Every rec court in America has the same conversation happening on the bench.
An elbow that's "been talking lately." A doctor who said rest. And a player who has no intention of resting — because the 7 AM game is the best hour of their day, and eight weeks off isn't a treatment plan, it's a punishment.
So they go looking for help, and the gear aisle offers two answers. Pharmacy braces that look like an injury and feel like one. And compression sleeves that squeeze the whole arm evenly and change almost nothing — because even pressure everywhere is help nowhere.
We thought players deserved a third answer: gear made for people who are going to keep playing anyway.
That's the whole company. Not rehab equipment for patients. Not a medical device with a warning label. Just well-built, low-profile gear that takes the load off the sore spot so you can stay on the court while you manage it — the same counterforce approach physical therapists have used on racquet athletes for decades, built for the way pickleball actually gets played.
