnings ($178,542) and was fourth in average (225.4). He became the first non-American player to win three consecutive POY honors, and the fourth PBA player overall to do so (joining
Earl Anthony,
Mark Roth and
Walter Ray Williams, Jr.).
2016 Belmonte made the five-player stepladder finals as the #3 seed for the 2016 PBA Fire Lake Tournament of Champions, seeking to join
Jason Couch as the only players to win in this tournament in three consecutive seasons, but he was knocked off in the second match of the finals by
Tom Daugherty. His bid for an unprecedented fourth USBC Masters title the following week also fell short, as he made the Round of 8 but was defeated by Wes Malott in the winner's bracket and Martin Larsen in the loser's bracket, keeping him out of the TV finals. On 15 February 2016, Belmonte was retroactively awarded a major title for his 2011 PBA Elite Players Championship victory. After the tournament returned to major status in the 2016 season, the PBA voted to award additional major titles to the winners of the three previous Players Championship events (2011, 2013, 2015), stating the tournament "is a members-only event, and includes all of the elements of a major." This gave Belmonte six majors among his PBA Tour titles.
2017: Three Majors in One Year On 12 February 2017, Belmonte won his 13th PBA title and seventh major in the
PBA Players Championship held in
Columbus, Ohio. Having qualified as the #1 seed, he defeated #2 seed
Anthony Simonsen in his lone TV finals match. On 26 February, as the #1 seed again, he defeated
Michael Tang to win his 14th PBA title, fourth
USBC Masters title, and his eighth major title, becoming the only bowler to ever win four USBC Masters titles. As one of the top eight money leaders from the start of the 2015 season through the 2017 USBC Masters, Belmonte was invited to participate in the inaugural Main Event PBA Tour Finals in May 2017. Starting as the #1 seed, Jason finished runner-up to
E. J. Tackett. Belmonte won his 15th PBA Tour title on 27 August 2017 at the PBA International-WBT Storm Lucky Larsen Masters, held in
Malmö,
Sweden. On 19 November, Belmonte won the
PBA World Championship in Reno, NV for his 16th title and ninth career major. With the win, Belmonte became the first PBA player to ever win three major titles in a season. On 17 January, in a landslide vote, Belmonte won with his fourth PBA Player of the Year Award. Also in 2017, Belmonte won the
Dick Weber Bowling Ambassador Award, an honour given annually by the Bowling Proprietors Association of America (BPAA) to the "bowling athlete who has consistently shown grace on and off the lanes by promoting the sport of bowling in a positive manner."
2018 Belmonte collected his 17th PBA title on 25 February 2018, winning the
Roth/
Holman PBA Doubles Championship with partner
Bill O'Neill. Belmonte qualified as the #1 seed in the 2018 PBA Tour Finals, held 4–6 May in
Allen Park, Michigan, and earned a rematch against last season's Finals champion, E. J. Tackett. Belmonte avenged his 2017 loss to Tackett for his 18th PBA Tour title.
2019: Making History, Player of the Decade On 10 February 2019, Belmonte won his 19th PBA title and tenth major at the
PBA Tournament of Champions held in
Fairlawn, Ohio. As the #1 seed, he defeated
E. J. Tackett 225–196 in the final match to claim the title. Belmonte's victory made him the third player to win three
Tournament of Champions after
Mike Durbin and
Jason Couch, and tied him with
Earl Anthony and
Pete Weber as the all-time major titles leader (10 majors). Belmonte was also the top qualifier in the 2019 season's next two events – the PBA Players Championship and PBA Indianapolis Open – but he failed to win either event. At the Players Championship, a pair of 7-10 splits – once in the fourth frame and again in the tenth – cost him the match against
Anthony Simonsen. At the Indianapolis Open, a few off-hits that refused to carry – once in the eighth frame and again in the tenth – handed the title to
Norm Duke. He joined
Johnny Petraglia,
Earl Anthony,
Walter Ray Williams Jr. and
Jakob Butturff as the only players in history to qualify as the #1 seed in three consecutive PBA Tour events. On 19 March 2019, Belmonte captured his 20th PBA title at the PBA Chameleon Championship, part of the
2019 World Series of Bowling in
Allen Park, Michigan. He qualified as the #2 seed in the stepladder finals, defeating A.J. Chapman in the semifinal match, then Andres Gomez in the title match. Two days later on 21 March, Belmonte won his 21st PBA title and record-breaking 11th major at the 2019 PBA World Championship, also part of the World Series of Bowling. Having earned the #1 seed for the stepladder finals, a record third consecutive major in which he was the top qualifier, he defeated
Jakob Butturff 236–227 in the championship match to win the title. With his victory, Belmonte now stands alone as the all-time PBA and professional bowling leader in major titles, surpassing Earl Anthony and Pete Weber (who have 10 majors each). Belmonte's streak of three consecutive majors in which he qualified as the top seed ended at the 2019 USBC Masters. He suffered a finger injury in a pre-tournament charity event, forcing him to alter his grip on the bowling ball, and finished well out of the top 64 that made match play. Belmonte qualified as the #1 seed for the inaugural
PBA Tour Playoffs held in
Portland, Maine. He defeated
Kyle Troup in the Round of 16 two games to one, but was then eliminated in the Round of 8 by
Kris Prather, losing both matches. On 28 April, Belmonte won the 2019 PBA DHC Japan Invitational held in
Tokyo. Qualifying as the #3 seed for the stepladder finals, he defeated
Chris Barnes, Takuya Miyazawa, and
Jakob Butturff en route to his 22nd PBA Tour title, which tied him with
Marshall Holman for 11th most career PBA Tour titles. Belmonte surpassed $1.5 million (USD) in career PBA Tour earnings during the 2019 season, and led the Tour in titles (4), championship round appearances (12), average (225.62) and earnings (a career-high $288,290). By an overwhelming majority vote, Belmonte won his fifth Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year award in 2019. On 3 January 2020,
Bowlers Journal magazine named Belmonte the male Player of the Decade (2010–2019).
2020: Completing the Super Slam On 23 February 2020, Belmonte won his 23rd PBA Tour title and 12th major at the
U.S. Open in
Lincoln, Nebraska. As the #2 seed for the stepladder finals, he defeated Dick Allen in the semifinal match and
Anthony Simonsen in the championship match. With his victory, Belmonte became the second bowler in PBA history (after Mike Aulby) to complete the Super Slam (winning all five PBA majors), as well as becoming the seventh Triple Crown and third Grand Slam winner. On 15 March, Belmonte won his 24th PBA Tour title and 13th major at the 2020
PBA World Championship, part of the
PBA World Series of Bowling held in
Las Vegas, Nevada. As the #1 seed for the finals, he defeated Anthony Simonsen in the championship match 213–190 to claim the win and the $150,000 top prize. This was Belmonte's third PBA World Championship title, winning all three consecutively and becoming the second bowler to do so (the other being
Earl Anthony). On 4 October, Belmonte won the PBA World Series of Bowling XI Chameleon Championship held in
Centreville, Virginia (qualifying rounds were held in
Las Vegas in March). As the #1 seed, he defeated Brad Miller in the championship match 232–202 to claim his third career (second consecutive) Chameleon Championship title and 25th career PBA Tour title, tying
Brian Voss for 10th on the all-time titles list. On 18 December 2020, Belmonte won the Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year Award for the sixth time. In addition to his three titles (two majors) on the season, Belmonte led the Tour in competition points, average (225.31) and earnings (a career-high $293,050).
2021 Despite not winning a title through the first nine events of the 2021 season, Belmonte accumulated enough points to earn a spot in the starting field for the
PBA Tour Playoffs, qualifying 14th. However, Belmonte chose to skip the event and instead return home to Australia for the birth of his fourth child. He had also chosen to skip the PBA Tour Finals on 26–27 June, having qualified for that event as well.
2022: Five Titles in One Season On 29 January, Belmonte captured his 26th PBA Tour title and 14th major at the 2022
PBA Players Championship, held in
Euless, Texas. He qualified as the #4 seed for the West Region finals and climbed the stepladder to defeat
Jakob Butturff in the region championship match and advance to the championship finals. He qualified as the #2 seed for the finals in a three-game seeding round, then defeated Arturo Quintero in the semifinal match and
Sean Rash in the championship match to claim his third PBA Players Championship title. On 16 February, after winning the Kokomo Championship and his 27th career PBA title, Belmonte surpassed
Don Johnson on the all-time titles list, having previously tied with him in ninth place. On 15 March, Belmonte won the PBA World Series of Bowling XIII Scorpion Championship. As the #4 seed, he climbed the stepladder to claim his 28th career title. On the difficult Scorpion oil pattern, Belmonte rolled games of 247, 211, 242, and 244, while none of his opponents reached 200. On 20 March, Belmonte won the Lubbock Sports Open for his fourth title of the 2022 season. Qualifying as the #3 seed for the stepladder finals, he defeated
Jesper Svensson, Sean Lavery-Spahr, and
E. J. Tackett en route to his 29th career PBA Tour title, tying
Mike Aulby for 8th most in PBA history. Winning two out of four events in the Storm Cup series, Belmonte won a $10,000 (USD) bonus and the Storm Cup for finishing first in series points. On 5 June, during the 2022 PBA Tour Finals, Belmonte threw the 34th televised 300 game in PBA Tour history. With
Kyle Troup rolling a 300 game earlier in the telecast, it marked the first time in the Tour's 60-plus year history where a televised event featured more than one perfect game. Also, Belmonte joined Sean Rash,
François Lavoie, and
Chris Via as the fourth player to throw multiple televised 300 games in PBA Tour events. He would go on to sweep
Dom Barrett 2-0 in the championship for his 30th career PBA Tour title, tying
Dick Weber for 7th on the all-time titles list. Jason made nine championship round appearances and posted a 20–4 record in championship round matches. On 4 November, the PBA announced that Belmonte had won his seventh
Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year award, tying
Walter Ray Williams Jr. for the most such awards in PBA history. In the 2023 PBA World Championship, Belmonte sat in the 12th and final match play position and over 300 pins out of the final TV spot before posting an incredible 11–1 match play record on 20 April to climb to the #4 seed. In the final round on 23 April, he defeated Santtu Tahvanainen,
Jakob Butturff and
Anthony Simonsen en route to the final match, but he then lost to E. J. Tackett, 254–247, to finish runner-up for the second time in this event. On 21 May, Belmonte won the season "rubber match" against Tackett, albeit in a non-title event. In the PBA Super Slam Cup, a special made-for-television event featuring the 2023 major champions, Belmonte qualified as the top seed. Right after Tackett rolled a 300 game in the semifinal match, Belmonte posted the first ten strikes of the final game before leaving a 7-10 split on his eleventh shot. He defeated Tackett 286–246 to take home the Super Slam Cup, a custom WWE belt, and the first prize of $100,000. In the PBA Tour Finals on 25 June 2023 Belmonte rolled the 35th televised 300 game in PBA Tour history, becoming the Tour's only player ever with three televised perfect games. The feat occurred in the second match of the race-to-two Group 2 finals against
Kris Prather, knotting the match at one game each. Belmonte would lose the ninth-tenth frame roll-off against Prather, ending his quest for another title.
2024 Despite not winning a title in this season, Belmonte finished fifth in Tour points and second in average (226.61). He had $145,799 in Tour earnings thanks to a runner-up finish at the Roth/Holman Doubles Championship and two third-place finishes at
U.S. Open and
USBC Masters. Belmonte's 9-match winning streak at the Masters was snapped after a 197-193 loss to Patrick Dombrowski in the semifinal match. He also made it to the quarterfinals of the PBA Playoffs (where he was eliminated by Bill O'Neill) and lost in the Group 2 stepladder of the PBA Tour Finals to eventual winner Anthony Simonsen.
2025 Belmonte won his 32nd career PBA Tour title at the Roth/Holman PBA Doubles Championship with
Bill O'Neill on February 8, 2025 (broadcast March 2 on
FS1). This was the duo's second Roth-Holman Doubles title together (they last won in 2018) and Belmonte's first title in nearly two years. Belmonte qualified as the top seed for the PBA World Championship at
PBA World Series of Bowling XVI. On the eve of the final round, he talked about his legacy and career aspirations as he bowls into his 40s: However, Belmonte would lose the title match in the PBA World Championship to
E. J. Tackett, 242–222. While Belmonte didn't win a singles title during the 2025 PBA regular season, his consistency led to a third-place finish on the Tour points list, earning him the #3 seed in the
PBA Playoffs His bid for a Playoffs title was short-lived, however, as he was swept by
Chris Via in two games in the quarterfinals. On the season, Belmonte finished second in average (225.87), third in points (15,365), fourth in earnings ($190,835) and second in top-ten finishes (9). ==Professional wins==