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Pickleball Nets
£90
Selkirk has a strong reputation in pickleball circles for premium paddles and accessories, and the Selkirk Sport Pickleball Net brings the same brand cachet to the portable-net category. The set is built to regulation 22-foot length, with the standard 36-inch post height and 34-inch centre dip, so it mirrors what serious players will encounter at organised club sessions and tournaments. At around £90 on Amazon UK it occupies the upper end of the portable bracket, sitting above Franklin, HEAD, JOOLA and Onix in this batch and below dedicated tournament-grade fixed nets. Buyers paying that premium are typically choosing it for the brand alignment with their Selkirk paddles and for a frame designed to stand up to repeated assembly cycles at clubs and coaching sessions. The included carry bag keeps everything together between venues, and tool-free setup means it can be deployed quickly. A good choice for committed recreational and intermediate players who want one net to last several seasons.
Something wrong? Suggest an edit →A premium Selkirk-branded portable net for committed players who play often and want their net to match their kit.
Selkirk has built one of the strongest reputations in premium pickleball gear, with paddles used by world number-one players, and the Selkirk Sport Pickleball Net carries that brand cachet into the portable-net category. It is a regulation 22-foot setup with the standard 36-inch post and 34-inch centre dip, built around a steel frame designed to handle frequent assembly cycles at clubs and coaching sessions rather than the occasional weekend backyard rally. At around £90 on Amazon UK it is the priciest option in this batch, sitting above Franklin, HEAD, JOOLA, Onix and Vermont, and is clearly aimed at players who want their net to match the badge on their paddle and the rest of their kit bag. Tool-free assembly, an included carry bag and a more substantial feel than entry-level sets are the key differentiators that justify the premium for committed players. It is still a portable net rather than a fixed tournament fitting, so the same caveats apply: weight or peg the base outdoors in any wind, and choose a flat surface for accurate centre height. For committed recreational and intermediate players who play several times a week and want a single net to last seasons of use, the Selkirk premium is easier to justify than for once-a-month casual users who would do equally well with the cheaper Franklin or Vermont options reviewed alongside it.
Hand-written editorial — not auto-generated. By Gary, RacketRise.