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  2. Nivia Sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nivia_Sports

    NIVIA Shastra, Football shoes. During the 1980s, Nivia Sports started manufacturing sports footwear in India. [6] Through the years, the company added footwear for use in other games such as cricket, football, basketball, volleyball, badminton, tennis, kabaddi, wrestling, and track & field. They also produced shoelaces and gel insoles. [30]

  3. Football boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Football_boot

    A pair of Nike Zoom Air football boots, for use on artificial grass or sand and rubber pitches. Originally, football boots were available only in black, but they are now available in a wide variety of colours. Nike's flagship shoes are the Phantom VNM, Phantom VSN, Tiempos, and The Nike Mercurial Vapor worn by Cristiano Ronaldo.

  4. Lotto Sport Italia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotto_Sport_Italia

    The first sponsorship agreements in football were signed with players (Dino Zoff and Ruud Gullit) and teams, such as Milan (1993–98), the Dutch national team, Napoli (1994–97), Juventus (2000–03), Chievo and Spanish club Real Zaragoza. Professional footballers provided input in both the design and fine-tuning of the products.

  5. Sports equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_equipment

    Cycling shoes: specialised shoes with stiff soles for more efficient energy transfer and cleats cliping into clipless pedals. Football: Football leggings: Football leggings, mostly used in winter. It is used to prevent the body from getting cold and injury due to the cold weather after warm-up training in winter.

  6. Nivia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nivia

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  7. Penn State narrative of missed opportunities persists in loss ...

    www.aol.com/penn-states-narrative-missed...

    No play will define Penn State's loss in the Orange Bowl more than a game-breaking interception from quarterback Drew Allar with 33 seconds left.