What Is Pickleball?

02/01/2018


Photo courtesy of USA Pickleball Association (USAPA)

Registration for the inaugural AAU National Indoor Pickleball Championships opened today, so we’re taking the opportunity to provide the scoop on all things pickleball.

Take a gander at the 41 sports programs the AAU offers each year.
 
Volleyball… Basketball… Baseball… Inline Hockey… Table Tennis… Pickleball…
 
Wait, what? Pickleball. What an odd name for a sport, huh?
 
There is a ball involved – a plastic ball that looks very similar to a wiffle ball – yet, sadly, there are no pickles in play. Really makes you wonder why it’s called pickleball in the first place.
 
Registration for the inaugural AAU National Indoor Pickleball Championships opened today, so we’re taking the opportunity to provide the scoop on all things pickleball, including the origins of the sport’s unique name:
 
History of the Game
After playing golf one Saturday during the Summer 1965, Joel Pritchard, congressman from Washington State, and Bill Bell, a successful businessman, returned to Pritchard’s home on Bainbridge Island, Wash. To find their families sitting around with nothing to do. The property had an old badminton court, but Pritchard and Bell couldn’t find all the equipment.

They improvised.

The two friends started playing with ping-pong paddles and a perforated plastic ball. At first, they placed the net at badminton height of 60 inches and volleyed the ball over the net. But they soon discovered the ball bounced well on the asphalt surface and lowered the net to 36 inches. The follow weekend, Barney McCallum was introduced to the game at Pritchard’s home. Soon, the three men had created rules, relying heavily on badminton and keeping in mind the original purpose: to provide a game the whole family could play together.

In 1972, a corporation was formed to protect the creation of the new sport.
 
How to Play
Pickleball is a paddle sport that combines several elements of tennis, badminton and ping-pong. It is played on a smaller, badminton-sized court with a modified tennis net. The paddle used is smaller than a tennis racket but larger than a ping-pong paddle, and the plastic ball used looks very similar to a wiffle ball.

Check out the video below to watch the game in action.
 
 
Growth of Pickleball
The sport of pickleball, believe it or not, has exploded in popularity. The number of places to play in North America has more than doubled since 2010, now totaling more than 4,000 locations on the USA Pickleball’s Places to Play map. The growth of the sport is attributed to its popularity within community centers, physical education classes, YMCA facilities and retirement communities.

In June 2016, the AAU announced a partnership with the USA Pickleball Assocation that landed an educational exhibition of the sport at the AAU Junior Olympic Games in Detroit, Mich.

The AAU will host its first indoor and outdoor national championship event this year. The AAU National Indoor Pickleball Championships will be held at Orlando Sports Center on Aug. 15-19 (registration is open now!) and the AAU National Outdoor Pickleball Championships will take place in Punta Gorda, Fla. in November.

Why is it Called Pickleball?
The question you’ve all been waiting for – why it is called pickleball? Truthfully, no one really knows for sure. Joan Pritchard, Joel’s wife, has stated that the game was so named because it reminded her “of the Pickle Boat crew where oarsmen were chosen from the leftovers of other boats.”

Others have stated that the name resulted from the Pritchard family dog, Pickles. Rumors suggest that Pickles would often chase after balls they used to play the game.
Ultimately, nobody really knows. Your guess is as good as ours.

For more information, visit www.aaupickleball.org.