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PadelPark brings Bullpadel 2026 apparel collection to India

New e-commerce play opens doors to premium padel gear nationwide

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MUMBAI: PadelPark India has served up a fresh play for India’s fast-growing padel community with the launch of the Bullpadel 2026 apparel collection on its official e-commerce platform.

The move marks Bullpadel’s dedicated online retail entry into India, making its performance-focused apparel accessible to players and enthusiasts across the country. Until now, access to specialised padel gear has been limited, but the new platform aims to bridge that gap with a few clicks.

The timing is no accident. Padel is quietly rallying momentum in India, with more than 350 courts now active and a growing urban following across cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai and Hyderabad. What was once a niche sport is now finding its rhythm among a new generation of players.

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Globally, Bullpadel has built a reputation for blending technical precision with sleek design, becoming a go-to name on international circuits. Top players including Federico Chingotto, Gemma Triay and Paquito Navarro are often seen sporting the brand in high-stakes matches, lending it both credibility and court-side visibility.

The 2026 collection itself leans into performance and practicality. Expect a full wardrobe for the court, from t-shirts and polos to jackets, skirts, shorts and track pants. The apparel uses lightweight, double-sided microfiber technology with quick-dry properties designed to handle both intense rallies and India’s demanding playing conditions.

For PadelPark India founder Nikhil Sachdev, the launch is part of a larger game plan. “India’s padel community has grown faster than anyone anticipated, and the appetite for premium, sport-specific gear is real. Bullpadel is the gold standard globally, and making it accessible to Indian players through a dedicated platform is a natural next step in building a complete padel ecosystem here,” he said.

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Beyond its own platform, the collection will also be available through select retail partners and leading e-commerce marketplaces, ensuring both online convenience and offline access.

As padel finds its footing in India, this launch signals a shift from curiosity to commitment, where the sport is not just played, but properly kitted out too.

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Sports

Asia’s sports media confab pitches its tent in Singapore

Sportel Asia returns with rights deals, piracy battles and a search for the holy grail of personalisation — all before the after-work drinks

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SINGAPORE: The world’s sports-media deal-makers are descending on the Lion City this week, briefcases and business cards at the ready, for Sportel Asia 2026. Two packed days at the Orchard Grand Ballroom — 24 and 25 March — promise a collision of rights-holders, broadcasters, streaming platforms and tech vendors, all hustling for a slice of the most-watched, most-fought-over content on the planet. Think of it as a transfer window, but for television.

The conference, organised by Monaco Mediax, has made Singapore its home for the Asia-Pacific edition of Sportel  — its glitzier sibling being the Monaco gathering each autumn. This year’s programme leans hard into the commercial tug-of-war between legacy broadcasters and the streaming insurgents eating their lunch, with a side-order of piracy panic and a dash of feminist economics.

The curtain-raiser on Tuesday morning is a masterclass on sports media rights in Asia — landscape, challenges and what comes next. With rights fees spiralling, streaming platforms multiplying and audiences fragmenting faster than a dropped smartphone, the question of who pays what for which rights has never been thornier. The session, one of several branded as masterclasses to lend proceedings an appropriately educational air, sets the intellectual tone for two days of vigorous back-scratching.

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Hot on its heels comes a presentation from the Korea Professional Football League on how it is showcasing the K League through media and content strategy. Beyond the pitch, as the session title rather poetically has it. Korean football has punched well above its weight culturally — its clubs would like to do the same commercially, and the APAC broadcasting market is the obvious first port of call.

After the obligatory coffee break — networking, in conference-speak — attention turns to the rather clinical-sounding matter of content fabric. A presentation on its real value for sports rights holders will either illuminate or baffle, depending on one’s tolerance for infrastructure jargon. The gist: in a world where content must travel seamlessly from stadium to screen in multiple formats across multiple platforms, the plumbing matters.

Tuesday’s afternoon centrepiece may well be the masterclass on European football’s commercial push into APAC. The session, cheekily titled “Away goals,” will examine how the Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga and their continental cousins are chasing Asian fans and, more to the point, Asian money. Broadcast deals, sponsorship, fan engagement, youth academies — there is no trick too small when the prize is 4.5 billion potential followers.

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A technology masterclass on making sense of new trends follows, which in sports-media terms means artificial intelligence, augmented reality, automated production and whatever acronym the industry has invented in the past fortnight. That leads into what may be the most entertainingly titled session of the week: “What the buyers want! Content acquisition in APAC: a Q&A.” Day one closes with after-work drinks — because no amount of disruption, digital transformation or dynamic rights packaging cannot be improved by a cold beer.

Tuesday 24 March — programme at a glance
08:30  Exhibition opens & welcome coffee
09:45  MasterClass: Sports media rights in Asia
10:35  Presentation: K League media & content strategy
11:20  Presentation: The real value of content fabric for rights holders
11:45  MasterClass: Women leading sport in Singapore — legacy & economic power
14:00  MasterClass: Away goals — European football & APAC commercial growth
15:50  MasterClass: Technology — making sense of new trends
16:45  Session: What the buyers want — content acquisition in APAC
17:30  After-work drinks

Wednesday opens with a session that could prove the week’s most consequential: the booming sports media and technology landscape of Australia and New Zealand. The ANZ market has become a battleground between free-to-air incumbents, pay-TV holdouts and streaming newcomers, all fighting over rugby, cricket and Australian rules football with a fervour that makes the European super-league saga look like a friendly disagreement.

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Then comes a presentation from FeedConstruct, a data and streaming infrastructure company, on its journey and where clients fit into it — corporate storytelling of the kind that keeps exhibitor halls financially viable. After lunch, the masterclass on streaming and the holy grail of personalisation tackles the central obsession of every platform executive: how to serve each viewer exactly what they want, the moment they want it, without haemorrhaging money in the attempt. The answer, spoiler alert, remains elusive.

Wednesday’s undoubted crowd-pleaser is the masterclass on streaming piracy in Asia, tartly subtitled “from illegal streams to cybercrime.” The region remains the world’s most enthusiastic market for pirated sports content, with illegal IPTV services, torrent streams and password-sharing operations costing rights-holders hundreds of millions of dollars each year. The session’s inclusion speaks to how seriously the industry now takes what was once dismissed as a niche law-enforcement matter. It is not. It is an existential threat to the economics of sports broadcasting.

The week closes with the Pitch Perfect Innovation Contest — a startup showcase where fledgling companies compete to impress an audience of potential investors and clients in the best Dragons’ Den tradition. The winner gets celebrated with drinks, which may be the most civilised prize in the business-events calendar. Everyone else gets a business card and a flight home.

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Also tucked into Wednesday’s programme is an exploration of women’s sport and the economic power it increasingly commands — a subject that, a decade ago, would have warranted a footnote. Today, with women’s football, cricket and basketball smashing broadcast records across the Asia-Pacific, it commands a masterclass of its own. Progress, of a sort.

Wednesday 25 March — programme at a glance
08:30  Exhibition opens & welcome coffee
10:00  MasterClass: Australia & New Zealand — booming sports media & tech landscape
11:20  Presentation: Beyond FeedConstruct — journey & partnership
11:45  MasterClass: From illegal streams to cybercrime — tackling streaming piracy in Asia
14:00  MasterClass: Streaming and the holy grail of personalisation
14:50  Session: Pitch Perfect Innovation Contest
16:00  After-work drinks in honour of the Pitch Perfect winner
17:00  Exhibition closes

Between sessions, the real business happens on the exhibition floor — handshakes, hushed conversations about rights packages, and the kind of deal-making that never makes it into a press release. Sportel has always understood that the conference is the pretext; the corridor is the point.

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The event is organised by Monaco Mediax. Registration and further details are available at sportelasia.com. Sportel Monaco 2026 follows in the autumn, for those whose appetite for sports-media deal-making is not yet sated. In this industry, it rarely is.

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