This was posted 2 years 9 months 20 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Wilson Champ Extra Duty Tennis Balls (4-Ball Can) $7.59 + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $39 Spend) @ Amazon AU

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Down from $9.95. Not far off the Boxing Day / Black Friday $7 price.

An ideal ball for all levels of tournament and recreational play. USTA and ITF approved. The pack contains 4 balls.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • How are these balls compared to the Slazenger Advantage Hardcourt?

    • +3

      slazenger is better, but it also cost more.

  • Thank you!

  • thanks. grab two cans

  • +1

    it comes out to be $1.89 a ball.

    i find these balls to have a lower bounce and speed of a regular tennis ball. longevity is also poor, you would need a new tube every time you play.

    not good for tournaments or club level play, but it's ok for recreational non serious tennis.

    these would be a step above the cheap kmart, bigw, and target tennis balls that don't come in a pressurised tube and are already dead flat balls.

    • on the bright side, they last forever.

      • it's perfect if you have a dog, because after playing with it a chew toy is all it's going to be good for. lol

  • +1

    Was looking for these last week but Amazon was OOS. I find them good. At $7.59 a can even better. Works for me. Thanks OP.

  • Thanks, down-ball and 2-square here I come

  • For the casual player I recommend pressureless balls. They bounce well and last basically forever. A little harder but you get used to it.

    Nothing worse than dead balls.

    • I've been playing with the triniti balls for a few months and they're pretty good. I don't know if they're getting flat but they're definitely nowhere near noticeably dead (vs our pressured balls)

    • They are great for oldies with tennis elbow and do last longer, but they bounce longer and have more air time. Would recommend as training balls.

  • Slazenger Wimbledon is the gold standard for tennis balls, I wouldn't consider anything else even though it costs more. They are brighter, last longer and have more consistent and higher bounce. These are USTA, ITF approved but these are very low level leagues below Grand Slam, ATP, Challenger events where they use high quality balls.

  • If you buy quality balls in bulk it ends up being a similar price and way cheaper than normal
    https://www.tenniswarehouse.com.au/balls/slazenger-wimbledon…

  • Are these very cockatoo proof?
    I suppose that's similar to dog proof.

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