Paddles That Pop: Diadem Teams Up with Shelby and Sandy
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Paddles That Pop: Diadem Teams Up with Shelby and Sandy

Performance meets personality in a bold collaboration that’s turning heads on and off the court. Diadem Sports has teamed up with Los Angeles-based art duo Shelby and Sandy to release a limited-edition pickleball paddle collection that blends tournament-grade engineering with playful, pop-inspired design. Dropping during National Pickleball Month, the three-paddle lineup celebrates individuality, craftsmanship, and the rising cultural tide of the sport. From vibrant visuals to collector-level packaging, these paddles were made to rally—both in spirit and in gameplay.

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Pickleball Goes Global: Utah Franchise Brings the Game to Japan
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Pickleball Goes Global: Utah Franchise Brings the Game to Japan

The Picklr, a Utah-born indoor pickleball franchise, is going international—kicking off its Asian expansion with a bold plan to open 20 locations across Japan. Known for transforming underused real estate into vibrant pickleball hubs, The Picklr has rapidly grown from a single facility in Uintah to 44 U.S. locations, with 500 more sold globally. The Japanese launch isn’t just a business move; it marks a new chapter in the global rise of the sport, driven by Japan’s growing player base and real estate that perfectly suits multi-court indoor facilities.

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Hong Kong Teens Turn to Pickleball for Fun, Fitness, and Friendship
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Hong Kong Teens Turn to Pickleball for Fun, Fitness, and Friendship

In a Kowloon Bay gym where badminton once reigned, the unmistakable thwack of a wiffle ball now signals something new: pickleball is catching fire among Hong Kong’s youth. With minimal equipment, fast-paced action, and a social vibe, the sport is drawing in teenagers who might otherwise dread traditional PE. Former gym teacher Kennedy Lai, now head of the Newly Emerged Sports Association, has found in pickleball what many educators seek—a sport kids can learn in a day and love for a lifetime. And with initiatives like the Fly High Charity Sports Programme offering first-time lessons, even skeptics are finding themselves hooked.

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The Unspoken Art of Pickleball Doubles Strategy
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The Unspoken Art of Pickleball Doubles Strategy

Everyone knows the basics of pickleball: keep it low, get to the kitchen, don’t pop it up. But if you're finding your progress has stalled or you're stuck between rec-level rallies and wanting to play smarter, there’s a layer of strategy in doubles that no one is talking about—but should be. From strategic placement on putaways to deliberately ball-hogging the middle, there’s a chess game happening under the surface of every point. Learning how and when to execute these nuanced plays could be the difference between surviving and dominating on the court.

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More Than a Long Weekend
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More Than a Long Weekend

This Memorial Day, we pause to honor the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to this country. Their sacrifice allows us the freedoms we enjoy every day—on and off the court. Whether we spend this weekend with family, friends, or playing a few games of pickleball, may we do so with gratitude in our hearts and a deep respect for those who made it possible.

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Georgia’s Going Big: Atlanta to Host Nation’s Largest Indoor Pickleball Club
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Georgia’s Going Big: Atlanta to Host Nation’s Largest Indoor Pickleball Club

Atlanta is turning up the heat—not just in the kitchen but across 30+ indoor courts at what will soon be the largest indoor pickleball facility in the country. The Pickleball Club of Georgia (PCoG), set to rise from a warehouse in Blandtown, will combine sport, leisure, and social life into one massive paddle-powered destination. Once completed, it’ll offer a full-service gym, a kitchen and bar, indoor golf simulators, a pro shop, and event spaces, all designed by Terminus Design Group. Forget a quick match—members might spend the whole day living the pickleball dream.

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Paddles and Precision: Inside the Pickleball Lab Powering Selkirk’s Meteoric Rise
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Paddles and Precision: Inside the Pickleball Lab Powering Selkirk’s Meteoric Rise

Tucked under the Selkirk Mountains, a humble family business is quietly revolutionizing the way pickleball gear is designed, tested, and imagined. Selkirk Sport—founded in 2014 by the Barnes family—has grown nearly 2,000% in revenue since 2019, all without a dime of outside investment. While other brands chase trends, Selkirk doubled down on one sport and one sport only. The result? A million-dollar, in-house R&D lab outfitted with 3-D printers, a robot arm, a CT scanner, and even a cannon that fires balls at paddles until they break. And yes, it’s every bit as fun as it sounds.

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Jeff Bezos’ Crew Just Flexed on Your Rec League
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Jeff Bezos’ Crew Just Flexed on Your Rec League

If you’ve ever wondered how the other half serves, look no further than the floating pickleball court on Jeff Bezos’ $75 million superyacht support vessel, Abeona. While the Amazon founder’s fiancée Lauren Sánchez lived it up in Paris, the yacht’s crew took full advantage of the empty helipad—transforming the 57-foot rotary-wing landing zone into the slickest sea-level pickleball court imaginable. With the tech billionaire’s $500 million sailing yacht Koru in the backdrop, this game had more ocean views than your last ten vacations combined.

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You’re Overcomplicating It: Pickleball’s Core Fixes That Actually Work
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You’re Overcomplicating It: Pickleball’s Core Fixes That Actually Work

You don’t need new gear, a flashy spin serve, or another five-hour YouTube binge. You need fundamentals. That’s the brutal truth behind a high-level breakdown of 4.5-rated play—where simple choices (or the lack of them) dictate the point. Whether it’s driving the third shot into a retreating opponent’s chest or avoiding dead drops that beg to be punished, these matches show that most players aren’t losing because they lack skills—they’re losing because they can’t make the right call under pressure.

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The Spiciest Pickleball Show No One Asked For
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The Spiciest Pickleball Show No One Asked For

If you’ve ever wondered what happens when a global tennis bad boy, an adult film legend, and a crew of reality TV stars collide on a pickleball court—you’re about to find out. OnlyFans is launching a new series called Smash City, and yes, it’s all about pickleball. The show premieres June 13 on OFTV, the platform’s PG-rated streaming service, and it brings together a cast of OnlyFans creators for a four-episode tournament that trades serious play for spicy chaos. Oversized paddles, “Pickleball Pong,” and a $20,000 prize ensure the show is equal parts competition and spectacle.

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Pickleball Wasn’t Enough? Now Padel’s Crashing the Party
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Pickleball Wasn’t Enough? Now Padel’s Crashing the Party

There’s a new sound echoing across Europe’s sports complexes—and increasingly, over here, too. No, it’s not the familiar pop of a pickleball or the high-pitched whine of a tennis serve. It’s the cagey thump of padel. This glass-box version of doubles tennis, where walls are in play and power is punished, is quietly building an empire. With tens of thousands of courts springing up across Spain, Sweden, and now cities like Miami and Las Vegas, padel is vying not only for tennis’s turf—but eyeing any racket sport with a court and a cult following. Like, you know, pickleball.

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How Sports Apps Are Reshaping Access to Pickleball and Beyond
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How Sports Apps Are Reshaping Access to Pickleball and Beyond

The sports scene in North America is changing fast. In major cities, demand for recreational facilities has exploded—especially in pickleball hotspots like New York and Los Angeles. Courts that were once half-empty are now booked out like exclusive restaurants. With urban space limited and weekend slots scarce, the question becomes: how do we get more people on the court without building more of them? That’s where sports tech steps in. Platforms like CatchCorner are turning booking chaos into a smooth tap-and-play experience, cutting through the friction of phone calls and long waitlists.

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The Three Counter Zones You’re Probably Messing Up
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The Three Counter Zones You’re Probably Messing Up

Effective counterattacking in pickleball starts with understanding three key zones. The dominant side (zone one), the body (zone two), and the non-dominant side (zone three) each demand a unique approach. Most players struggle in zone two—where getting jammed is all too common. The fix? A one-handed counter, timed close to the body, with a short punch powered by the shoulder. Less is more when the pace picks up, and letting the ball come in a little can make all the difference.

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San Diego Startup Rallies for a Pickleball Emoji: “It’s About Time”
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San Diego Startup Rallies for a Pickleball Emoji: “It’s About Time”

In the emoji-obsessed world we live in, it seems almost everything has its own icon—except pickleball. That’s the spark behind a San Diego-based movement, spearheaded by startup TeachMe.To, to get Apple to finally add a pickleball emoji to the iOS keyboard. Led by company president Nick O’Brien, the effort is backed by a Change.org petition aimed at reaching 25,000 signatures. The emoji? A clean, community-approved design featuring a square paddle and iconic yellow ball. After all, if curling and archery get to be emoji-official, why not the sport that millions of us are actually playing?

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Love at First Serve: New Pickleball Series Hits Pickleballtv and Film Festival
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Love at First Serve: New Pickleball Series Hits Pickleballtv and Film Festival

Pickleball isn’t just a sport—it’s becoming a love language. The new series How I Met My Partner is making waves both on Pickleballtv and at the Denver Film Festival, where it was nominated in the Unscripted Category at the 11th annual SeriesFest. Blending romance and recreation, the show dives into real-life stories of couples who met mid-rally, paddle in hand. Whether it’s the charm of spontaneous chemistry or the shared joy of sport, the series taps into something a lot of us believe but rarely say out loud: maybe the person we’re meant to meet isn’t on an app—they’re on the other side of the net.

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The Serve and Return Blueprint: Simple Fixes with Big Results
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The Serve and Return Blueprint: Simple Fixes with Big Results

Improving your serve and return isn’t about reinventing your swing—sometimes it’s just about fixing your toss and using your legs. In this lesson, Kennedy offers game-changing tips for players struggling with consistency, spin, and depth on their serve. She starts with the fundamentals: contact out in front, not over the waist, with a toss that isn’t erratic or side-flung like a game of dodgeball. From there, she adds the crucial detail—aiming for depth, adding topspin, and using your hips—not just your arm—for acceleration. If your serve’s been landing in the middle of the box or worse, now you know why.

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The Seven Deadliest Pickleball Shots of 2025
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The Seven Deadliest Pickleball Shots of 2025

Pickleball in 2025 is all about speed, aggression, and a ruthless shot selection that doesn’t give your opponent room to breathe. The seven “deadly shots” covered here offer a blueprint for players looking to impose their will on the game. From the dripping hybrid of a drive and a drop, to the intimidating Ernie and its high-flying glory, each tactic is built to pressure opponents from every angle. Toss in the speed up, the powerfully orchestrated shake-and-bake, and the underestimated angled overhead, and you’ve got a toolset that makes defense feel obsolete. Mastering these shots means mastering the momentum.

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5 Hidden Habits That Are Sabotaging Your Pickleball Game
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5 Hidden Habits That Are Sabotaging Your Pickleball Game

Every player has blind spots, and unfortunately, most of them are standing smack dab in the kitchen. From involuntary flinching to ill-timed panic drives, many common pickleball errors fly under the radar simply because they feel so natural. But don’t let your instincts fool you. Flinching when someone speeds up a shot isn’t bravery—it’s biology. Same with driving balls from awkward spots or misreading spin because the ball has you hypnotized. Even more damaging is believing your improvement hinges solely on court time. In reality, small mental shifts and smarter drills (some of which can be done in your garage) can make a world of difference.

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5 Essential Pickleball Tips for Older Players Who Still Want to Win
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5 Essential Pickleball Tips for Older Players Who Still Want to Win

Experience counts—especially in pickleball. And for players in their 50s and beyond, there are five essential tips that can significantly raise your level of play without requiring you to sprint like you’re 25. It all starts with one thing: get to the kitchen. Every. Single. Rally. The non-volley zone is where the game is won or lost, and arriving there quickly after your return gives you a huge strategic edge. Forget blasting a low, hard return—lift that return higher over the net and buy yourself time. If you’re not at the kitchen by the third shot, you’re likely stuck reacting to pace you can’t control.

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How to Beat Tennis Players at Their Own Game (Pickleball Version)
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How to Beat Tennis Players at Their Own Game (Pickleball Version)

Anyone who’s ever faced a tennis player on a pickleball court knows how it starts: blistering serves, heavy drives, and a barrage of pace. They look like they’re controlling the match—until they’re not. The secret? Stop playing their game. Four key tactics can neutralize the power and flip the pressure. First, take a step back on the return and aim deep crosscourt. This adds time, changes tempo, and allows you to move into position without eating a forehand to the chest. While you’re advancing, have your partner shift more toward the middle to cover for your temporary vulnerability. You’re not trying to win the point here—you’re just surviving the opening.

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