I want to start a pickleball club in my neighborhood
Let's make that real. First, what IS this club? Not logistics yet. The identity. What's the vibe you're going for, and who's it for?
Super casual. Not competitive at all. I'm thinking people in their late 20s to 40s who just want to get outside on Sunday mornings, play some games, grab coffee after. Social, not serious.
So: social-first, recreational, Sunday morning ritual. 25-40 crowd, community over competition. That's a clear identity. Do you have a name in mind, or is that still wide open?
No name yet honestly. Can you help me think of something? I want it to feel fun and approachable, not like some official sports league.
Sure, a few directions you could go. Something that leans into the neighborhood: 'Hillcrest Morning Picklers.' Something that nods to the post-game hangout: 'Dink & Drip' or 'Rally & Roast.' Or something deliberately casual: 'Sunday Smash Club.' What feels right?
Hillcrest Morning Picklers. That's it. Feels local, feels fun, doesn't take itself too seriously.
Hillcrest Morning Picklers. A casual Sunday-morning pickleball crew for 25-40 year-olds in the neighborhood. Social energy, not tournament energy. That's your founding identity.
✓ A founding identity for the club
Now that we know what this is, where can you actually play? Do you know of any courts nearby?
There are courts at Hillcrest Park I think. I've seen people playing there but I have no idea if you can reserve them or if it's just a free-for-all.
Let me look into that for you.
Good news. Hillcrest Park has four pickleball courts, and you can reserve them online through Parks & Rec. $10 an hour per court. Looks like they support recurring reservations too, which is exactly what you'd need for a weekly thing.
Oh nice, that's way easier than I expected. Let me check Sundays at 9am...
Wide open. Just booked the next 4 Sundays. Done.
You now have a confirmed location with recurring access. Not hypothetical. Booked and paid for. That's real.
And since the post-game coffee hangout is part of the identity, you'll want a go-to spot nearby.
Dark Horse is 5 minutes from the courts and has a big outdoor patio — perfect for a sweaty post-game crew.
Oh I love Dark Horse! That's literally a 5 minute walk. Perfect.
✓ A playable court location with recurring access
Identity and courts are locked. But a club isn't real until people show up. Right now it's just you with a reservation. We need 8-12 people who'll actually commit to the first month. Where are you starting? Do you know anyone who'd be into this?
I have maybe 3 friends who'd probably come. But that's not really a club, that's just us playing pickleball.
Right, 3 friends is a hangout, not a club. Let's build this out together. I'm setting up a coaching session. Five concrete steps to get you from 'a few maybes' to 'founding crew confirmed.'
Post in 3 local community channels
Done when: At least 5 people express interest
Alright, I posted in the neighborhood Facebook group, Nextdoor, and the local subreddit. Kept it casual, just said what it is, when it is, and that beginners are welcome.
Smart to lead with 'beginners welcome,' removes the biggest barrier. How's the response looking?
6 people responded in the first day. Two from Facebook, three from Nextdoor, one from Reddit. A couple said they've been wanting to try pickleball but didn't want to show up alone to a random court.
That's exactly the pain point you're solving. These people were already looking for permission to show up. You just gave it to them. That's 6 interested plus your 3 friends, 9 potential players. Time to get them on a court.
Run the first casual session
Done when: 3+ people show up and play
First session was yesterday. 4 people came. Two from the Facebook group, one neighbor who saw the Nextdoor post, and one of my friends.
How'd it go? What was the energy like?
Honestly way better than I expected. We played for about 90 minutes. One guy brought his own paddles and was showing the beginners how to serve. People were laughing. Nobody wanted to leave.
Oh one thing though — only 2 of us had paddles. Everyone else was sharing. Should I buy some sets for the club?
Definitely. Shared gear removes the biggest barrier for newcomers. Let me find some beginner-friendly options.
The Uteeqe set is your best bet for a casual club — 4 paddles and 6 balls for $36. Grab two and you're covered for 8 players. Under $75 total.
Now back to what matters. That first session was the inflection point. You went from 'I have an idea' to 'a thing that happened.' People played, they enjoyed it, they don't want to stop. How does that feel?
Really good. Like, weirdly good. Everyone asked when the next one is. It felt... real.
Because it is real. You didn't just plan a club, you ran a session and people came back asking for more. Now let's make sure the momentum holds.
Create a group chat and lock in the next 3 sessions
Done when: Group chat exists with 6+ members, next 3 dates confirmed
Made a WhatsApp group. Added everyone who came plus two people who said they wanted to join next time. Posted the next 3 Sunday dates and sent calendar invites.
How many in the group chat now?
8 people in a group chat with 3 dates locked in. That's not a hypothetical club anymore, that's a group of people with a shared commitment. The question now is: who sticks?
Run 2 more sessions and see who returns
Done when: 5-6 people have attended multiple sessions
Session 2 just happened. 6 people showed up, 3 were repeats from week 1. But I'm starting to wonder, how do I tell who's actually in vs. who's just trying it out?
You don't have to guess. Commitment reveals itself through repetition. After session 3, look at who's come more than once, who's bringing friends, who's asking 'what do you need help with?' Those are your core. One more session and the picture will be clear.
Identify 2-3 co-organizers
Done when: 1-on-1 conversations with potential co-leaders, at least 2 confirmed
Once your founding crew is locked in, there are a few more things that'll need to exist. Making the club findable so it grows beyond your personal network, building a rhythm that sustains itself without you doing everything, and eventually recognizing when this thing is genuinely thriving on its own. But that's ahead of us. Right now, run session 3. See who shows up again.
Got it. I'll report back after Sunday.