By Ben H. Perkins
Adidas F50.8 Tunit [affiliate] has been the center of the soccer world buzz. It’s won two awards this year, Most Innovative Shoe, and also Best Looking too. However, what is it that sets this shoe apart from all the rest? As an owner of this cleat, I’ve found several different pros and cons the Tunit brings with ownership. I’ll start with the good.
Adidas Tunit F50.8
Adidas Tunit F50.8
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What Makes the Adidas F50.8 Tunit So Special?
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Posted on October 7th, 2008 | No Comments »
Filed under: Soccer Shoes
Soccer Cleats Guide - General Tips on Soccer Cleats
By Sardool Sikandar
Soccer cleats are athletic shoes that are specially designed for soccer players. Soccer shoes have large studs or cleats on the bottom that assist players in gripping the surface. These studs help players to be easily moved in the desired position.
Generally the cleats are made up of molded plastic because metal cleats are illegal as they cause danger to other players. Plastic studs are round in shape that offers excellent grip on the hard mud of the basepath. Soccer shoes or football shoes can have both plastic as well as metal cleats on the sole whereas golf shoes have metal cleats.
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Posted on May 12th, 2008 | No Comments »
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Soccer Shoes? (I Thought They Were Cleats!)by Samantha Kay
The name of the footwear used for playing soccer is commonly referred to as cleats, or in Europe, boots. However, if you are speaking of indoor soccer, it is quite proper to refer to your cleats as shoes, especially since they don’t actually have the spikes usually associated with cleats.
Indoor soccer shoes should have a non-marking rubber sole, meaning even hard use on a gym floor or other surface will not leave it worse for the wear. Many players who frequent both grassy and indoor fields refer to their indoor shoes as flats, and their traditional grass field shoes as cleats. Flat soccer shoes are also appropriate on dry artificial surfaces, even when outdoors.
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Posted on February 28th, 2008 | No Comments »
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Soccer Cleats: To Stud Or Not To Stud
by M. Jedediah
Soccer boots, only correctly called cleats when they have the ground gripping teeth on the bottom of the shoe, have always been fodder for debate, among those who believe the screw in stud to be better than the molded teeth for traction or reliability. Many of the modern changes to soccer boots has come more from concerned parents, demanding the safest footwear for their young players, than it has from professional players, as might be believed.
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Posted on February 8th, 2008 | No Comments »
Filed under: Soccer Shoes