TYPTI
About TYPTI

A LETTER FROM THE FOUNDER

The remarkable journey behind TYPTI and the evolution of racket sports

Dear Friend,

I've played racket sports my entire life. I started out playing racquetball and handball and by about age 8 my Dad had me playing tennis at Belle Meade Apartments in Indianapolis, IN. Soon after I graduated to the Indianapolis Racquet Club and did their junior program in the winter and North Central High School in the summer. I played 8 hours a day, every day. In high school I became addicted to ping pong, and shortly after Badminton. I started training for the Olympic Badminton team, but it didn't become an Olympic sport for a few more cycles. I played little in college and then immediately moved to California where I taught tennis to the top juniors in the world. I started acquiring tennis clubs and while doing that I invented LiveBall and Shotgun 21. I also got introduced to a sport at Venice Beach called Paddle Tennis, which was sort of like mini tennis meets a zoo, as there were so many characters.

While seeing how rewarding tennis was to kids and how little tennis was on television, I came up with an idea for a television network devoted to all racket sports, but carrying the name of flagship racket sport…Tennis. Thinking it would be a long time before I'd actually get live tennis on The Tennis Channel, I started researching other racket sports… platform tennis, court tennis, jai alai, real tennis, and an obscure sport in the upper Northwest with what I thought was the dumbest name of all time… It seemed like the least sophisticated of them all by a long shot. So, I took what little money I had, bought a plane ticket to Seattle and hopped a ferry to Baimbridge Island to meet the founders of a game called pickleball. It was raining that day, so we went to an indoor basketball gym with some blended lines. It was me, a Grandma and Grandpa aged couple and their dog aptly named Mr. Pickles. We played pickleball and they gloated about how tennis professional Jan Michael Gambill played pickleball. They had very unsophisticated paddles and a whiffle ball with long holes.

"I had my first rights for The Tennis Channel. A sport that shares the name of a hamburger accoutrement that no one knew about for a tournament that didn't exist. I was in business!"

Candidly, the game didn't feel very sophisticated, but I had a one-page television rights agreement for the US Open of Pickleball that I wanted them to sign. They said "There is no US Open of Pickleball" to which I responded, "then you've got nothing to lose signing the rights away" which they did! So, I had my first rights for The Tennis Channel. A sport that shares the name of a hamburger accoutrement that no one knew about for a tournament that didn't exist. I was in business! Next, I got the rights to The Clydesdale Open in Cincinnati, OH where doubles teams had to weigh at least 425LBs. My 3rd pitch was for a Nudest Colony tournament, but unfortunately I couldn't get them to sign.

Anywho in the early years of The Tennis Channel, I was still teaching tennis at my clubs as I wasn't making any real salary, and I was getting bombarded with teaching pro's looking for courts. There was no shortage of lesson takers, but courts were like an ice cube in hot water. The stories were all the same, a tennis pro would have 40 hours of lessons at a club in the valley or somewhere in LA, and that club was more valuable to the community as a shopping mall or an apartment complex. In 30 days, it was going to be demolished. My intentions for The Tennis Channel were entirely noble. I wanted to promote tennis. I didn't build a business as much as a cause. But now there was a sand in the gears because at 7200 sq ft 22 degrees North, the real estate was simply too valuable in large population centers to sustain courts.

So, I started working on new games on a smaller court. I built a new sport (late 1990's) and a presentation. Then at ITF, USTA, TIA, ATP and WTA meetings, I pitched either shrinking the tennis court or building this new companion short court sport. To say I was laughed out of every meeting is a comical understatement. I basically pitched to the tennis industry elite that if we didn't address the harsh reality of how large our playing field was, there would be a day of reckoning in 20 years of so that would be brutal. And my last slide said, "Don't Make Me Say I Told You So!"

After a long stint in the movie business, the anticipation of the likely devastating impact of AI, a few other environmental movie business issues at the same time as the insane crescendo of pickleball, I started reworking that sport I'd created, but this time sitting on top of a pickleball court with no adulterations. I tried every racket and ball combination I could. I spent a bazillion dollars on rackets from eBay and started customizing like crazy. After a while I found the perfect marriage of racket and ball that on a pickleball court allowed the player to load, explode and rip. It's the itch that we loved in tennis but wasn't getting scratched appropriately in pickleball. (PS. I love pickleball)

25°
Pickleball Ball Angle
Leaves ground at 13°
25°
Tennis Ball Angle
Leaves ground at 25°
43°
TYPTI Ball Angle
300% more ascent!

To that and in my opinion, tennis is the best professionally played sport there is. Badminton is the best racket sport. And pickleball is the greatest social phenomenon in the history of sport. TYPTI is sort of the baby of Tennis and Badminton on what was a badminton court, but has now become a pickleball court. After watching a bazillion junior tennis matches and tons of professional pickleball matches, I wanted to overhaul the game and scoring. So, I devised 'The Stakes' method which creates a completely different risk and reward scenario than contemplated in traditional racket sports scoring. Tie them all together and TYPTI is really something special.

The points are long, exciting and fun. Players load, explode and rip. They stay at the baseline longer. They turn points around more often. The saves are incredible, and every point is like a highlight reel shot. Much like in Badminton, you can hit a missile with the flick of the wrist. And the channeled foam ball bounces high. Back of the envelope, a pickleball comes in at 25 degrees and leaves the ground at 13 degrees. A tennis ball comes in at 25 degrees and leaves at 25 degrees. A TYPTI ball comes in at 25 degrees and leaves at 43 degrees. That is over a 300% difference of ascent. Every ball strike feels like you're on Roland Garros right after they threw down (4) bags of fresh. Pickleball has made dinking an a fine wine or an art form. TYPTI goes the other way. You don't just crash the net, you strategically set up or wait for the perfect opportunity and then you attack. Because players can so control depth and trajectory of the ball through spin, passing shots are much easier to hit than in tennis and pickleball.

"TYPTI is the most fun racket sport. It is a blast and you can do so much with the ball and with your game."

Most importantly and without a doubt as vetted by many, many players… TYPTI is the most fun racket sport. It is a blast and you can do so much with the ball and with your game. When you start getting in the groove, every point is like a masterpiece that hangs at a museum. It allows players to push the boundaries of their potential in ways I've never seen before. Also, when people who play tennis and pickleball…. play TYPTI, they always say that their tennis or pickleball is much better.

So, I present to you TYPTI! It's an absolute blast. If you have racket sport expertise, then you'll be amazing at the first ball strike. If you've never played a racket sport, you'll be amazed at how quickly you can get up to speed as the ball bounces high and moves through the air slowly. Try it out and you will be hooked.

PLAY BALL!!!

Sincerely,

Steve Bellamy

Racket Sport Dilettante

What Makes TYPTI Special

The Net Rebound Rule

The net in tennis and most racket sports has always been the extinguishment of joy. TYPTI introduces a revolutionary net rebound rule that keeps the ball in play, adding an exciting new dimension to the game.

The 'Stakes' Scoring Method

After thousands of hours watching tennis and pickleball matches, TYPTI developed an innovative scoring system that maintains drama and excitement throughout the match.

The Ball

The 3.5-inch channeled foam ball was the result of staggering time, expense, and painstaking energy. Countless prototypes and extensive testing created the perfect gameplay experience with 300% more bounce ascent.

OLO da Vinci Racket

The OLO da Vinci is the first mass-produced TYPTI racket. With its 26mm beam and premium carbon fiber construction, it represents the pinnacle of TYPTI equipment design.