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Rare Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 Hnq No 3 on 2040-motos

US $129.99
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

San Jose, California, United States

San Jose, California, United States
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RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 1

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RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 2 RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 3 RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 4 RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 5 RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 6 RARE Wilson St Vincent Pro Staff Midsize Sampras Tennis Racquet Mid 85 HNQ No 3, US $129.99, image 7

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Moto blog

2012 AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Class Nominees Announced

Tue, 03 Apr 2012

The American Motorcycle Heritage Foundation released its list of nominees for the AMA Hall of Fame Museum induction class of 2012. The 26 nominees represents a wide range of contributions to motorcycling, from motocross champions and Daytona 200 winners to tuners to motorcycle rights advocates. The selection committee will further trim the list down to six individuals, three from competition categories and three from non-competition categories.

Mission Motorcycles Sues Co-Founder

Tue, 31 Dec 2013

Mission Motorcycles is suing Vincent Ip, one of three co-founders of the electric motorcycle company, who was terminated in November. This according to a lawsuit filed this month in U.S. District Court, and first reported by the Associated Press.

The World Endurance Championship Starts This Weekend

Wed, 23 Apr 2014

Endurance racing is perhaps the ultimate test of both man and machine. In the past, teams would pace themselves in order to rest both elements enough to make a final push at the end. These days, however, motorcycles are more reliable than ever, and riders train like triathletes.