logo
Pickleball too easy? There's a new racquet sport bouncing onto the courts of L.A.

Pickleball too easy? There's a new racquet sport bouncing onto the courts of L.A.

Yahoo27-03-2025

Coach Jon Guerra teaches technique during drills at his beginner padel clinic at the Padel Courts in Hollywood.
(Chiara Alexa / For The Times)
The ball pops up in the air and soars into an arc, drifting against the blue sky, then comes down with a plunk on the glass wall behind Jon Guerra. Out.
'Your swing is too hard,' Guerra says to me.
Guerra, who goes by Coach Jon, is sending lobs across the net toward me and three other students at the Padel Courts, a hideaway just off Sunset Boulevard in Little Armenia. We're learning padel, a racquet sport played with foam paddle rackets on a tennis-like court surrounded by tempered glass walls. And it's proving to be quite a challenge.
Advertisement
'Don't go toward the ball, let it bounce to you,' Guerra says after a ball boomerangs off the wall toward me and I miss it completely.
Coach Jon Guerra, the head coach at the Padel Courts.
(Chiara Alexa / For The Times)
A sport that began in the 1960s in Mexico, padel has already exploded across Europe and South America, and fans are hopeful it will do the same in the U.S. It's been steadily gaining traction in Los Angeles, with new padel centers cropping up around the county: There's Padel Up at Westfield Century City, Pura Padel L.A. in Sherman Oaks and at the courts at L.A. Galaxy Park in Carson. This summer, the Los Angeles Padel Club, co-founded by L.A. real estate developer Steve Shpilsky, will open a padel clubhouse in a restored Hollywood-era mansion in Culver City. Later, the King of Padel, an indoor padel and pickleball club, will join San Pedro's West Harbor development.
The Padel Courts, where I'm trying the sport, resembles a Thumbelina-sized country club. It has a cozy vibe — there's a fireplace in the clubhouse and a record player with Tyler, the Creator's 'Igor' album on it, alongside a wall full of trypophobia-inducing fiberglass-and-foam padel rackets.
Advertisement
Read more: Move over, pickleball: In this wealthy L.A. neighborhood, another game reigns supreme
Guerra, who reached a ranking of No. 13 in the U.S. in 2023, started the day's clinic by explaining the difference between padel and tennis — the obvious one being the playable walls surrounding the court. You can either volley, play off a bounce or let the ball ricochet off tempered glass walls before you hit it. If your return hits the wall first, it's out.
The fuzzy ball looks like a tennis ball but has a slightly lower PSI, meaning it's a little flatter and less bouncy. Serves are underhanded and aces are slow, intricately placed shots that bounce at an angle off the side glass. It's a game of mistakes, Guerra tells his students — you're waiting on your opponent to misfire a ball in a way that allows you to make a shot they can't return.
Padel balls have a slightly lower PSI than a tennis ball, meaning they're a little flatter and less bouncy.
(Chiara Alexa / For The Times)
And there's an important rule: Padel is played doubles. Always. Much of the game involves strategizing in tandem.
Advertisement
'Move up with your partner,' says Guerra as he sends balls toward the front of the net for us to volley. 'Partners move in to volley together and back to the baseline together.'
I played tennis competitively in high school — not very well, but I held my own in some matches. But on this day I am struggling to hit any good shots whatsoever. The game feels a little slower, more reliant on careful lobs than power; it reminds me a little of billiards, though squash is probably padel's closest relative.
Guerra tells me to twist my body into a closed position that feels counterintuitive to the open stroke of a tennis swing. Padel swings are short and precise — and extremely awkward. I know I look stupid as I smack a return into the net.
'I have friends who are older people in the country club where they start playing that have tennis experience that find it hard to learn after you are bonded to your ideas,' Guerra later tells me in the clubhouse after the clinic. 'It all depends on how much you are able to forget.'
Padel began in Acapulco, Mexico, in 1969.
(Chiara Alexa / For The Times)
The sport began in 1969 when Mexican businessman Enrique Corcuera modified the squash court at his holiday home in Acapulco. He initially named the game 'Paddle Corcuera.'
Advertisement
In 1974, Corcuera's friend Alfonso de Hohenlohe-Langenburg, a Spanish prince and hotelier who dated Ava Gardner and Kim Novak, imported the game to his tony Marbella Club Hotel in Marbella, Spain. It quickly spread as a country club sport due to its foursome nature — many liken its companionship quality to golf. Today, Spain has more than 16,000 padel courts, making it the second most-played sport in the country behind soccer.
Despite its country club roots, padel is competitive. It's more dynamic than pickleball, and the curve to learn it is a little steeper. By the time I finally punch a backhand onto the other side, it's been a few tries. I do feel triumphant. The next volley pongs off my racket and lands just in front of the base of the glass wall, making it difficult for my opponent to return.
'Perfect shot,' says Guerra. I am overjoyed. My teammate and I touch rackets to celebrate as if we're Agustin Tapia and Arturo Coello (the co-No. 1 players in the world).
Read more: I completed my years-long quest to play at every L.A. tennis court. These 10 stand out
Advertisement
Padel is still most popular in Spain, where Guerra is from, as well as Argentina, but it's surging in the States. There were fewer than 20 courts in the U.S. in 2019 — now there are nearly 500. Houston and Miami are hotbeds. Floridian rapper Daddy Yankee opened the 10by20 Padel Club (courts are 10 meters wide by 20 meters long) and owns a pro team, the Orlando Florida Goats.
L.A. is a little slower on the uptake but that is sure to change as padel's popularity grows. There's a professional team called the Los Angeles Beat in the Pro Padel League (PPL), the American circuit, that is mostly made up of internationally ranked Spanish and Argentine players. And the Los Angeles Padel Club's new Culver City location will be the home of the first youth development academy on the West Coast.
'Los Angeles has the perfect ingredients to stake its claim as one of the most important cities in the world for padel with its strong tennis and racquet sports heritage, ideal weather, international community and emphasis on wellness and social interactions,' says Christ Ishoo, co-owner of Los Angeles Beat, which also will be housed at the Los Angeles Padel Club clubhouse.
Still, the idea that padel will follow the path of pickleball is questionable. The sport doesn't have the same accessibility as tennis and pickleball, which can be played for free on the many municipal courts in the city. Time at the Padel Courts is $100 per hour (which isn't too bad when split four ways) and should be reserved about a week in advance.
(Chiara Alexa / For The Times)
Yet Guerra sees great promise. 'I feel with pickleball, it's like when you see an entrepreneur that becomes a billionaire,' he says. 'You don't see the 20 years that he had to struggle to hustle.'
Advertisement
There was chatter that padel might become a competitive sport for the 2028 L.A. Olympics, but that effort fell short (it will be a demonstration sport). Yet there's still hope that it will be accepted for the 2032 Summer Olympics in Brisbane, Australia.
Most importantly, padel is challenging and fun. During a demo, my partner and I are making a few nice shots and getting into a groove. I return a ricochet in a way that surprises even me. I work up a sweat. And I feel like I've made a little progress.
Maybe an old tennis player can learn some new padel tricks. Guerra points his racquet at me and looks pleased. 'The earlier you lose fear and you forget, and you are less aware of how you look, the earlier you stop feeling stupid, the better,' he says.
Sign up for The Wild newsletter to get weekly insider tips on the best of our beaches, trails, parks, deserts, forests and mountains.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hulu's ‘Predator: Killer Of Killers' Lands Predator's Best Critic Score Ever
Hulu's ‘Predator: Killer Of Killers' Lands Predator's Best Critic Score Ever

Forbes

time31 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Hulu's ‘Predator: Killer Of Killers' Lands Predator's Best Critic Score Ever

Predator: Killer of Killers Hulu seems to have developed a hobby in making amazing Predator movies that don't go anywhere near theaters. First it was Prey in 2022, now it's Predator: Killer of Killers from the same director, Dan Trachtenberg. This time around, Killer of Killers is animated, but that has unleashed the series to make an exceptional entry without spending $200 million on VFX. Rather, it's just gorgeously animated and written, and guess what? It's reviewed better than every single other movie in the series. Here's the full list, and how it stacks up: Predator Killer of Killers I mean, I know the Alien vs. Predator movies weren't good, but wow, those scores. I am also firmly okay with Trachtenberg's Killer of Killers and Prey being the top two rated Predator movies as I mean, they are the two best movie. I know it's hard to say that over the classic original, but I am willing to overlook nostalgia to examine which are literally better movies. And those two are. Killer of Killers follows three warriors from different periods in history set against different Predator variants, using the tools of their time to take them on before a larger-scale conflict that will merge all the stories. The fight scenes are absolutely insane, and the mini-stories that lead up to the end are fantastic. My only complaint is that I wish the last act was a bit longer. Prey I did like Prey better, personally. Killer of Killers very much does feel like that film in the sense that it's going through history and imagining different Predator battles past its modern day setting. But both are excellent. There is further good news here. Trachtenberg is also directing Predator: Badlands, which is out November 7, 2025, and will star Elle Fanning and is set on the Predators' homeworld. Fanning will play a Weyland-Yutani android, crossing over to the Alien universe yet again. It also will feature Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi as Dek, an outcast from his species and a good guy rather than bad. Clearly, this is Trachtenberg's lane. It's hard to imagine that Badlands will not deliver, given what we've seen here. Go and watch Predator: Killer of Killers on Hulu right now if you disagree. Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram. Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.

Sam Altman's Brief Ouster at OpenAI Is Getting the Movie Treatment
Sam Altman's Brief Ouster at OpenAI Is Getting the Movie Treatment

Gizmodo

time3 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

Sam Altman's Brief Ouster at OpenAI Is Getting the Movie Treatment

At some point, Hollywood decided the world of tech was a nice little well for drama, but it can probably just throw out the latest material that it's happened into rather than serving it to the rest of us. According to The Hollywood Reporter, we're going to be getting a movie based on the five-day period that Sam Altman was ousted and ultimately reinstated as the head of OpenAI. The film, which will reportedly be titled 'Artificial,' already has a pretty star-studded call sheet, though everything is still in the rumor period, it seems. Luca Guadagnino, director of Call Me by Your Name and Challengers, is reportedly in talks to direct the picture. Andrew Garfield is currently the favorite to play Altman, which is very much in his wheelhouse after his performance as Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin in The Social Network. Monica Barbaro, who played Joan Baez in A Complete Unknown, is reportedly in talks to play former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, and Anora breakout star Yura Borisov is up for company co-founder and Altman antagonist Ilya Sutskever. Comedy writer Simon Rich, who wrote for 'Saturday Night Live' and created 'Miracle Workers,' is reportedly responsible for the screenplay. One of the problems for Hollywood repeatedly going after these real-life Big Tech dramas is that the industries are now so entangled. This OpenAI flick, for instance, is handled by Amazon MGM Studios. Amazon is about $8 billion deep into investments into OpenAI rival Anthropic. So like, do they have the motivation to trash OpenAI in this thing? (Not that external pressure to do so is necessary, but still.) And sure, the drama at OpenAI is compelling. It's not too often that the founder of one of the hottest companies around gets kicked out by the board because they no longer trust him, only for him to be reinstated five days later. And, as stories like the Wall Street Journal's accounting of the events highlight, there is no shortage of intrigue and backstabbing along the way that will probably play well on the big screen. But ugh is the list of these Silicon Valley dramas getting long, and it doesn't feel like it's really accomplishing much other than pumping the egos of the subjects. The Social Network remains probably the best work the genre has produced (save for HBO's 'Silicon Valley,' which hasn't aged a day since it came to an end), and even that failed to really capture just how greedy and unethical these people would turn out. (Though, give Aaron Sorkin this, he probably was ahead of the curve on calling out the bro-ish-ness of Zuckerberg that is now on display when he pops up on Joe Rogan's podcast.) The rest of the offerings have their charms, to be sure. 'The Dropout,' 'WeCrashed,' and 'Super Pumped' all manage to pull out some great performances and are built around compelling stories. But none of them really sufficiently get at the greed, corruption, and frankly, the disdain for everyone from regulators to actual, regular people who get harmed while these people amass their fortunes. Maybe that's because the stories typically follow the central figures—the Altmans and Zuckerbergs and Holmeses of the world—from their seats in the C-suites, and they are so rarely confronted with reality there.

NEWS OF THE WEEK: Blake Lively pulling 'emotional distress' claims from Justin Baldoni lawsuit
NEWS OF THE WEEK: Blake Lively pulling 'emotional distress' claims from Justin Baldoni lawsuit

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NEWS OF THE WEEK: Blake Lively pulling 'emotional distress' claims from Justin Baldoni lawsuit

In December, the actress sued co-star Baldoni for alleged sexual harassment on the set of the drama It Ends with Us, which he also directed. Lively also claimed the 41-year-old orchestrated a smear campaign against her around the film's release in August 2024. Baldoni, who has denied the allegations, filed a countersuit for alleged defamation and civil extortion against Lively, her husband Ryan Reynolds, and others. On Monday, editors at Variety reported Lively, 37, is seeking to withdraw her claims of "intentional infliction of emotional distress" and "negligent infliction of emotional distress" from her lawsuit.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store