These pickleballs don’t clog up landfills with microplastic. And they perform, team says

David Neill was playing pickleball in Daytona Beach about 18 months ago when the idea for his company was born.

“I saw people throwing cracked pickleballs into trash cans,” said Neill, 58, of Cocoa Beach. “Some guys were just throwing balls over the fence and not even putting them into trash cans.

“I thought: ‘This could harm this great sport because we’re not being good neighbors.’”…

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