Martial Art Belt
Color Belts
Gloves
Goal keeper gloves Top range professional soccer gloves with extra gripped super soft latex foam double padded palm with PU back embossed design fitted with finger protector available in all sizes and colours.
Gloves
Gloves
Color Belts
Football
Gloves
Gloves
Martial Art Belt
Gloves
Sizes Available : 3 No - 5 No Raw Material Used : Blador & Recseen Technical Specification : Normal Brief About Product : Good Quality Ball Industries Where This Product Is Used : Football Matches & Training Colors & Packaging Available : Yes
Promotional soccer ball, 100% pvc 1.10 mm shiny, latex bladder, cosmetic customer desire
Foot Ball M/o Artificeal Leather santhaic with letex rubber blader
BOXING GLOVES M/O ARTIFICEAL LEATHER AND IN JANIUN LEATHER GOTE SKIN AND IN COW HIDE ALSO AVELABEL.
Gloves designed to protect both athletes during competitions, built according to official regulations. Generally less padded than other glove types
FIELD HOCKEY: Field hockey sticks have an end which varies in shape, often depending on the players position. In general there are four main variations on head: The 'shorti',The 'Midi'The 'Maxi' and The 'J Hook ICE HOCKEY: Sticks are approximately 150–200 cm long, composed of a long, slender shaft and a flat extension at one end called the blade. The curved part where the blade and the shaft meet is called a taper. The blade is the part of the stick used to contact the puck, and is typically 10 to 15 inches long ROLLER HOCKEY:In the event of roller hockey, one-piece sticks are usually the same as ice hockey sticks. But when graphite shafts are used with replacement blades, it's quite common for the replacement blades to be made of mainly fiberglass with a narrow wood core. Fiberglass shaves down nicely over time on concrete, sport court, and blacktop surfaces when traditional wooden ice hockey replacement blades are more likely to splinter, split and/or crack on those surfaces. UNDERWATER HOCKEY:The stick (also referred to as a 'bat' or 'pusher') for this sport is relatively short compared to that for Field/Ice/Roller hockey, and should be coloured either white or black in its entirety to indicate the player's team.
The bat is traditionally made from willow wood, specifically from a variety of White Willow called Cricket Bat Willow (Salix alba var. caerulea), treated with raw (unboiled) linseed oil, which has a protective function. This variety of willow is used as it is very tough and shock-resistant, not being significantly dented nor splintering on the impact of a cricket ball at high speed, while also being light in weight. The face of the bat is often covered with a protective film by the user.
Most modern footballs consist of twelve regular pentagonal and twenty regular hexagonal panels positioned in a truncated icosahedron spherical geometry.[Some premium-grade 32-panel balls use non-regular polygons to give a closer approximation to spherical. The inside of the football is made up of a latex bladder which enables the football to be pressurized. The ball's panel pairs are stitched along the edge; this procedure can either be performed manually or with a machine.[3] The size of a soccer ball is roughly 22 cm (8.65 inches) in diameter for a regulation size 5 ball. Rules state that a size 5 ball must be 68 to 70 cm in circumference. Averaging that to 69 cm and then dividing by p gives about 22 cm for a diameter. The ball's weight must be in the range of 410 to 450 grams (14 to 16 oz) and inflated to a pressure of between 0.6 and 1.1 bars (8.5 and 15.6 psi) at sea level.[9] There are a number of different types of football balls depending on the match and turf including: training footballs, match footballs, professional match footballs, beach footballs, street footballs, indoor footballs, turf balls, futsal footballs and mini/skills footballs.