Pickleball Magazine 2019_Picklballmag_Product_guid_interactive | Page 49

view these products and more at paddlesandmore.com PICKLEBALLS THE EVOLUTION OF THE BALL AND HOW IT’S GOING TO IMPACT YOUR GAME By Wayne Dollard Pickleball Magazine W e’ve all heard the story how pickleball began as a summertime activity in 1966 when Joel Pritchard, and his neighbor Bill Bell, grabbed a couple of paddles and balls and played that first game. Not many people ask where the ball came from and how it has changed over the years. Pickleball Magazine has done some research to introduce the origin of the ball, explain its evolution, and show the path the IFP and USAPA are taking toward maintaining the ball and the sport’s integrity moving into the future. When Joel Pritchard opened his shed that sunny summer afternoon, it is most likely that he had never heard of Cosom — the plastic baseball he grabbed with the intent of making up a new game for his | children and their friends. Fifty years later, we recognize the impact that the Cosom ball, with its aerodynamic hole design, had in the establishment of pickleball. The Cosom became essentially the only ball used for the sport from 1966 until the late 1980s. Other Wiffle balls were available but Cosom was the ball of choice due to its round, consistent holes, allowing it to fly straight and bounce predictably. In the late 1980s Pickle-Ball, Inc. began mass producing balls specifically for pickleball. In December of 2015, the IFP convened and tightened the ball “approval” specifications. The purpose was to maintain a set of rules to develop universality of the balls and maintain bounce specifications true to the original nature of the game. Today, there are no less than 9 indoor balls and 24 outdoor balls that are approved by the International Federation of Pickleball (IFP). The ball list is shown on the following pages. There are also numerous additional models that are available for purchase that do not comply with IFP specifications. SO WHAT MAKES ONE BALL DIFFERENT FROM ANOTHER? Generally speaking, everything. When making a ball, each manufacturer must consider the following: material and hardness, process (one piece or two), hole size and pattern, diameter, weight, bounce height, and, oh yes, color. Material and Hardness. For the most part, the pickleball manufacturers discuss concepts and ideas with each other in order to find better ways to produce their own products; however, the material mix the balls are made with is often  thought of as the “secret sauce” T o order any of these products, call 888.308.3720 or go to Paddlesandmore.com ❘ 2019 49