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Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light

KUIKMA

8372030

Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light

KES6,750.00
VAT included Same day delivery for orders placed before 2 p.m.
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
  • Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
Kids' Padel Racket Kuikma PR 100 Light
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The Kuikma PR100 racket is specially designed for children (5 to 8 years of age). Ultra light, with a soft touch to reduce vibrations.

BENEFITS

Handling

Its light weight (265 g) lets you react quickly.

Control

The glass fibre is very forgiving of hitting errors

TECHNICAL INFORMATIONS

What is Full EVA?

This innovation is exclusive to Decathlon.The racket is made from a single piece of EVA foam covered with a composite fibre surface. The larger EVA foam surface increases the head's sweet spot and therefore makes it more forgiving of centring errors, resulting in better ball control.

Do you know what padel is?

Padel emerged in Mexico in the late 1960s. This fun sport soon found its way to Spain, Argentina, and later to all Spanish-speaking South American countries. Padel is currently the second-most played sport in Spain, behind football but ahead of tennis. There are eight million players around the world.

How do you play padel?

Matches are played in teams of two (doubles). Two serves are allowed and must be played underhand, diagonally across the court. One bounce is allowed. The ball must hit the ground before any other part of the court. The ball can be hit against a wall after it has bounced (wall only, not the metal fence). The ball can leave the court after bouncing and can be hit back into play from outside the court. The points system is the same as tennis.

To start off on the right foot, our design team has some tips:

For a better start, use balls designed for beginners. They are softer and slower to make learning to control your shots easier. Appropriate shoes will keep you from slipping on padel courts, which are often in artificial grass with sand.Finally, taking classes will help you learn faster and keep you from developing bad habits, such as using the same techniques from tennis or squash.