Tennis Has A Serious Pickleball Problem...

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @Courtside_Tennis
    @Courtside_Tennis  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

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    • @germanslice
      @germanslice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I didn't like Pickleball. The reasons? Listed below All I see in Pickelball is Doubles, Doubles, Doubles, Doubles no Singles because where I used to play the game it was always doubles and games no singles games so I never learnt any singles,
      So I lost interest because there was too much doubles As playing doubles don't give me time to feel my way around
      the court as doubles is more faster and more cramped than singles,
      I found doubles to be too fast paced. Tennis I have more time , pickleball I don't have always enough time
      Swings Felt also awkward.
      Always feeling rushed jammed..
      Didn't like the faster timing
      Disliked the kitchen dinking knee bending thing. In Tennis I use just pronation of the racquet to clear the
      netcord but in Pickelball its all these little soft dinks...
      Because the ball is plastic and full of holes. The ball dies more faster than a tennis ball does..
      Pickleball had way more knee bending than tennis because the ball is much more lower down to the ground in Pickelball.
      The court is much more smaller there's not alot of space to move the body around with the ball.
      Pickelball Footwork is a little different to tennis
      Pickelball puts more pressure on the 1st serve than tennis because you only get just only 1 serve in Pickelball.
      Didn't really like the pickelball paddles. Grips are much more shorter on the paddles than on the tennis racquets.
      Didn't feel very comfortable.
      I have a slice drive that hits big flat penetrating pronations at 80-100 mph because I use a low to high swing motion to drive
      the ball using pronation off the racquets edge. Well ripping backhand slice drives at 80-100 mph off the edge of the pickelball paddle worked but it lasted only just an hour and then after that I heard a loud crack and the pickelball bat snapped
      all off the handle flying several courts away..
      And that happened when i started first playing the game...and trying the tennis drives with it.
      Oh....
      In tennis driving the ball all flat using pronation allowed me to maintain depth and clerance at lower heights over the netcord
      than the normal way where people usually float the ball with brushing under the ball with the strings and have to aim more higher over the net in order to maintain depth which can result in slices falling short and weak in the court if you don't get enough height.. So in tennis the net clearance was 1-2 feet or a few inches over it when using the big flat pronation slice drive but would be 3-6 or more feet higher if using the normal floating slice drive.. But in Pickelball the net clerance is much more lower, only just 1 foot or an inch over it with the big flat slice drive and abt 2 feet for the normal drive l A little bit too low,. Didn't really think much of Pickelball after breaking the bat.
      So for these reasons is why I didn't like doubles because with more people on the court, and less space to move
      around in with the ball I felt cramped in my swings and found the tempo in doubles was a little bit too fast.

    • @francescojsb
      @francescojsb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @Courtside Tennis You are among the very few who have not yet spoken about the Sinner case (just an observation)

    • @Courtside_Tennis
      @Courtside_Tennis  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      soon

    • @francescojsb
      @francescojsb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Courtside_Tennis 👍

    • @sammydavis991
      @sammydavis991 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Pickleball is badminton for the untalented.

  • @lizwilson51
    @lizwilson51 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +674

    The people that are playing pickleball aren’t going to play tennis if pickleball doesn’t exist. They were not playing any sport so we should celebrate more people getting active and outside in a fun healthy community.
    Tennis is one of the most difficult skilled sports to learn along with golf. Pickleball is easier and faster to pick up and enjoy for those who aren’t going to play competitively but just recreationally.

    • @shumyum
      @shumyum 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      I played tennis when pickelball wasn't an option. I would be playing tennis now if it wasn't for pickleball being an option now. I'm playing pickleball instead because it makes me and my friends laugh. Tennis simply isn't as fun for us. But I agree that it's great that both sports are an option.

    • @SuenosDePaz7
      @SuenosDePaz7 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Yeah, if it weren’t for tennis courts being converted to pickleball, this would be a total non-issue. Plenty of real estate for both sports. I agree with your take completely and wish people didn’t think so tribally

    • @sethlichtenstein4442
      @sethlichtenstein4442 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah I don't think they're competitors at all. If anything someone might play pickleball because it's easy and accessible and then decide they need to scratch the itch more seriously and take up tennis. And pickle is no threat to tennis as a spectator sport. It's borderline unwatchable, and I will watch just about any sport

    • @anthonywarne9751
      @anthonywarne9751 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@sethlichtenstein4442this is exactly what happened to me, have played pickleball with the family casually for years and finally decided I wanted a challenge and a more intense workout and have now picked up tennis as a 30 YO after never having played before.

    • @borfe
      @borfe 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Not true, a lot of pickleball players that I know, me included, are or was tennis players

  • @chamberfield1
    @chamberfield1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +143

    Tennis player here. I played pickleball for the first time a few weeks ago and it was fun. Kind of like playing ping pong on a huge table. It was super easy to play and I hardly broke a sweat, especially if playing doubles. So I can see why so many people love it -- easy learning curve and you don't need to be in shape to play it. But I still love tennis and won't switch until I'm old and can't play tennis anymore.

    • @naturesbest7977
      @naturesbest7977 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      I went from badminton to pickleball.
      Now I play pickleball for an hour and a half +, 4x or more a week @ 3.5-4.0 rating.
      In singles, playing 2hrs, I easily burn 1,300 + calories.
      Doubles is almost 800+ in two hours.
      Mind you, that’s with 3-5 minute breaks in between each set.
      I’m athletic, and because of pickleball addiction I have to eat a little more protein because I’m losing nearly 1/2 a lb a week.
      All of my friends play now. I’m in several group chats, different acquaintances of all age range sending messages four times and dates that everyone’s playing. This did not happen when I played badminton or any other sport in my life. I’ve watched friends who were over weight cut down 30lbs over the summer even with a bad diet.
      My state has been covered in recreational parks, tennis courts, basketball courts playgrounds baseball fields; you name it. And they have been empty for 15 years. The tennis courts have had little to no maintenance. But because of Pickleball, all of the parks have been redone. there’s almost nowhere to park vehicles on Sundays because it’s crowded with people playing Pickleball. I’m just happy that people are getting out of the house. Moving their bodies, and breathing in fresh air.

    • @alan887
      @alan887 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@naturesbest7977on what level were you playing badminton? If you compete on a high level, I’m pretty sure badminton can burn the same amount of calories as the numbers you mentioned with pickleball

    • @naturesbest7977
      @naturesbest7977 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@alan887 oh yeah, I was very skinny in my young days LOL. Badminton and hiking at the time.

    • @alan887
      @alan887 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@naturesbest7977 that’s awesome! I stopped training and playing competitive badminton a while back. This resulted in me gaining 22 lbs😂😂

    • @naturesbest7977
      @naturesbest7977 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@alan887 it happens fast unfortunately. But the pickleball, walking dogs and eating healthy started keeping it at bay.

  • @محمدسمير-ف5ث3ي
    @محمدسمير-ف5ث3ي 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +516

    If I wanted to play with friends, I would choose pickball or padel, but I wouldn't watch it. It's like futsal compared to football.

    • @helloeveryone0123
      @helloeveryone0123 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@محمدسمير-ف5ث3ي the pettiness of the tennis corporates. Ooof. Hope novak can save tennis in the right direction

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      That's like me.. but with all sports lol. All so boring to watch I just end up sleeping

    • @ovandograham7793
      @ovandograham7793 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Naaa because most people would rather play 6-8 a side football than futsal. I’m a padel player now, great hobby but I love watching tennis

    • @MATHEW94061
      @MATHEW94061 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Pickleball is fun to play but not very interesting to watch. I think tennis will survive because of that

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@MATHEW94061 Tennis is just as boring if not maybe even more boring to watch LIVE.
      I admit though, tennis HIGHLIGHTS are more fun to watch vs highlights in PICKLEBALL.
      That's why pickleball will strive, fun for its easy learning curve.
      Tennis will survive just because of its history and prestige.

  • @aHumanCookiee
    @aHumanCookiee 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +125

    Part of the decline of tennis is cost of entry.
    Here in the UK, where it rains 98% of the year, indoor courts run you up to £25 an hour to play on.
    Where is the sense a tennis court earning more per hour than 70% of all UK workers?
    I love tennis, but pricing has just become a joke.

    • @JetPoweredCloud
      @JetPoweredCloud 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      This.

    • @caryg4638
      @caryg4638 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      They should charge that per month or per week as a membership.

    • @a_little_flame589
      @a_little_flame589 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      98% is a huge exaggeration tbf the issue is the outdoors tennis clubs aren’t much cheaper

    • @angadsinghchhabra9422
      @angadsinghchhabra9422 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Exact conversation I had with my father a few days ago, we were comparing badminton and tennis but yeah the point still stands

    • @aHumanCookiee
      @aHumanCookiee 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@angadsinghchhabra9422 yes badminton is another one where I've been priced out the market.

  • @helloeveryone0123
    @helloeveryone0123 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +231

    As much as i dislike pickleball, pickleball is NOT the problem. Tennis association needs to change. millions of tennis players and viewers have been suffering… goat novak trying to help save the sport, sadly we know the short sightedness of the corporates are obvious.

    • @qwaszx2
      @qwaszx2 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Liberals are the problem. They are 100% of pickleball.

    • @baldeagle4710
      @baldeagle4710 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@helloeveryone0123 tennis is suuuuuuper elitist the people on the USTA site are all white and it looks like you have to pay thousands and join a country club to join. There are tons of people from foreign countries who love tennis but USTa makes it look like only white people are taken seriously

    • @tridentstacking
      @tridentstacking 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      💯

    • @esmolol4091
      @esmolol4091 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Tennis is in a beautiful spot compared to table tennis.

    • @crimnvL
      @crimnvL 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      well when tennis courts are being converted to pickleball courts its a problem

  • @mb2776
    @mb2776 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Years ago, I've tried to get into tennis. Snob clubs, expensive gear and the sheer power you had to have in your arm to play. Seems like nothing has changed and pickleball looks awesome!!

  • @Monsteroflopogis
    @Monsteroflopogis 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    lol I only heard of pickleball recently when I was out playing tennis and they had a smaller court drawn into the tennis court. Everyone was playing pickleball so my buddy and I tried it out. Basically gave up tennis immediately for it. The fact that it's easier to play really did make it more fun. And the super friendly nature of it with the community is cool.

  • @trippwraze1509
    @trippwraze1509 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +744

    I think the main aspect that attracts people to Pickleball is the accessibility. Tennis has always had issues with its “rich kid” facade, and Pickleball is much more accessible to play than Tennis.

    • @baldeagle4710
      @baldeagle4710 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      I play pickleball now because I’m less likely to get injured from it than in tennis

    • @whatevergoesforme5129
      @whatevergoesforme5129 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Novak was right with his assessment about tennis being less accessible because of the factors he mentioned. Hence, the so-called "rich kid" facade because of those factors.

    • @codycast
      @codycast 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

      Interesting take. I grew up dirt poor but bought a racket at a garage sale that I used as a kid till sophomore in high school.
      I never viewed it as a rich kid sport.

    • @livelierfellow
      @livelierfellow 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Yeah, fully agree. Pickleball is easier to pick up and play. Tennis is a very difficult sport to play consistently and it generally costs a lot of money for lessons to get better

    • @Huiando
      @Huiando 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Pickleball is also a lot less technically and physically challenging.

  • @mmphzlol
    @mmphzlol 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +137

    It's so frustrating trying to watch Grand Slams in the USA. There's too many pay walls and it doesn't include access to all the matches being played in grand slams. Ive given up watching the matches live, and just wait for highlights on YT.

    • @evanwride6638
      @evanwride6638 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      IMO, the grand slams are the easiest to watch. They’re usually on a major network like ESPN (AO, Wimbledon, USO) or NBC (RG)
      I will agree with you that there are more paywalls like ESPN+/Peacock, but that allows you to watch every single match at the tournaments if you wanted to. But you could just watch the main ESPN channel in a standard TV package, but you don’t get to choose which match is being shown.
      It’s harder to watch the minor ATP tournaments because you need to have access to Tennis TV or Tennis Channel.

    • @sauce1232
      @sauce1232 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Google is your friend and will provide tons of free streaming websites. Just have to ask mate...

    • @badmanskill1112
      @badmanskill1112 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@evanwride6638How many different subscriptions online would I have to get if I wanted to watch the main big one: All 4 GSs, ATP Finals, and ATP1000s?
      I don't have cable TV. Do they have one subscription to watch all those or would I need to buy more?

    • @LenaandCary
      @LenaandCary 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sauce1232 Wish that had been my experience. TH-cam TV allowed me to watch some of some matches on ESPN, with constant switching between matches going on at the same time, but my dream is to pay a flat fee for access to full, live and recorded matches, and that's it. Kinda like the NFL Packages. Heck, I'd pay for a Grand Slam Package! If only someone would offer it.

    • @smftrsddvjiou6443
      @smftrsddvjiou6443 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Who wants to watch a 5 h three setter or a 7h five setter. And all play the same style.

  • @mtnhowie
    @mtnhowie 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +94

    Our seniors community in Arizona has eight tennis courts and eleven pickleball courts. Forty members in the tennis club, three hundred and fifty pickleball members. Forty-four players are usually on the pickleball courts with at least a dozen waiting; never more than eight on the tennis courts and they often sit empty. The diehard tennis players still refuse to have any of their courts made dual purpose. It’s turning into a war.

    • @urioriari34
      @urioriari34 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Lol the Elderly Court Sport War of 2024

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​​​@@urioriari34Uhh, the middle aged, the elderly with often poor form, slow, and out of shape are more of the Pickleball crowd. You go Tennis players! Stand your ground! Robert at 69 who is a current competive Table Tennis player, and ex Tennis player in the Phoenix area.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      GOOD, GOOD GOOD!! You Tennis players keep up the good fight to retain those Tennis courts! I'm an ex Tennis player at 69, and now play club level Table Tennis where I am competitive with players half my age in a shortened court area. I will not give in to the overly trendy/goofy Pickleball. The name, plastic ball 'plink' and court rules alone makes me cringe, and I'm right here in your ballpark in Apache Junction Az.

    • @gsue33
      @gsue33 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      U can't play tennis with all kinds of lines all over the court.

    • @almadeunrebel
      @almadeunrebel 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      yes , f pickleball.
      i hope they stand their ground for a long time

  • @johnnygenlock
    @johnnygenlock 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +56

    When I grew up most of the tennis courts had backboard areas for a single player to practice. I was even trained by Fred Reed that if I couldn't hit 100 strokes against the backboard, then I was not up for serious matches. Today there are very few backboards at courts around the metroplex. That forces the sometimes impossible . . . that you matched schedules with another player who wants to go out and hit tennis with you. In the old backboard scene, sure, you're often taking up a court. Others show and want to play that court. Then you negotiate, meet other players, etc. I've challenged two other players to hit two-on-one, just as long as they observed the singles lines on my side; and we had a great time playing "doubles". Having backboards at courts allows for single arriving players to evaluate the skill and choose to ask that player for a match. Backboards were a major social event. A lot of tennis happened because there wree backboards. And now they're gone.

    • @corvus2512
      @corvus2512 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      When I was 16 I got into tennis and would drive out to some courts that had a concrete wall at the back of some and would spend hours and hours learning to play tennis. It’s how I met 2 of my long term tennis partners in my 20s. I agree it’s sad so many tennis courts don’t have some courts with walls

    • @jonmccauley6490
      @jonmccauley6490 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@corvus2512 It's worse than that IME. The crime and vandalism that has escalated across the city has caused the tennis coaches at the schools to lock the gates. They then tell you to drive an extra 10minutes to the nearest controlled facilities, and possibly pay fees. This certainly will keep people from entering the sport. I grew up driving less than 5min to my local HS courts to learn.

    • @claireroth
      @claireroth หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I totally agree.I miss backboards!!! They were terrific at improving my game.

    • @fjb7380
      @fjb7380 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yes!

  • @matrixtv1217
    @matrixtv1217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I started playing tennis because i played 1 match of pickleball in nyc during my vacation there. It was fun and my opponent told me he can see i have been playing tennis back home. I never have to that point to be honest. Pickleball is much more casual and easy to learn. I played one match where my opponent explained the rules to me. After 10min we could play a really good looking match. it was fun but tennis is much more interesting to me because of the skills and techniques you have to learn to play on a casual level.

  • @rahulchoudhury6054
    @rahulchoudhury6054 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +360

    Pickleball is a nice leisure sport but it can never match athleticism,mental capacity,shot making of tennis and the aura ,history of tennis .. pickleball can never compare to the aspiration of lifting a Wimbledon trophy....Tennis will always be greater than pickleball ..but yeah the marketing of masters tournaments besides the 4 majors can be done better to engage the casual fan .

    • @anto-sk4ce
      @anto-sk4ce 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I think sinner alcaraz or rog could easily best pickleball top athletes

    • @mikethebeginner
      @mikethebeginner 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

      They said similar things about horses when motor cars came along.

    • @pweb1720
      @pweb1720 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      Pedigree doesn’t really matter to your casual fan/player though. I play both and love tennis more but pickleball is just an overall more fun experience since it’s much more social and approachable. Pickleball has multiple easy to access leagues and open play is its biggest strength. I live in a massive city and there’s no tennis leagues outside of the tennis clubs we have. But there’s multiple pickleball clubs and leagues. Tennis just needs to be more approachable and easy to get into

    • @moiven7524
      @moiven7524 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      @@mikethebeginnerpickleball is not the next super invention like cars 😭😭

    • @francisedward8713
      @francisedward8713 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      ​@@mikethebeginner Cars revolutionised the world. How tf is that even remotely comparable?

  • @johnskrb
    @johnskrb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Reminds me of the rise of racquetball on handball courts. It was so much easier to pick up and less stressful to play, that the handball players were squeezed out of their courts. Fast forward 25 years, racquetball popularity declines and not enough handball players are left to take up the slack, and courts are closed / repurposed.

  • @esquared5064
    @esquared5064 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    I live on one of the poorest islands in Indonesia. Most of our neighbors have never even been to the local mall and going to a restaurant is an impossibility. But there are now about 30 pickleball courts on our island and several active clubs. I daily see poor barefoot villagers playing a pickup game.

    • @Tr786hala
      @Tr786hala 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Dimana? Pickleball atau padel? Saya tinggal di Indonesia juga tapi hanya lihat padel

    • @esquared5064
      @esquared5064 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Tr786hala di Lombok... Saya belum melihat Padel di sini. Hanya Pickleball. Di Mataram dan Senggigi. Ada pickleball di hotel, complex, BTN, dan SMA.

    • @Tr786hala
      @Tr786hala 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@esquared5064 wkwkwk saya tinggal di Kuta, Lombok! Hanya Padel disini kak. Selong Belanak juga

    • @igorhiller5596
      @igorhiller5596 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      that's amazing!

    • @esquared5064
      @esquared5064 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Tr786hala I think the Europeans living there must have built the Padel courts there since that's popular in Europe. And there's one on Gili T I hear. But in Mataram and surrounding areas, it's more a local grass roots movement toward pickleball.

  • @fjb7380
    @fjb7380 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    It’s a lot like the arrival boom of snowboarding trend - it was easier and lower barrier to entry in how quick you could learn and the cost of equipment (at least it used to be that way) but years on it bored people and had various negatives. And snowboarders go (back to in some cases or new to) skiing. Snowboarding still exists but its popularity has waned and it’s just not sustaining.

  • @Hermessio
    @Hermessio 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

    I feel that Pickleball and Padel will be what Futsal is to Football:
    Many people play it for the same reasons as described in the video (accessibility, more inclusive to begginer and age difference etc) but in the end they will still watch Football on the TV.
    I know many people (especially over 30s) who almost never play tennis not Football anymore and now only play padel or futsal. None of them has never followed the pro circuit of these sports and still whatch tennis when they want to see a big performance

    • @Flootyy
      @Flootyy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      correct

    • @parkercrossland410
      @parkercrossland410 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Tennis only has a pickleball problem because it has an overall viewership problem, particularly in America. They gotta get their non-crown jewel events on mainstream American networks more often, and in order to do so they need more total viewership for smaller events. Nobody who watches tennis doesn't really play it, whereas tons of people across the big 4 American sports as well as football (not the US version) watch but don't play.

    • @gustavobortoluzzi4314
      @gustavobortoluzzi4314 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Exactly, and same for other sports that we also have variations such as volleyball, rugby, basketball etc. In the end of the day the mainstream goes to the primary one.

    • @gustavobortoluzzi4314
      @gustavobortoluzzi4314 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I believe that in the future tennis can grow due to the pickleball popularity when some pickball players decide to step up to the next level migrate to tennis.

    • @lobstercrostini
      @lobstercrostini 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The problem is going to be participation. If young people are playing more pickleball than tennis, naturally there will be less tennis players and less tennis viewership

  • @alexsad1000
    @alexsad1000 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I happen to play tennis and pickleball at solid ~5.0 level and love both sports a lot! Tennis fans are always comparing pro-level matches say between Alcaraz and Sinner to a bunch of "abuelitas" playing pickleball doubles in a park for fun. Next time try playing 2-3 best of 3 singles matches in pickle (or just watch singles match say between Ben Johns and Tyson McGuffin) and compare physicality to tennis singles. In tennis you have free points from serves and returns, much longer times in between the points/games and sets. I tend to burn more calories playing pickle singles, very similar numbers too tennis for same 2-3h sessions of play in Florida's heat.

    • @Jacob-ee8ux
      @Jacob-ee8ux 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      That's the reason I love Pickleball compared to Tennis, it just feels like so much more of my time playing Pickleball is actually spent ~playing~ Pickleball, whereas so much of Tennis is spent acing, getting aced, and faults.

    • @MJ-revered
      @MJ-revered 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Jacob-ee8ux Skill issue.

    • @toms9864
      @toms9864 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Jacob-ee8ux Another large amount of time lost is retrieving the tennis ball after the serve or point.

  • @Mcflynerdyguy
    @Mcflynerdyguy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I just started playing pickleball a month ago, the biggest thing I like about it compared to tennis is the accessibility and the people. I played tennis, but the people even pros in pickleball are nicer, more laid back, and more welcoming. But, I think there are people for each sport and if pickleball gets people up and out and getting exercise then that’s a good thing.

  • @davidhancock6629
    @davidhancock6629 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I've played a lot more pickleball than tennis, see new people coming in all the time. People with at least a year of tennis experience can usually get to a 4.0 level in pickleball very quickly, within a matter of days. It's a matter of recalibrating shots so they don't hit the net or sail out of bounds, and learning basic pickleball tactics (trying to stay back at the baseline and just rip drives will get you slaughtered by any semi-competent pickleball player). But then moving from 4.0 to 5.0+ in pickleball takes about as much time for a converted tennis player as it does for a seasoned pickleball player. There are advanced shots and tactics that just take time to perfect. Sam Querrey and Eugenie Bouchard vastly underestimated what it would take to compete at the pro level. Jack Sock did not and deservedly is now in the top 10, but still has yet to consistently win any tournaments. And while most of the top pickleball pros nevertheless have considerable tennis background (typically D1 college tennis), it is increasingly common for the upstart challengers at pro tournaments to have a background in pickleball only, with little/no tennis playing experience. The game continues to evolve.

  • @lulumimi09
    @lulumimi09 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    even some of your favs are playing pickleball… for example, last week during the cincy open, i went to my usual pickleball courts at my local gym and i happened to run into andrey rublev’s team playing pickleball. andrey wasn’t there ofc since he’s still playing in the tournament but i got to play with/against his coach (fernando), physio (marcos), his wife, and this other guy (idk his name). they were good, obviously, and they seemed to be enjoying it a lot.

  • @aidenhughes6400
    @aidenhughes6400 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    As a squash fan, I can relate. A lot of courts are being converted into cardio rooms and the like.

  • @chivatech
    @chivatech 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I tried playing recreational tennis in my local community but it wasn't accessible as pickleball. The pickleball community is so friendly and supportive.

  • @123Perillo
    @123Perillo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

    Tennis is just really difficult to learn. Anyone who has ever taught a friend to play know that it takes months if not year until they can play a match with an experienced player where both have fun

    • @don9733
      @don9733 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Nothing is easy in life, thats part of the journey.

    • @Noname-rc6sv
      @Noname-rc6sv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@don9733thats why there is a possibility that tennis will die

    • @don9733
      @don9733 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @@Noname-rc6sv nope pickleball is just a phase, tennis has been here for 100 yrs and will be

    • @SsoulBlade
      @SsoulBlade 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Which is exactly why I look down on pickle ball.

    • @vladimircurkoski1455
      @vladimircurkoski1455 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Picks all is a trash , paddle little bit less, tenis is where the pros is on different level

  • @caitlinmorris18
    @caitlinmorris18 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I grew up playing tennis. I recently switched to pickleball because I'm newer to my community and I want to meet people and it's easy to stop by pickleball pick up nights. I like that it's much more of a social sport. I wish tennis had more of a pick-up/quick games mentality like pickleball so you could cycle through who you play with more frequently.

    • @Bobison
      @Bobison 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Pickleball is fine for social interaction. So is golf. Tennis is for better conditioned athletes who wish to stay aerobically fit and who seek more all around fitness with their competitive lifetime sport.

  • @McLovin1759
    @McLovin1759 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I don’t think it has to be a Tennis VS Pickleball problem. This is like skiing vs snowboarding. Both sports can thrive. Both “rec level” industries can flourish.

    • @jasonborne5724
      @jasonborne5724 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is a competition between the two. Parks departments often convert a tennis court or two into Pickleball courts. Frequently the Pickleball courts are full mornings and evenings and there’s a line waiting to play. They look at the often empty tennis courts and want more Pickleball courts. This situation is extremely common. Most tennis players belong to private clubs and the park courts don’t get much play. You can show up by yourself to the Pickleball courts and be welcomed to play. Not usually so with tennis.

  • @michaelsheedy
    @michaelsheedy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Here in the Villages with over 300 courts, it serms the really competitive pickleball players play everyday as the keep improving, but once they hit the glass ceiling like in tennis, they cut way back or give up the sport. Others get hurt and drop out. Thus, the courts aren't as busy as a few years ago. The injury rate seems higher with continuous play and sudden, fast reactions.

    • @karenv8351
      @karenv8351 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Pickleball is deceptive. Lots of falls among older people while running backwards to get a lob.

    • @michaelsheedy
      @michaelsheedy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@karenv8351 Ditto for tennis. If a lob gets over my head, I say "good shot." I've seen lots of serious injuries going back for a lob. At the rec level, not worth it.

  • @WSBM
    @WSBM 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I think one of the issues in tennis can be the vast range of skill level illustrated but the UTR rating which tracks a person's level by two decimal points from 0.00 to mid 16 ish. When you play against someone 2 or more UTR points better or worse than you, the enjoyment starts to diminish. This serves to put people into cliques by skill level. It seems pickleball allows more people to play together because the skill quotient is relatively diminished by the smaller court, plastic ball, and paddles.

    • @sophiak4299
      @sophiak4299 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, it can be hard to find people of a similar level in tennis. And it can come across as clique-y 😂 But ultimately what I love about tennis is how hard it is to be any good, and how rewarding it is when you make progress. It’s addictive to me and I’m my 50s still trying to get a bit better 😊

    • @WSBM
      @WSBM 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sophiak4299 this is exactly why I play tennis as well. 54 here. Tried pickleball twice. Absolutely hated it both times. A big part of hitting a tennis ball is the “feel” of it. Take that away and a lot of the enjoyment goes with it for me.

  • @KidFresh71
    @KidFresh71 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Middle aged man who loves tennis. Take two lessons per week- it's such a beautiful game and an awesome workout. Only problem is now that I'm 53, I find it a bit taxing on my ankles and achilles tendons. I've never played pickleball, but I can see why people love it. Less taxing on the tendons as we age.

  • @gregoryf9299
    @gregoryf9299 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    My 70+ FIL got big into pickleball. He’s gone on trips, joined regional org’s, and just loves it. I’m glad it exists as it gives him a social exercise. It’s a great sport for all ages but definitely for seniors.
    I’m more annoyed that communities push back against the sound. To me, it’s the sound of community and fun.

  • @timisa58
    @timisa58 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    50-something and play tennis and now, pickle ball. Many are going to pickle ball because they no longer have the stamina or mobility to play tennis. So, people wanting to continue to be active have bought into pickle ball. I find fewer and fewer people my age playing tennis. Pickle ball is fun and a decent workout.

  • @kaiserandvlad
    @kaiserandvlad 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I think the prize money will waiver down though. This is funny, but fortnite had a 30 million dollar world cup in 2018, but despite maintaining size and still being popular, top tournaments pay a small fraction of that now.

    • @its_radit
      @its_radit 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      its more about growing the popularity so people think they can have a career by playing the game even though its only a marketing stunt

    • @fh2234
      @fh2234 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thats crazy honestly. Did they just bait the little kids into playing it lol ?

  • @rungavagairun
    @rungavagairun 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    Advantages of pickleball over tennis:
    1. the smaller real estate required means you can put more courts into the same space.
    2. there is more tolerance for varied surface types in pickleball. People are willing to play on wood gym floors, low pile carpet in church rec rooms, and taped lines on asphalt.
    3. portable net systems allow for make-shift courts to be put up almost anywhere.
    4. the cost of putting up those make-shift courts is very low (also much lower than the cost of padel courts with the external high fencing required for each court)
    5. pickleball culture has been very welcoming to new players. It's normal at public locations for bystanders who are watching to be invited to pick up a paddle and get on the court to play. Most of the time you can expect to be welcomed to rotate into games when you walk up to a court to play (at public or open play locations). This cultural difference with tennis is (I suspect) one of the biggest reasons for the explosive growth of pickleball.
    6. lower barrier of entry with regard to skills. But there are also great depths of strategy and skill required to master the sport. This is evident in the fact cited in this video that pro tennis players, who clearly know how to hit a ball with a racket with power, technique, and accuracy, but they have not dominated at the top levels when they have crossed over to pickleball playing against the top pickleball players with years of experience in the sport.

    • @MrSheduur
      @MrSheduur 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Problem is though, it is less exciting to watch. Fans will not really watch it when it just screams "amateur sport" at you. I am sure it is fun to play, and it is great that even seniors can use it to stay in shape, but that does not make it a true competitor to Tennis when it comes to people watching it.

    • @rungavagairun
      @rungavagairun 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@MrSheduur the pro levels of pickleball are not amateur. The issues (IMO) is that people who do not play do not grasp the strategies and difficulty of many of the shots and exchanges. It's more subtle than many other racket sports because of the smaller court dimensions, the NVZ, and the rules that advantage the receiving team over the serving team.

    • @baldeagle4710
      @baldeagle4710 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      This. Tennis is not welcoming to beginners. I’m not even a beginner, I’m a 3.0 who is rusty and I got thrown out of a meetup group for not being good enough

    • @whatevergoesforme5129
      @whatevergoesforme5129 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@baldeagle4710 Yep, tennis is kinda a sport for snobs not only because of the skill level required but because it began as a sport for rich kids and has kept this impression that it is a sport that needs money to be able to play it per se and more money to be able to play it well. Basketball, despite the skill level required, can be played in slum areas.

    • @McLovin1759
      @McLovin1759 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      To add to your OP, Pickleball has a couple of advantages over Tennis:
      1a) More places to play. Indoor games can be held in school gyms vs expensive tennis clubs.
      1b) As a result of the above, it’s more affordable. Costs me $5/game at the local rec centre in the winter vs booking an indoor tennis court at a dome
      2). Underhand serve in Pickleball encourages more rallies. Makes for a more entertaining game
      3). Seems to be more social. Where you can show up as a single and find a doubles match, no problem
      4). Just anecdotal but I feel less strain on my elbow at the end of a Pickleball game. Fewer overhands, more dinking, less “drives”

  • @imateapot51
    @imateapot51 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    In my area, when 4 tennis courts need to be resurfaced, they become two tennis courts and 4 pickleball courts. My town and all the towns around me. I guess that is going on everywhere.

  • @renanlopes9400
    @renanlopes9400 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    People just want to combine exercise with having fun and socializing... So the lower skill required to play helps this happen.
    Same applies to beach tennis... It is refreshing to step into the sand after a long day and have fun with your friends and new people you've just met.
    They are great sports for the mental health.
    There is space for everyone.

  • @Hermessio
    @Hermessio 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    I think that the real danger to tennis is Padel. Let's not forget that the main tennis practice zone is Europe and here I have juste NEVER seen a Pickleball court nor met anyone who plays it in several EU countries, while it is clear that Paddle is growing very fast.

    • @acelive7
      @acelive7 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Padel is super boring to many. There is a padel court in my tennis club but no one is ever booking a spot. Padel will not replace tennis and its long term traditions. With players like Alcaraz Federer Nadal Agassi Djokovic how do you expect padel to do that?! Plus padel is only doubles lol. No matter how spectacular you think padel is when the ball gets out of the cage, it will never be as explosive as an Alcaraz-Sinner thriller. I watched padel, got bored quickly, never was even interested in picking up one of their cheap beach ball rackets to try. It might interest a few, but not the masses!

    • @db8458
      @db8458 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@acelive7 Come back in 10 years when Padel is in the olympics and read your dumb comment again.

    • @ItsaMeGo
      @ItsaMeGo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The biggest danger to tennis is tennis

    • @dubbelhelix
      @dubbelhelix 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@acelive7 Padel is extremely popular in Spain! Love watching it and playing.Took it up in my mid 60s!

    • @pedroserpa9625
      @pedroserpa9625 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Padel has also a big ceiling of skill, you can see some Padel players do incredible stuff even tough it's not as "physical" as tennis

  • @toty21
    @toty21 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    It is fascinating to me how this topic is always addressed from the tennis vs pickleball approach.
    As someone who has followed tennis, table tennis, and now pickleball, and enjoy watching and playing all three (granted recreationally), I do not understand why these are not talked about as different sports.
    I have never seen the argument of why tennis is much better than table tennis or vice versa. They are different sports.
    I get it that pickleball tends to overlap with tennis in physical space (converting courts from tennis to pickleball) and in some of its mechanics (drives, slices, overheads, etc), yet they are different sports.
    This becomes especially clear when playing pickleball doubles at a bit of a higher level. Some of the most effective techniques used in doubles resemble table tennis mechanics as much as tennis when playing from the baseline.
    As someone who has followed tennis from the Pete Sampras era, to the great Roger Federer, up to the recent Carlos Alcaraz, and also someone who equally has followed table tennis from the era of the great Jan Ove Waldner to the era of the dragon Ma Long, it is very clear to me while observing pickleball at his highest level that although we are talking about a racquet/paddle sport, it is indeed a different sport, and needs to be respected as such.
    One that requires its own set of skills, critical thinking, mechanics and strategies.
    So I would hope that this feud goes away when people recognize this and respect all these different racquet sports equally.

    • @wildeagle5791
      @wildeagle5791 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well said.

    • @danhogan7156
      @danhogan7156 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You just made the greatest point ever.

    • @whatevergoesforme5129
      @whatevergoesforme5129 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      And I don't know why badminton is not mentioned since it is also a racket sport, and also a different sport. It is also fun to watch but not as popular it seems (since it is not mentioned much). Is it because of the higher net?

    • @harmonizing_spellian
      @harmonizing_spellian 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think it's because badminton is mostly dominant in Asia where it is the most popular racket sport, rather than in Europe or the USA. Actually now that I think about it, I haven't heard much mention in this video about east asia and whether pickleball has a presence there.

    • @ND-9
      @ND-9 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Great points. It is its own entity. Skill wise, mechanics and strategies as you stated. Where I think the rub comes in (and I’m only speaking from my personal experience) is the pickleball players often play on tennis courts. You never have 8 tennis players on a pickleball court. Makes sense. It’s idiotic 😂😂. But having to wait can be frustrating.

  • @andreszambrano5081
    @andreszambrano5081 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Amazing video man, you contextualized the situation really well.
    I have only played tennis once in my life, and it was fun, but you quickly realize how difficult it can be.
    However, I have been watching tennis these last few years, it has become my favourite sport.

  • @neroroseumu3023
    @neroroseumu3023 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I Love Tennis 🎾 more than any other sport... 👍🏻
    Great exercise and more fun 😎... 👍🏻 😃..

  • @philamguambomb
    @philamguambomb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I recently went to Vietnam(Saigon)for 2 weeks business trip.I was blown away how many courts they have, how many players there were and how competitive it was. I played everyday for hours and hours during this business trip😅. $3 for 2-3 hours of play. For anyone to say or think Pickleball is or will not grow you clearly have no idea what you are talking about.

    • @Basilisk2077
      @Basilisk2077 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow, didn’t know they were playing it over in Vietnam.

    • @toms9864
      @toms9864 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The amazing thing about the pickleball growth is that it has been done by word of mouth from people who enjoy playing the sport.

    • @DaiCaThanh71
      @DaiCaThanh71 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Pickleball in Vietnam is mostly a place for working girls meeting their customers😂😂😂. It is unbearably painful watching a pickleball match for me, it is so stoopidđ😂

    • @philamguambomb
      @philamguambomb หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@DaiCaThanh71wtf are you talking about? You definitely are going to the wrong courts😂🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

  • @michaelsheedy
    @michaelsheedy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Why does it have to be tennis vs. pickleball? There is room for both. Enjoy what you like. In fact, tennis is going through a resurgence since the pandemic started. Tennis tournaments are getting record crowds, tennis channel ratings are up, and USTA reports more people playing tennis last few years.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      How about Table Tennis? NOT ping pong (casual garage term) It is quite professional at the pro level. Watch top rated pro player videos. At my 50's and 60's it gave me a new reborn raquet sport life where I could not cover the vast expance of a Tennis court area. Competitive now with players half my age. Robert at 69.

  • @tomr1056
    @tomr1056 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I've played Tennis 3 or 4 times a week for the last 4 years and it's great.. but I'm 54, 5'7" and weigh about 60kg...Size and strength in Tennis means a lot... all round, and even more in the serve. Whilst in Spain last winter, for 3 months, I played Padel 3 times a week and it's such good fun and easier, more natural I would say, in terms of just hitting the ball, you don't use as much energy, which could be good or bad depending on what you want or can do, and size and strength are less important... there is no overhand serve for a start.
    After 4 or 5 lessons and my brain getting the picture of where a ball struck by my opponent may be bouncing...after getting the basics into me.. I was definitely better at Padel than Tennis, and that is always fun, to be good at something. Padel is easier, and easier on the body (Tennis can be brutal) and just a bit lighter/more fun in some ways. It also has varied play like Tennis (unlike Pickleball). I'm sure I'll play pickleball too at some point but it doesn't attract me tbh. Somewhat like badminton, the lack of variation and technicality in it means I might get a bit bored after an hours play each time! ...Maybe Tennis and Padel now, and Padel and Pickleball in 10 years! :)

    • @felixperalta5154
      @felixperalta5154 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Beach tennis is much more easier onthe joints. 😊

    • @richardokyou5463
      @richardokyou5463 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Badminton lack of variation?As in what way?

  • @siler22
    @siler22 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Pickeball is fantastic, tennis players or every tennis community should be happy people are choosing sporting activity, if i had any court for tennis i would play it but only court we have is basketball and football court all on one concrete field, so yeah wish a pickeball was "problem" here too

  • @morganpowell94
    @morganpowell94 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    X tennis pro here. Now at 43 I can say pickleball is far from “hype and novelty “. This game is here to stay due to so many reasons. It is spreading like wildfire and not going anywhere.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Ya, but Pickleball is a wussy 'sport' if it's going away or not. The natural transition is from Tennis is to Table Tennis, getting older. (not ping pong) I can't cover the wide Tennis court space area like I could 25 years ago, but in a shortened court area I am still very competitive and quick at age 69 with players half my age at the club level. Pickleball is popular with duffs with poor footwork, follow through fundementals, pudgy, bad knees, middle aged, etc.

    • @toms9864
      @toms9864 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bobmalack481 Remember the famous tennis coach Nicholas Bollettieri? He said that pickleball is more aerobic than tennis.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thats an insane comment, maybe he should go coach Tracy Austin and Aaron Krickstein for the senior circuit. Robert at 69.@@toms9864

  • @nihilus1626
    @nihilus1626 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

    pickleball is just way more engaging and welcoming as a community. You can walk up to most parks and put your paddle up and join most games. Advanced players can play with beginners. You simply cant do the same thing in tennis. You'll almost never see advanced tennis players playing with beginners, the skill gap is just too wide. Pickleball being so easy to play and pick up is what makes it so popular; practically anyone can pick up a paddle and learn the game and become a solid beginner within weeks if not months. Again, you just can't do that in tennis. Tennis takes years to become even intermediate.

    • @CurtPrice
      @CurtPrice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Mostly true. But new pickleball players can't compete with advanced players. That's not happening.

    • @2Thes22
      @2Thes22 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why not just play shuttleboard

  • @gydscutroo9973
    @gydscutroo9973 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    I think the biggest problem here is something that I’m seeing much more broadly throughout our culture. It’s the desire for immediate gratification. I have been playing and working hard at tennis for years, and I never feel like I’m as good as I want to be. It’s really hard to be great. In contrast, I’ve played pickleball a few times and it took me about 5 minutes to be way better than anyone else on the court (and there were quite a few). My point is this: tennis is hard to learn and takes years to be half-decent. Delayed gratification - not immediate gratification - is all that’s possible. So you really have to want it and be willing to work at it consistently over a long period. Pickleball ain’t anything like that. Sorry if others take exception to this, but any non-athletic schmoe can be pretty serviceable at pickleball almost immediately. Maybe that’s a virtue to some, or even many, but, to me, the ultimate level of gratification rewarded to those who tough their way through it is immeasurably higher in tennis than in pickleball. It just is. The process of developing skill - often alone and intensely frustrating - inevitably builds personal discipline, self-esteem, and confidence that translates directly into many important things in life. It’s far more meaningful than a social happy hour of next-level ping-pong. Just ask any concert pianist or other accomplished virtuoso in pretty much any highly skill-based activity. Perhaps that’s too serious a take on this topic for those just lookin’ for some light fun, but drawing out the differences between the two activities is, after all, precisely the point of the video. In the end, we get what we give.
    And not fer nothin’, … but the actual sensation/feeling of striking a hard, annoyingly noisy wiffle-type pickleball well can’t come anywhere close to comparing to the sensation/feeling of skillfully but effortlessly moving through the pleasing pop of a tennis ball.

    • @sethlichtenstein4442
      @sethlichtenstein4442 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You're probably right, but I just don't get it. Getting good (or at least competent) at something hard is sort of the point of a hobby and where actual satisfaction comes from. I get pickleball being a better game for people who don't play it regularly, but if you're spending multiple hours every week why wouldn't you want to go for the game where you have endless room for improvement?

    • @CurtPrice
      @CurtPrice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That's a horribly generic comment that kind of misses the mark. Yes, entry skill level for pickleball is low... which is a big part of the draw for many. And you can learn to play fairly quick if you aren't athletic or not that mobile. But being able to learn how to play quickly is way different than being pretty serviceable or even being good. So with that said... if a new non-athletic player plays against someone who is athletic and mobile and experienced (4.5+), the talent gap is HUGE and the more experienced player is going to dominate.
      Pickleball is very desirable because it's easy to learn and start playing, but let's not act like new, non-athletic players are out there beating experienced 4.5+ players after a day of play. That's not happening anywhere. (I know you didn't say that specifically, but the general vibe was there) To get to an advanced level in pickleball and be considered a "good player" is still going to take a lot of work, and time, and developed skill. Probably years for most. If someone is truly a non-athletic person and isn't overly mobile, chances are they're not going to be a 4.0 player for quite a while... years. And for that to actually happen, they really do need to play a lot, drill a lot, and have an active mindset to improve. And again, that will likely take years.
      I just don't want people to think pickleball is so easy that anyone can go out there and be a very good player almost immediately and compete with experienced players. Let's not get crazy here.

    • @gydscutroo9973
      @gydscutroo9973 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@CurtPrice Very fair points (though “horribly generic” seems a bit harsh and kinda’ misplaced). Candidly, I don’t know first-hand the “high-level player” side of pickleball, or anyone that would count themselves as one of them. What I invariably see around me are people that are either just inartfully playing for some exercise (many of whom gave up on tennis because of level of difficulty), or who are relatively good but (honestly) seem to be taking it way more seriously than it warrants. I guess I’m a snob at some level, but, to me, pickleball - at least for the most part - is kinda’ on a level with shuffleboard (just kinda’) … if you can drink beers and tell jokes and laugh it up while you play it - which I see everywhere - it’s really more a game, not a sport. I never meant to say - or even suggest - that pickleball isn’t an activity that offers limitless opportunity for improvement/skill refinement (I’m sure it does, at some level I’ll probably never really appreciate, … though, to my mind, the same can probably be said about shuffleboard) … or even that it’s unworthy in this regard … only that such opportunity can’t come close to comparing to the one afforded by tennis (think checkers v chess). But, here, I certainly do recognize that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and to each his own.

    • @charlesmuller120
      @charlesmuller120 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I played Tennis for years, and yes, it takes more skill development, and yes, I converted over to pickleball and it was easier to pick up. However, I got schooled by 65 year old men women for a couple weeks before I learned many of the nuances/strategies to become the 4.0 player I currently am. There is so much strategy at higher level play, the intensity of firefights, dinking, drops, drives, atp's, ernies, shake and bakes. You say it took you 5 minutes to become better than anyone on the court. Well, they must have all been beginners. I like tennis, but I LOVE pickleball!I've met more friends through pickleball in the 1 year of regular play than a whole lifetime! It checks all the boxes of the mind/body/soul!

    • @gydscutroo9973
      @gydscutroo9973 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@charlesmuller120. Very honest, respectful and measured. Hard not to hear you.
      I’m gonna’ try to be more open-minded, and maybe even learn what a few of those totally-unfamiliar-to-me pickleball people terms mean. 😅

  • @pjcpjc10017
    @pjcpjc10017 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think that padel has a ceiling on its growth due to the high cost of building the courts while you can put a pickleball court anywhere. In the US you see padel courts in high level athletic facilities like Miami or Chicago not in Newark NJ. Pickleball can be set up anywhere you have open space and from a revenue standpoint it makes sense for a tennis club to convert courts since you can get 4 pickleball courts per tennis court. As far as watching the game, I find pickleball extremely enjoyable to watch. I grew up a huge fan of tennis watching Borg, McEnroe, Connors etc but the game is now just two players pounding away from the baseline which I don't find very interesting. No one seems to play serve and volley in today's game which is what we get in pickleball on almost every play. Maybe it's because I don't watch that much tennis anymore, but it's what I see when I watch.

  • @sandman1347
    @sandman1347 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    With regards to the noise issue, the sound of the ball being struck is quite loud but I don't think it compares to some of the grunts you hear from the likes of Sharapova.

    • @CurtPrice
      @CurtPrice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Give me the "pop" sound of a pickleball over the loud grunts in tennis any day. The absurd grunts on tv make tennis unwatchable.

    • @DanBlake3rd
      @DanBlake3rd 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You can have both now that she plays pickleball!

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Uhh, Sharapova is old news history now. You need to catch up.

  • @TobiasStarling
    @TobiasStarling หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Agreed easy learning curve and almost equalisation of skill makes it very popular. I can play with my mum and feel like there’s a challenge and she can still play and have fun. It so much more accessible. I live near Wimbledon but I can basically never get a tennis court anyway nearby, can get a paddle court nearly anywhere.

  • @db8458
    @db8458 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    I get why Padel is exploding so much lately, Its speed and dynamism makes it incredibly fun to watch and play, accessible for beginners but still with a huge skill ceiling. I think it will dominate way more globally than Pickleball in the long term.

    • @jj9749
      @jj9749 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes. Pickleball is just playing ping pong while standing on the table

    • @DanBlake3rd
      @DanBlake3rd 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I really like playing padel (and paddle and squash too), but the cost of building the courts and then charging club members to recoup the cost is going to put it at a disadvantage to pickleball. I play pickle at a tennis club, and they built a padel court. Pickle is $5 for non members, but padel is $80 / hr for the court. So I suppose correctly, $20 vs $80 per hour, although pickleball is free to members. They haven't announced a club option for padel. I've heard that the club management is gauging popularity. Anyway, in the US, given pickleball's cost advantage for club owners and players alike, padel seems to be going to same road as squash and paddle tennis. That is great games, but only found in exclusive clubs, to be played by those who who can afford it. Pickleball for the masses.

    • @Sentinelll
      @Sentinelll หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@DanBlake3rd I'm in Europe, pickleball doesn't really seem to exist here, but Padel is all the rage, I'm pretty much addicted to it too. It's extremely accessible and a very social sport to play. But it also costs me about 3-6 euro for a full 1.5 hour game. Crazy to me thats it's 80 in us? I don't understand how it can be that much more expensive. It's really a very cheap sport to play here.

  • @MartinJohnZ
    @MartinJohnZ 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    1:45
    What exactly is this chart supposed to mean?
    Top tier is the NFL, American Football league, a sport that is only really, really big in the United States.
    The second tier is the Premier League (English soccer league), MLB (American baseball league) and NBA (American basketball league), and again, both baseball and basketball are only really, really big in the United States.
    Third tier is Bundesliga (German soccer league), La Liga (Spanish soccer league), NHL (ice hockey league), and Champions League (European soccer league).
    Fourth tier is the red and yellow logo on the left (the only logo on this chart that I don't recognize), Serie A (Italian soccer league), Ligue 1 (French soccer league) and MLS (American soccer league).
    Fifth tier is everything related to tennis.
    Looks to me like American sports (that are only really, really big in the United States) are the most lucrative (not meaning the most popular worldwide), followed by European soccer, with international tennis holding a very, very healthy third spot. If anything, it proves that tennis is a huge international sport. Not exactly 'rock bottom', as you're so gloomily stating.

    • @刘励戈
      @刘励戈 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The logo you didn't recognize is Chinese Super League, the top-tier football league in China. This chart is probably using old data because CSL had a big media contract before covid and now it's worth a lot less

  • @bartcasey
    @bartcasey 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thoughtful, well-researched, excellent analysis. Love this content.

  • @ValentinoDagher
    @ValentinoDagher 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Pickleball vs tennis reminds me of the snowboarding vs ski war back in the 70s/80s

  • @johonimo
    @johonimo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am pretty sporty guy and I love watching the big ATP tournaments.
    I have played semi pro basketball, tried football, windsurf, boxing, wrestling swimming for years. My issue with tennis is that it is quite technical so it takes quite a lot of time to get into and actually enjoy it, which is very hard as an adult without so much free time. Padel on the other hand you can just go and play and have fun without having to practice for so long.

  • @Burps___
    @Burps___ หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I hope pickleball continues to boom so my tennis-playing friends and I can get the tennis courts without a wait 🎾

  • @davids2096
    @davids2096 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I'm a new viewer and subscriber! I'm a fan of 🎾 tennis, as well as a few other sports! I participate in a few sports as well, and 🥽 swimming, 🏀 basketball and 🎾 tennis are my favorites!
    I enjoy your content, and I 1st watched your segment on the WTA parity, and found it very interesting, informative and accurate! I am chiming in because you failed to mention racquet 🏸 ball in this segment, and only mentioned 🏓 ping pong briefly! Maybe you can delve into these 2 sports in a future episode! Take care!

  • @evidencebased1
    @evidencebased1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I am 65 years old and my exercise through the years was running and then biking as I got older. I picked up pickleball one year ago and find it easy to learn to play decently and easy on the body. Tennis would be harder on the body and harder to get a foursome together. Growing up, tennis seemed for richer kids (same for golf). Pickleball has all walks of life and different skill levels can have a challenge on the same court (not everyone would agree with that observation though 😅). Finally, almost every town over 10,000 people has some courts where you can show up by yourself, jump right in, and play for an hour or two and satisfy your competitive self, get exercise, and socialize with eight-or-so strangers who will remember your name when you come again.

    • @evidencebased1
      @evidencebased1 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Replying to my own post, I would have to back off on a couple claims a couple months later. 1. Pickleball can still be tough on the body. I experience soreness the next day which is usually better in two days. Maybe I should build up more tolerance. 2. People (myself included) DON’T remember your name 🤪but that is okay.

  • @genin69
    @genin69 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Its true. I live in a very rainy and windy climate. At least 7 or 8 months out of the year tennis suffers. We have ZERO indoor tennis facilities in my country. Zero. Close to me there are 3 indoor padel centres. They are always fully booked. Tennis courts are empty

  • @jeffsaffron5647
    @jeffsaffron5647 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    One of the major intrinsic problems of tennis is the court being too damn big. Tennis court requires more space than many indoor team sports... just so 2 people can play. On top of that courts are pretty much permanent therefor they require a dedicated single purpose venue. It will always be expensive upper class sport.

    • @monica012077
      @monica012077 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      4 can play if it's doubles.

    • @davidaugustine3686
      @davidaugustine3686 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @monica012077 To the point he's making though, from what I've observed, singles tennis is the version that most want to play.
      Whereas in pickleball, the general expectation is that you will play with 4 in a game.

    • @monica012077
      @monica012077 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @davidaugustine3686 You're only allotted one hour of court time with 2 permits. You get 2 with 4 permits. Wait till y'all have to purchase permits to play since pickleball is so popular and the $$ will be needed to maintain the courts.

  • @TheAgaveSpirit
    @TheAgaveSpirit หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As I am writing this post, another 10 tennis courts have just been converted to pickleball.

  • @jow.6605
    @jow.6605 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Tennis is a very hard game to become good at. Pickleball is easier to play and have fun playing, especially as you get older.

  • @davebudge4526
    @davebudge4526 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been a life long amateur athlete and a tennis lover and club player since childhood, this is my honest take. Tennis played well is the most enjoyable of all sports but even to maintain fluent baseline rallies requires a fairly decent skill level ( a solid forehand and backhand, or at least a slice backhand) I've played college level athletes in other sports and it's striking how much they struggle with tennis and crucially how frustrated they become when they struggle to play it well. The serve alone is a complicated atheltic feat and it's a disappointing experience playing someone who can't rally, serve return serve just maintain some tempo and rhythm during play.
    I personally don't care for pickleball but it a completely uncomplicated game by comparison that draws people in with it's ease to get started.
    Tennis also is extremely middle class a tough atheltic kid from a working class background won't naturally find tennis unless their family gives everything to their child's dream, example Novak.

  • @eddiepearce5307
    @eddiepearce5307 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I am old:(. I started as a kid during the late 70s when the tennis BOOM had started. All courts were full at 5pm. After 4 more courts were built, the same. Everyone playing were fair at best. Doubtful in a small town that nobody better than a 3.5 NTRP by todays standards but EVERYONE was playing. Today pickleball is same. Courts being converted into pickle courts and man at a deserted Memphis tennis center told me yesterday, that people call ALL TIME asking if there were pickleball courts. Tennis is DEAD sadly

  • @MHY558
    @MHY558 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I have nothing against them. Good alternatives for people with fitness and injury issues. I just think they should definitely have their own courts. You don't see tennis played on a volley ball court.

  • @JC-nx5pf
    @JC-nx5pf 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    The problem that tennis player have is an invation on our facilities.
    We do not care how much those sports grow, we can even play them...
    Our concern is that is more difficult each day to find a tennis court availabe for TENNIS.

    • @OneAdam12Adam
      @OneAdam12Adam 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah because the pickleball players showed no respect and just INVADED tennis courts preventing tennis players from playing.
      It's outrageous how arrogant these schmucks are.

  • @pickleballer1729
    @pickleballer1729 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tennis is a great traditional sport, but Pickleball is WAY more fun. And though I've never played Padel, it looks incredibly fun. I don't know what Tennis can do about that fact. It's just too fundamental; no organizational change or PR campaign is going to change that reality. BTW, the game was NOT named after the dog, a claim that is debunked in the very test you show about its origins. Read the paragraph after that (3:09) about the "Pickle boat". That's where the name comes from.
    About viewing: I played Soccer in College and for several years after that, was an avid cyclist for most of my life, competed in Judo for about 8 years, and played Golf for several years, and have played and watched quite a few Tennis matches as well. Since becoming a Pickleball fan, I have watched more Pickleball than I have all those sports combined, and I find it MUCH more entertaining than any of them. However, most of my Pickleball buddies don't share my enthusiasm for watching. Different strokes for different folks I guess. Great video. Thanks.

  • @RichardMaratea
    @RichardMaratea 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I am 74 years old. I play at a high level. Where would I be if I played Tennis at this age? Even if I could even play competitively. It's the age!!

  • @kirstenshindler7767
    @kirstenshindler7767 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I play both..pickleball is fast food dopamine fix… it is nice socially and very accessible to others.. it may even be good introduction into tennis for young kids… but pickleball is no way close to the game of tennis. Tennis requires much more athleticism and movement on court.. it allows for more strategy and mental toughness and grit.. pickleball game is over in a flash.

  • @stevenlancestoll629
    @stevenlancestoll629 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    What happened to Raquet ball? In the 80's this was really popular.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Players got tired into running into each other and that stupid kill shot hit 1 inch above the floor gives no one a chance of returning, AND hitting off 4 wall serfaces, glad to see it go.

  • @tomtaylor4944
    @tomtaylor4944 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Think the main issue with Tennis at the moment is that there is a major financial barrier for someone to play or get coaching sessions to get better. I've played for over 18 years and it takes a long time, with lots of patience, and a lot of money spent on coaching to get to a position where you are able to engage competitively. I've recently picked up Pickleball and it's really fun to be focused more on gameplay tactics rather than technique over and over.

  • @smackleo
    @smackleo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    between tennis and pickleball, i do feel a greater sense of accomplishment when i find a good groove and dominate in tennis- and in general i do feel like i get a great workout playing tennis (singles tennis). all that being said, the way tennis culture is and the deceptive difficulty to even be able to start playing, makes it difficult to grow. in tennis culture, you show up with a friend (or friends for doubles) to play a few sets which can take hours and everyone else is doing the same, meaning you need a lot of courts for everyone who wants to play... not to mention the difficulty of finding enough players who are on similar skill and athleticism levels to make it fun. pickleball doesn't have those problems. it's much easier to get into and it is possible for it to be fun even if skill and athleticism levels are different. my whole family can go out and play pickleball together after work and we can have fun, if we tried the same with tennis, it would be frustrating bc the young kids or older parents would never be able to run and match the power of someone in their prime... which makes it difficult to complete a single enjoyable point for all parties involved. also, pickleball also has more of a culture akin to pickup basketball at the park. you can show up with friends or by yourself at the local park and be able to play a few games within an hour because of how quickly people can rotate on and off the court... this seldom happens with tennis at the park. the only way tennis can match this community and quick rotation system is to maybe switch to only being able to play super-tiebreakers when people are waiting for a court... but that does change way tennis is normally played and strategized in the normal set play.

  • @jimmychafins
    @jimmychafins 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    All the tennis courts around me are empty…the pickleball courts are packed…it’s happening

  • @themoreyouknqw3555
    @themoreyouknqw3555 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Pickleball has taken over in Australia..
    My club has converted all their courts with an overlay of a PB courts..
    The tennis centre makes more money cos they hire more courts..
    I've become a fan actually..

  • @anubis520
    @anubis520 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Yea, this video about covers it. Tennis does feel like it has an unwelcoming environment (whether it's true or not). Pickleball is just an easy game you can pick up and play and feel comfortable even if you are out of shape. Not to mention a lot of tennis courts have lines drawn on them for pickleball so it is a low cost to set up a new court.

    • @casa0123
      @casa0123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Additional lines should be banned , go and play on the street itsgot lines also 👐🏻👎👎👎👎👎🏿

  • @DRM0087
    @DRM0087 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My issue with PB is it’s taking over actual tennis courts and even some outdoor roller hockey rinks over here in SoCal and it’s so frustrating bc at least in my experience, PB ppl tend to have the biggest ego and complain the most abt court time

    • @ExampleName-j2n
      @ExampleName-j2n 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yeah as an aussie this just seems like a lazy person's tennis which we dont really care about except for the Aussie open.

  • @gevsvid
    @gevsvid 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    Only the US has a pickleball problem. It's hard to find in any other place.

    • @tritone11
      @tritone11 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Unfortunately nonsense.in Spain it‘s hard to find Tennis courts because of Padel.

    • @acelive7
      @acelive7 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@tritone11 Spain has tons of tennis courts and tons of academies training kids to become the Sergi Brugera, and tons of Spanish pros came out like Nadal Alcaraz Moya just to name a few. Spain is not threatened by pickleball or padel lol

    • @jachorube
      @jachorube 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ​@@acelive7that is just wrong. Check the tendency in federated players. Padel has already surpassed tennis, and clubs are replacing tennis courts and teachers for padel, never the other way. There are way more people playing padel than tennis in Spain, at all levels

    • @gevsvid
      @gevsvid 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I can't speak about Spain's padel traction. However in Latam you can always spot a tennis player, also playing padel. And people playing padel as an introduction to tennis. So I guess both sports can be complementary. The problem with pickleball is that it usually takes the same courts, infrastructure/resources from existing tennis clubs.

    • @casicoartes
      @casicoartes 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah, where I live Beach tennis took over more quickly

  • @timetheory84
    @timetheory84 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I can barely even watch Baseball anymore because I don't have cable and don't pay extra for streaming online. I haven't watched a tennis match in so long I almost forgot the rules. And I grew up playing in tournaments against adults. Was a natural talent at it. I'm starting to get back into it and noticed these extra lines on the courts. It's annoying, I hate pickle ball. Or I just hate that Tennis is ultimately more rewarding in every way and kids want to play pickle ball instead. At least make separate courts for it.

  • @Floriano881
    @Floriano881 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Footwork and eye to hand coordination in pickleball would help in building fundamentals for begginer tennis players..

    • @SeamusONo
      @SeamusONo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Heck of a lot easier for a child to swing too.
      If tennis is so superior, when that child is big enough, they'll naturally want to graduate to tennis.
      Or not.

  • @fermanzini
    @fermanzini 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Same happened with paddle in Argentina and Spain in the 90s but they did not defeat tenis. Simple to play for newcomers but you reach to your top level easily and points are boring.

  • @kennymcd
    @kennymcd 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +61

    I was never into tennis, but getting into pickleball actually got me watching more pro tennis.

    • @davidpickford.
      @davidpickford. 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      So you didn't like tennis but was willing to play a more boring sport similar to tennis? Lol

    • @davidvang09
      @davidvang09 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      ​@@davidpickford.So what? They enjoy themselves. You're too busy worrying about your dying sport 😂

    • @heth91
      @heth91 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @davidpickford. Just because you find it more boring doesnt mean that other people think the same way 😉

    • @HSHAZAM
      @HSHAZAM 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@davidpickford. It's not for you to decide which sport is boring

    • @intrusivethought
      @intrusivethought 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HSHAZAM The sport is borring. Its not up to you to decide what conclusions other people come to.

  • @matthewnapoleon125
    @matthewnapoleon125 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Our 5 local tennis courts rarely got used. Since pickleball came along the courts have pleanty of action now. Don't see the problem. More people are getting exercise and having fun.

  • @scottmudrak2455
    @scottmudrak2455 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Pickleball appears easier than tennis, it's a lot of fun and challenging. Before pickleball I would see multiple tennis courts empty unused and that has nothing to do with pickleball.

  • @DodensLammungar
    @DodensLammungar 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    To give this episode some perspective, as Sweden is mentioned a couple of times.
    Very very very few people as of now know what Pickleball is in Sweden.
    With this kind of videos you might be able to sell it to Swedish hopeful entrepreneurs but many will probably take a step back and reflect on the Swedish ”Padel death” that occurs right now. A lot of Padel halls are closing down all over Sweden because there’s no money in it anymore, since people lost interest quite quickly after the Covid-19 years. The tennis clubs allover Sweden that almost fell for all the sale-speech and planned to rebuild two or three courts into padel courts are now _very_ happy they didn’t.
    Also an interesting detail related to this video that is not mentioned is that Zlatans Padel hall and many other in Stockholm are more expensive to play in than to play on most regular sthlm tennis courts.
    Just want to update some viewers on a few details that’s worth mentioning in relation to Sweden and to this video :)

  • @teemorgan9282
    @teemorgan9282 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    As an investor, I'd fully support pickleball. As a tennis player, pickleball is for lame or elderly people and an insult to the talent required to excel in tennis.

    • @NATES84
      @NATES84 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Which is why tennis is being ditched by all but 5% of these "elites" that will not pay the bills long.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      'An invester'..how 'bout that, a 'desk guy' acknowledging the reality. Robert at 69 who now plays competitive Table Tennis.

    • @daniela9171
      @daniela9171 หลายเดือนก่อน

      An insult? Whose insulted here

  • @linnemeyerhere
    @linnemeyerhere 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tennis is a great sport and must remain as it always has been, I found Paddle Tennis and immediately found my new love, played and scored the same as tennis the only major differences was the court dimensions, a restraint line called the bucket line that no player can cross until the service receiver has hit their return, then there is the single underhand service. This tennis variant played with a de-pressurized tennis ball and a smaller paddle. FAST, hard and net driven a better kinetic ball strike isn't to be found in Tennis maybe Golf could rival! Pickle is huge but lacks any kinetic feel but as they say the masses are the _sses and like all paddle sports they play easier, learn faster and play longer into late ages then Tennis!

  • @xtasLOCO
    @xtasLOCO 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Pickleball is much more of a social sport. I haven't really seen tennis pick up games like pickleball..

    • @theakountant8444
      @theakountant8444 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      This is really what it boils down to. Millions of people began playing pickleball by simply going to open courts and jumping into a game with people they didn't know. How many people were introduced to tennis this way?

    • @CurtPrice
      @CurtPrice 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Exactly. Imagine showing up to play tennis and asking to jump in a game with some tennis players. They'd look at you like you had 2 heads. It's not an inclusive community at all. Every game is isolated. It's just a completely different environment. It's not as friendly, it's not inclusive, it's not as social... it's just not as much fun.
      And tennis blames pickleball for their problems. LOL. Tennis IS the problem. Pickleball is just the solution.

    • @jonlucente4709
      @jonlucente4709 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ⁠@@CurtPriceexactly.

  • @jhwheuer
    @jhwheuer 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Sorry, the main reason is the court size per paying customer. Squash courts are smaller but more expensive. That’s what caused it’s downfall, IMHO, in Germany in the nineties. You need to get butts on bar/restaurant seats to make money in an average sized facility. Just for reference, I played as a club player in the German minor league in the nineties and ran two clubs in a decade.

  • @macross8767
    @macross8767 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Companies are just throwing money at pickleball right now in hopes that it’s the next big thing but it has a huge problem.. it’s not very exciting to watch. It is pretty fun to play though. I’ve got no problem with it and will readily play tennis or pickleball.

    • @ryanyi6753
      @ryanyi6753 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No one watches Tennis nowadays either. Check out the viewership of Tennis game vs other popular sports like NFL and MLB.

  • @Tigonx7
    @Tigonx7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I used to enjoy playing and watching tennis, but since I tried Padel in 2018, I never went back. Now, the only sport I play and watch is Padel.
    Tennis is often referred to as “the rich peoples sport”, so I left it for them to enjoy

  • @sombojoe
    @sombojoe 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Put it this way. I saw this video and got excited because I wanted to hear about PICKLEBALL! :)

  • @NATES84
    @NATES84 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Older tennis players cannot keep up for two long sets of tennis especially singles .Too many injuries in tennis overuse. 10-15 yrs ago my tennis club had 25-28 50 plus playing every open friday ,now we ger 5-7 ! at least 5-10 have gone to only pickleball , many others died and injured and cannot do tennis.
    The noise it generates make two tennis courts that are used maybe once a week off limits with the threat of lawsuits if pickleball comes in (quieter ball? possible )

  • @kiritosintern
    @kiritosintern 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Tennis > Table Tennis > Padel/Pickleball

  • @lindam2884
    @lindam2884 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Pickleball is appealing because its easy to find partners your level, and its easy enough for beginners to learn and enjoy right away.

  • @tommylarrys
    @tommylarrys 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    In Italy there’s the same issue happening with padel. We’re very lucky to have Sinner and a general exploit because the sport would be played less in favour of padel.

    • @EmanueleCeron
      @EmanueleCeron 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yes, I'm italian and padel had a big exploit.
      I'm happy because in this moment in Italy there are many famous players who attract new tennis players.

  • @juanvaldez7633
    @juanvaldez7633 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As a former competitive tennis player now in my more advanced years, I tried out pickleball but didn't take to it. Don't like the aesthetics, don't like the 'kitchen' aspect, etc. Never even heard of padel until watching this video, but as a former racquetball player also, I think that may be a little more to my liking. Whatever in the world happened to racquetball, anyways?

  • @maxdawson2948
    @maxdawson2948 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    We have ten full tennis courts every day where I play. Its popularity seems to be just fine.

    • @NATES84
      @NATES84 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Where is that ?Spain?

    • @maxdawson2948
      @maxdawson2948 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@NATES84 Midwest us

  • @zmxvbj
    @zmxvbj 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I agree with Andy Murray, these sports can exist side by side and may be a gateway to each other. The learning curve for pickleball is much much lower than tennis so that anybody can play. This introduction to racket sports can be a gateway to tennis to those players that are more technical and competitive. I come from a tennis background and fell in love with pickleball, but I realize that it is not as physically and technically demanding. However, I personally know 2 pickleball players who are quite good (4.5+) who never played tennis before who are now learning tennis because it is more technical and demanding.

  • @jpesicka492
    @jpesicka492 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    For me and my dad who is much older, Pickleball is like 75% speed of Tennis and a smaller court makes it easier for me to still play with him. He watches all the Grand Slams and most of the Tennis tournaments on TV, never watches Pickleball.

    • @mattpalmer152
      @mattpalmer152 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You and your dad need a new type of freudian therapy. Because you guys are extra ***

  • @jesusrivera3942
    @jesusrivera3942 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    in Mexico City there's almost no places no play tennis, due to this bullcrep called Padel :@