May even be destined to become an Olympic sport one day

By Ken Reed

Originally published by Troy Media

Pickleball, kind of a combination of tennis and ping pong, is the fastest-growing sport in the United States. The state of Washington, in fact, has declared it the state sport.

Based on different reports, there are somewhere between five million and eight million pickleball players (or “picklers,” as some of those in the sport call themselves) in the U.S. and some in the sport project 40 million pickleball players by 2030. The sport has grown nearly 40 per cent since 2020. There are over 35,000 courts, more than double the figure from five years ago.

LeBron James, Tom Brady and former world No.1 tennis player Kim Clijsters have become owners in Major League Pickleball. Yes, there is a professional pickleball league. And there’s also a professional pickleball players’ tour.

Pickleball matches have been shown on CBS, Fox Sports and the Tennis Channel. Some speculate that Pickleball is destined to become an Olympic sport one day.

The game is played on a small court with a net using a paddle about twice the size of a ping pong paddle and a perforated yellow hard plastic ball. If you played Wiffle ball as a kid, the ball will look very familiar. Pickleball is popular with all demographic groups but especially the 55+ set. It provides a physical activity with a lot of social elements. Players tend to make fast friends in a local pickleball community. The sport is also taking off in prisons and juvenile detention centres.

One senior pickleball player says Pickleball changed her life: “It was black and white before pickleball and it was living colour after pickleball.”

Pickleball is increasingly popular with elementary-age children as well. It is being introduced to kids in physical education classes because it is easier to pick up for kids than tennis. Pickleball is a skill sport that doesn’t require super speed or strength.

The sport was created by a few children and their parents in 1965 in Washington state. According to legend, it was named after a dog named Pickle, who would chase the ball around the court. Another theory suggests the game was named by one of the original adult players after the pickle boat in rowing, where rowers are chosen from the leftovers of other boats.

The sport’s popularity took off in 1984 when the United States Amateur Pickleball Association was created to grow the sport on a national level.

Some non-players aren’t fans of this relatively new sport. They hate the loud “thwack” sound that results from the plastic ball meeting the paddle. Some people have sold their homes due to the noise resulting from close proximity to pickleball courts. Also, some tennis players are upset that their favourite courts are being transformed into permanent pickleball courts.

Nevertheless, the sport’s popularity is undeniable. One enthusiast, Marianne Johnson, says the sport changed her and her husband’s social life.

“It’s completely transformed our life. It’s transformed our marriage, our social circle …” says Johnson, a recreation specialist for the Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department in Edmonds, Washington. “We actually built a pickleball court in our backyard. We have pickleball parties.”

Washington state senator John Lovick says Pickleball helped him lose weight and get his high blood pressure under control. “Win, lose or draw, I just absolutely love playing,” says Lovick.

Other pickleball evangelists think the sport can help bring the divided country together.

“I think pickleball will save America, and I think America, sadly, feels like it needs saving right now,” says Steve Kuhn, founder of Major League Pickleball. “It’s bringing people together (who) otherwise would not be meeting each other.”

I don’t know about saving America, but Pickleball is good clean fun for people of all ages. And while it’s not the most physically-demanding sport in the world, if it gets people off the couch and moving, I’m all for it.

Give it a try.

Ken Reed is sports policy director for League of Fans, a sports reform project. He is the author of The Sports Reformers, Ego vs. Soul in Sports, and How We Can Save Sports.

 

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