Alongside the classic club competition, there is a large group of padel players in the Netherlands who are active in a way that's harder to count: through meet-and-play, open sessions and casual pickup matches. The KNLTB/EY study shows that more than 333,000 players use this kind of flexible format.
They don't appear in any membership register. They don't play a fixed competition night. But they are there, week after week, on their own schedule.
Who are these players?
A large share of padel players play fewer than five times a year. They're enthusiastic about the sport, but not willing or able to commit to a fixed structure. A demanding job, a family, an irregular schedule. The sport fits into their lives, but a set competition slot doesn't always.
That's not a problem with the sport, it's simply a fact about the audience. And it's a fact that clubs can either do something with, or ignore. The clubs that act on it find that it pays off.
What flexible formats mean for clubs
A ladder competition is a great fit for these players. Not because it's more casual, but because it's competitive on their own terms. Teams play whenever it suits them, within the rules of the competition. There's a ranking, there's something at stake, but there's no mandatory Tuesday.
Clubs that offer a ladder alongside their fixed group competition reach a broader audience. Players who wouldn't sign up for a season-long competition sometimes do sign up for this. They get involved, play more often than they otherwise would have, and over time become familiar faces.
The risk of doing nothing
Clubs without a flexible offering miss out on players who are willing but can't fit into the existing structure. Those players end up playing somewhere else, or stop altogether. They're not lost to the sport, but they are lost to the club.
That's no reason to scrap the fixed competition. It has its own value, especially for the core of committed members. But it is a reason to look at whether there's room for a layer alongside it, for people with different needs.
Getting started in practice
Setting up a ladder competition doesn't have to be complicated. A list of teams, rules about who can challenge whom, and a way to keep track of results. It works even with a small number of participants and grows on its own once players start enjoying it.
What makes it harder is keeping track. Who has already challenged whom? What's the current standing? Keeping it by hand works up to a certain size. After that you need something that does it for you, so the club spends its time on the sport instead of the admin.
