The popular game with the goofy name
Created one
Sunday afternoon in 1965 on Bainbridge Island, Washington, by then
State Representative Joel Pritchard, pickleball is now played in all 50
states – and has nothing to do with pickles.
Springfield
resident Jack Handy loves to play pickleball, and so do 140 of his
closest friends in the Springfield Pickleball Club who play in Iles Park
on the largest dedicated outdoor facility in the Midwest. November
through March they move indoors and keep playing. Yeah it’s popular.
“People
like it for different reasons,” says Handy, 63 years young, who plays
at least six times a week. “It can be social or ultra-competitive,
players like moving around and getting exercise, and you can compete in
local, regional, national, even international tournaments. Members range
in age from 15 to 81. About half our club members are seniors,” he
adds. But all ages, men and women, parents, kids and grandparents can
and do play together.
Mike
and Barb DiDonato of Springfield, their daughter, Rachel Tinsley, and
13-yearold grandson, Nace, of St. Louis play together as a family and
competitively in tournaments. “It’s something fun to do together that’s
active. My mom and dad have always been active and that’s what we do
together,” says Rachel.
Here’s
how it works. Two, three, or four people with oversized wooden ping
pong paddles hit a softball-sized wiffle ball over a net 34 to 36 inches
high on badmintonsize concrete courts until one side wins 11 points.
“Think ping pong on steroids,” says Handy. “The court is one-third the
size of a tennis court, so there’s a lot less running, it’s not as fast
as tennis, and you cover less territory. It’s more quick reaction and
strategy than power and fast running.”
Handy first discovered pickleball several years ago when he was in a
group that played badminton at the YMCA. That year, the Senior Olympics
added pickleball to the lineup and asked Handy’s group to play. “We
thought it sounded goofy but said we’d come out and try it,” Handy says.
“It was fun, we played more, the group grew and, by spring of 2012, the
Springfield Park District had approved building eight courts for public
play in Iles Park.
Since
then, the Springfield Pickleball Club has established a small
membership fee for unlimited play that covers court maintenance and
helped purchase court lighting. And they host a USAPAsanctioned
tournament every summer.
Michelle
Cheffy, at 81 the most senior member of the group, has played at least
three times a week since 1993. “It’s fun, and it’s exercise,” she says.
“The people are very nice, very friendly.” She helps with snacks
at the tournaments and will play in the Senior Olympics this fall.
“Last year I was paired with a tennis player. We won a gold medal by
default – there was no one else in our bracket.”
There
were 160 pickleball players competing in the Senior Olympics last fall,
says Handy. It may have been the most players of any sport.
Not surprising. According to the USAPA Pickleball website, http://www.usapa.org,
“Pickleball is exploding in popularity. The number of places to play
has nearly doubled since 2010. There are now well over 2,000 locations
on the USAPA’s Places to Play map. The spread of the sport is attributed
to its popularity within community centers, PE classes, YMCA facilities
and retirement communities.”
That same site lists significant benchmarks in the sport roughly every 10 years:
creation of a family game in 1965, first tournament in 1976, formal
organization of the sport through the USA Pickleball Association in
1984, play in all 50 states by 1990; and growth from 39 places to play
in 2003 to more than 2,000 today.
In
July, the Springfield Pickleball Club hosted the Scheels Capital City
Pickleball Classic that was nothing if not flexible. Drawing players
from across the region, including the women’s national champion,
Stephanie Lane, the morning opened with a downpour and strong storm
system moving across the radar. Handy quickly moved the first rounds to
the indoor courts at the Nelson Center, then back to Iles Park when the
weather cleared. Staying in touch by cellphone and Facebook, the
tournament leaders, scorers, announcers and players enjoyed another
great event.
That
camaraderie characterizes pickleball across the country. “People see
each other in tournaments and make lasting friendships. It’s like a
circuit,” says Handy, who has even vacationed with pickleball friends.
To
give it a try, stop by and pick up a paddle. “People are welcome to
come and play with us and join the club if they want,” Handy says. For
schedule and contact information, and lots of photos of friends and fun,
visit the Springfield Pickleball Club’s Facebook page.
But
what about that name? One story is that the Pritchards’ cocker spaniel,
Pickles, fetched the game ball and hid it in the bushes, so they just
named the game after the dog. Another story attributes the name to Joan
Pritchard: “The combination of different sports reminded me of the
pickle boat in crew where oarsmen were chosen from the leftovers of
other boats.” Either, neither, or both may be true, according to the
USAPA. It’s all part of the game’s great, goofy charm.
DiAnne
Crown of Springfield is a syndicated feature writer with enough racket
sports experience to watch from the stands with the best.