Author Archives: ReSkills Pickleball

Good Player vs. Certified Coach: Which One Is Right for You?

As pickleball continues to grow rapidly in Malaysia, we’ve noticed something interesting happening across courts and clubs. More and more players are actively looking for coaching. Some want to improve their fundamentals, some want to compete in tournaments, and others simply want to understand the game better.

Naturally, this leads to an important question that many players ask us:

Should I learn from a good player, or should I look for a certified coach?

At first glance, both options seem valid. A strong player clearly knows how to play the game well, while a certified coach brings structured knowledge and teaching methodology. But when it comes to improving your own game, the answer is not always as straightforward as it seems.

The Appeal of Learning From a Good Player

It’s very common for players to approach someone who performs well on the court and ask for lessons. After all, if someone can consistently win matches, execute advanced shots, and perform well in tournaments, it feels natural to assume they must know how to teach the game too.

Learning from a good player can certainly have its advantages. These players often have deep practical experience and can share insights about match strategies, shot selection, and real-game situations. Watching how they move, how they react under pressure, and how they construct points can be extremely valuable for players who already understand the basics.

However, playing well and teaching well are not always the same skill. Some excellent players rely heavily on instinct or years of personal experience, which can make it difficult for them to explain techniques clearly to beginners. They may know what works for them personally, but translating that knowledge into structured guidance for others requires a different set of abilities.

What a Certified Coach Brings to the Court

Certified coaches, on the other hand, go through formal training programs that focus not only on playing skills but also on how to teach the sport effectively. Certification programs usually cover areas such as teaching methodology, skill progression, communication techniques, and error correction.

A certified coach typically understands how to break down complex movements into smaller steps that players can learn gradually. They know how to identify common mistakes and provide drills that help correct them. More importantly, they are trained to build a long-term development pathway, ensuring that players learn the right habits early on.

For beginners especially, this structure can make a huge difference. Learning the correct fundamentals from the start often prevents bad habits that may take years to fix later.

The Real Difference: Playing Skill vs Teaching Skill

One of the biggest misconceptions in sports is the belief that the best players automatically make the best coaches. In reality, the skill of performing and the skill of teaching are two different disciplines.

A professional athlete may perform at an elite level, but coaching requires patience, communication, observation, and the ability to adapt lessons to different learning styles. Some of the world’s best coaches were not necessarily the top players during their competitive years, yet they excel because they understand how to develop others.

This is why many coaching systems around the world emphasize education and certification — to ensure that coaches are equipped with both technical knowledge and teaching ability.

So Which One Is Better?

The honest answer is that both can be valuable, depending on what you need as a player.

Certified Coach Can Provides

Stronger foundation, Proper Grip, Footwork,
Court Positioning, Shot Mechanics

More Suitable for Beginner

High Level Player Can Provides

Advanced strategies, Match experience,
Tactical insights

More Suitable for Intermediate / Advance Player

In many cases, the best learning environment combines both perspectives — structured coaching for skill development, and exposure to strong players for competitive growth.

How to Identify the Right Coach for You

Instead of focusing solely on titles or rankings, players should consider several practical factors when choosing a coach. A good coach should communicate clearly, demonstrate patience, and be able to explain techniques in ways that are easy to understand. Their training sessions should feel organized rather than random, and they should show genuine interest in helping players improve over time.

It’s also important to observe how the coach interacts with different students. A coach who can adjust their teaching approach for beginners, intermediate players, and competitive athletes is often a sign of strong coaching ability.


As the pickleball community in Malaysia continues to grow, coaching will play an increasingly important role in shaping the next generation of players. Whether learning from experienced players or certified coaches, what truly matters is finding guidance that helps you improve while enjoying the journey.

At the end of the day, the goal of coaching is not just to create better shots, but to create better understanding of the game.

And when players understand the game better, the entire pickleball community grows stronger together.

SEA Games 2027 Is Coming to Malaysia — Can Pickleball Make the List?

With the SEA Games 2027 scheduled to take place in Malaysia next September, excitement is already building across the national sports ecosystem. Hosting the Games is a rare opportunity — not just to showcase elite athletes, but to spotlight emerging sports that reflect the region’s evolving sporting culture.

Pickleball, without question, has become one of the fastest-growing sports in Malaysia. Courts are filling up, clubs are multiplying, tournaments are happening regularly, and participation spans all ages.

But growth alone does not guarantee inclusion in a multi-sport event like the SEA Games.

So the real question is not “Is pickleball popular enough?”
The real question is: Have we done enough to make pickleball ready?

From our perspective as a pickleball club on the ground, 2026 is the make-or-break year.


How Sports Get Considered for the SEA Games

For any sport to be included in the SEA Games, popularity is only one factor. Organizers and regional councils look closely at:

Presence Across Multiple SEA Countries

A Recognized Governing Body

Standardized Rules and Officiating

Competitive Depth

Athlete Pathways and National Representation

Event Readiness and Professionalism

This means that if pickleball wants a place on the SEA Games stage, the entire ecosystem must step up, together.


Growth Is Not Enough — Structure Is the Real Requirement

Pickleball’s rise in Malaysia has been impressive, but international multi-sport events evaluate more than just player numbers. What matters is whether the sport demonstrates organizational maturity, consistent rules enforcement, standardized competition formats, and a clear governance framework.

If pickleball is to be considered seriously for the SEA Games, 2026 must be the year where the sport proves it is more than a trend. There must be visible alignment between clubs, organizers, referees, and national bodies, showing that pickleball can be managed professionally at scale.

Without this foundation, even the fastest-growing sport risks being seen as premature for inclusion.

National Alignment Must Come First

One of the most important steps in 2026 is national coordination. Associations, clubs, and organizers must move in the same direction instead of operating independently. Fragmentation weakens credibility, especially when international committees assess readiness.

This means standardizing competition rules, referee guidelines, ranking systems, and athlete eligibility criteria. It also means presenting a united front when communicating with regional and international sporting bodies. A sport cannot be introduced to the SEA Games if it appears divided or inconsistent at home.

Pickleball needs to show that Malaysia is capable of governing the sport cohesively — not just hosting events frequently.


Refereeing and Competition Standards Must Improve Significantly

At the SEA Games level, officiating errors are not minor inconveniences — they are unacceptable risks. One incorrect call, one uncalled fault, or one poorly managed match can damage the credibility of the sport instantly.

In 2026, we must:

  • Build referee depth, not just player depth
  • Train and certify referees
  • Eliminate untrained “point guards” in major events
  • Standardize officiating protocols

If pickleball hopes to enter the SEA Games, it must demonstrate that every point is earned fairly and every match is managed professionally.


Athlete Development Must Match International Expectations

Another key requirement is athlete readiness. SEA Games participation is not about participation trophies — it is about fielding athletes who can compete credibly at a regional level.

This means 2026 must focus heavily on structured training pathways, national-level competitions, and performance benchmarks. Players selected to represent the country must emerge from systems that

Emphasise Discipline

Fitness

Mental Strength

Tactical Understanding

Not Just Frequent Match Play!!

Without a clear pathway from grassroots to elite level, the sport will struggle to justify its inclusion on such a stage.


Professional Presentation Is Part of the Evaluation

Beyond gameplay, presentation matters. Event organization, athlete conduct, media coverage, branding, and spectator experience all contribute to how a sport is perceived by decision-makers.

Pickleball events in 2026 should reflect the standards expected at international competitions. This includes proper scheduling, clear communication, respectful sportsmanship, and professional handling of disputes. These details may seem small, but collectively, they signal whether a sport is ready for the global stage.

A Shared Responsibility for a National Opportunity

The opportunity to host the SEA Games does not come often. If pickleball wants a seat at that table, everyone in the ecosystem must take responsibility.

Players must commit to professionalism and continuous improvement. Clubs must prioritize development and collaboration over ego-driven growth. Organizers must raise standards rather than chase volume. Referees must be trained and respected. Associations must lead with clarity and unity. Sponsors must support long-term vision instead of short-term exposure.

No single group can carry this alone.

2026 Is the Deciding Year

Pickleball’s growth in Malaysia has been remarkable — but inclusion in the SEA Games requires more than momentum. It requires maturity, structure, and collective discipline.

If 2026 becomes a year of alignment, professionalism, and intentional development, pickleball has a real chance to stand alongside established sports on the SEA Games stage. If not, the opportunity may pass — not because the sport wasn’t exciting enough, but because it wasn’t ready.

The question is no longer “Can pickleball be included?”
The real question is: Are we willing to do what it takes — together — to make it happen?

After the Boom: What We Must Do in 2026 to Grow Pickleball Sustainably

There’s no denying it — 2025 was a breakthrough year for pickleball in Malaysia.

Banks, business owners, brands, startups, and individuals all entered the scene. New courts opened, clubs multiplied, tournaments happened almost every weekend, and pickleball became one of the most talked-about sports in the country.

But as 2025 comes to an end, we’ve started hearing a familiar concern from players, organizers, and even sponsors:

Is the sport really declining?
Or are we simply entering the next phase of growth — one that demands more structure, maturity, and responsibility?

As a pickleball club operating on the ground, we believe the latter is true.
And how we act in 2026 will determine whether pickleball continues to grow healthily, or slowly burns itself out.


Why Pickleball Feels Like It’s Slowing Down

The perceived slowdown isn’t caused by lack of interest — it’s caused by oversupply without alignment.

Some common factors we’ve observed:

Too Many Clubs & Hosts Competing Instead Of Collaborating

Overlapping Tournaments Every Weekend

Inconsistent Event Quality

Player Fatigue From Constant Competitions

Sponsors Struggling To See Clear ROI

Lack Of Long-term Player Development Pathways

In simple terms:

GROWTH HAPPENED FASTER THAN GOVERNANCE.

This is not unusual. Many fast-growing sports face this exact phase; some survive it, while others don’t.


What We SHOULD DO in 2026

Shift From Quantity to Quality

Not every weekend has to be filled with tournaments. Instead of organizing more events, the priority should be on delivering fewer but better-organized competitions with clear event tiers such as social, intermediate, competitive, and elite levels. When tournaments are supported by proper refereeing, thoughtful scheduling, and a positive player experience, they build trust within the community. And when players trust the events they join, long-term participation follows naturally.

Strengthen Club Collaboration

Clubs should not operate in isolation. When clubs work together instead of independently, the entire pickleball ecosystem becomes stronger and more resilient. This can take many practical forms, such as organizing partner-club leagues, running shared coaching clinics, developing joint junior programs, and pooling resources for referees and volunteers. By supporting one another when help is needed, clubs not only reduce operational strain but also create a more connected and sustainable environment for the sport to grow.

Develop Players, Not Just Events

A healthy sport grows from the bottom up. This means investing in proper development rather than focusing only on competitions. More structured drilling sessions, clear training pathways, and a well-defined progression from beginner to competitive levels are essential. Junior and youth programs must be nurtured early, alongside continuous coach education and certification to ensure quality guidance. When players feel themselves improving, they stay motivated and engaged — because when development is ignored, players eventually stop competing, and over time, stop playing altogether.

Professionalize Officiating and Operations

This can no longer be treated as optional. If pickleball in Malaysia is to progress in 2026, there must be a stronger focus on professionalizing tournament operations. This includes engaging properly trained referees instead of relying on untrained “point guards,” implementing standardized tournament procedures, enforcing rules consistently, and ensuring volunteers receive proper briefings before events begin. A sport simply cannot reach world-class standards when its systems remain amateur, no matter how fast it grows.

Educate Sponsors and Players

Sponsorship misunderstandings often hurt both brands and players, and addressing this is crucial for the sport’s long-term stability. Clear sponsorship guidelines, proper education on expectations and deliverables, and transparent communication before any agreement is signed can prevent unnecessary conflicts. More importantly, the focus should shift toward building long-term partnerships rather than one-off deals. When sponsorships are managed healthily and sustainably, they provide the financial backbone that allows pickleball to continue growing in a structured and professional manner.


What We SHOULD NOT DO In 2026

Oversaturate the Calendar

Too many events dilute:

  • player attendance
  • sponsor value
  • volunteer quality

More is not always better.

Undercut Each Other on Pricing

Cheap entry fees + cheap referees = poor experience.

Race-to-the-bottom pricing damages the sport’s perceived value.

Ignore Player Experience

If players feel:

  • unfairly treated
  • confused by rules
  • disrespected
  • exhausted

They leave quietly — and they rarely come back.

Build Ego-Driven Projects

Sports ecosystems collapse when driven by:

  • personal branding over community benefit
  • short-term hype over long-term planning
  • competition between organizers instead of collaboration

Pickleball is bigger than any individual or single club.


Many sports around the world have experienced rapid growth, only to stagnate or decline when proper structure failed to keep up with popularity. Common issues such as fragmented leadership, weak governance, over-commercialization without development, inconsistent officiating, and the absence of clear talent pathways eventually eroded trust among players and sponsors alike. Pickleball has the opportunity to learn from these examples instead of repeating them. To avoid the same fate, every stakeholder in the ecosystem must play their part — players committing to discipline and sportsmanship, clubs collaborating rather than competing, organizers prioritizing quality and fairness, referees being properly trained and respected, sponsors taking a long-term view, and governing bodies providing guidance and alignment. Only when each role is fulfilled responsibly can the sport continue to grow in a healthy, sustainable way.

2026 Is a Defining Year

Pickleball in Malaysia is not dying.
It is EVOLVING.

But evolution requires intention. If we consciously choose collaboration over competition, quality over quantity, development over hype, and structure over shortcuts, we create an environment where pickleball can mature sustainably rather than burn out quickly. These choices may require more patience and effort, but they are exactly what will allow the sport to grow stronger, more credible, and better prepared for long-term success.

The future of pickleball doesn’t depend on how fast it grew in 2025.
It depends on how wisely we guide it next.

And as a community, we believe we’re ready to do it better together.

How Weak Refereeing Is Ruining Players’ Tournament Experience in Malaysia

As pickleball continues to grow rapidly across Malaysia, tournaments are becoming more frequent, competitive, and important for players who are chasing rankings, experience, and personal milestones.
But with this growth comes a pressing issue that many players whisper about — and some openly complain about — yet few organizers address properly:

The Lack Of Trained And Professional Referees.

We’ve seen it happen again and again:
Tournaments hire “point guards” — individuals who simply manage the scoreboard but lack proper rule knowledge just because it is cheaper and easier.

But this short-term solution is creating long-term damage to the player experience, tournament integrity, and the overall reputation of Malaysia’s pickleball industry.

As a club that plays, trains, hosts events, and listens to the ground sentiment, we feel it’s time to speak about this openly — not to blame anyone, but to encourage the entire ecosystem to grow in the right direction.


When “Point Guards” Replace Referees, Players Pay the Price

A proper referee isn’t just someone who calls out scores.

When tournaments use untrained individuals who don’t understand these responsibilities, the match experience suffers.

And sometimes, the consequences are far bigger than a single bad call — they can change the entire outcome of a match or even the entire tournament.


How a Single Point Can Change Everything

Pickleball is a sport of momentum. One point isn’t just one point — it can:

Imagine this situation:

A tight match at 10–10.
One wrong line call.
One uncalled foot fault.
One illegal serve that goes unnoticed.

That single mistake can decide:

  • who tops the group
  • who enters semifinals
  • who gets knocked out
  • who qualifies for future events
  • how players perceive the fairness of the tournament

And players remember these moments. They talk about them. They lose trust in events that repeat the same issues.


A Sample Case Study: A Situation Many Players Experienced

During a tournament, two intermediate-level teams were battling for a spot in the semifinals. Both teams were tied in wins and point differential — meaning the winner of their match would advance into Final.

During a crucial rally at 9–9, one player executed an erne attempt. His foot clearly crossed over the imaginary extension of the NVZ line — a textbook fault.

The “point guard,” who had never officiated pickleball before, simply wasn’t aware of this rule. They allowed the point to continue, and it resulted in a winning shot.

The opponent protested politely, explaining the rule, but the point guard insisted,

“I don’t know about that rule… point stands.”

That single point shifted everything:

  • The disadvantaged team lost 11–9
  • They lost in the semifinals
  • Their entire tournament ended because of a rule that should have been enforced

This wasn’t an isolated case.
We hear versions of this story every single week.


Unprofessional refereeing affects more than the scoreboard. It damages:

  • Player Experience
    Players feel disappointed, frustrated, and disrespected.
  • Tournament Credibility
    Players avoid returning to events that feel unfair.
  • Community Trust
    When bad calls become normal, trust erodes.
  • Player Development
    Athletes never truly know where they stand if their matches are influenced by officiating errors.
  • Malaysia’s Global Reputation
    Foreign players may hesitate to join Malaysian events if stories of poor officiating spread.

We cannot grow the sport if players keep losing confidence in the competitive ecosystem.

Tournament Organizers: Costs vs. Standards

We understand that organizers face challenges:

  • budget constraints
  • manpower difficulty
  • tight schedules
  • high demand for back-to-back tournaments

But cutting corners on referee quality is not the place to save money.

A sport cannot become professional
if its officiating remains amateur.

Even if players forgive once or twice, repeated poor officiating becomes a stain on the industry — something that could have been avoided with proper planning, training, and collaboration with qualified bodies.

What Can We Do to Improve? (Real Solutions)

To grow the Malaysian pickleball ecosystem, we believe tournaments should:

  • Engage trained referees
    Even a small team of certified refs per event makes a huge difference.
  • Provide basic training for volunteers
    A 60–90 minute pre-event briefing can prevent major mistakes.
  • Focus on quality, not quantity
    Fewer courts with better refereeing is better than too many courts with no control.
  • Partner with professional referee bodies
    IPTPA referee workshops, MPA certification sessions, or collaboration with experienced referees can elevate standards quickly.
  • Educate players on rules
    Players who understand the rules reduce conflicts and improve fairness.

If we fix officiating, we fix half the negativity that surrounds local tournaments.

To Reach World-Class Standards, Every Point Must Be Earned Fairly

Pickleball in Malaysia is growing beautifully — but growth must be responsible.

If we want to bring Malaysian pickleball to world-class standards,
we must minimize:

  • every unnecessary mistake
  • every overlooked fault
  • every poor line call
  • every unclear rule
  • every factor that unfairly affects a player’s performance

A single point can determine a champion.
A single mistake can change a journey.
A single bad experience can push players away.

Let’s raise our standards together — organizers, clubs, players, referees, and volunteers.
Because the more we respect the game, the faster we can lift Malaysian pickleball to the global stage it deserves.

Pickleball Sponsorships – Expectation & Perspective (Sponsor vs Player)

Sponsorships are becoming more common in the Malaysian pickleball scene as brands begin to recognize the sport’s potential — and players, in turn, hope to receive support that allows them to compete, grow, and represent their communities.

But while sponsorships look glamorous from the outside, the reality is more complex.
There are expectations, responsibilities, and commitments from both sides — the sponsor and the sponsored athlete.

As a pickleball club that has worked closely with brands and players, we’ve seen both perspectives, the misunderstandings, and the challenges that happen when expectations aren’t aligned.

This blog aims to provide a clearer picture of what sponsorship really means — and how both parties can build healthier, longer-lasting partnerships.


Two Perspectives, Two Realities: Sponsor vs. Player

What Sponsors Expect

Brands sponsor athletes for a reason — visibility, value, and alignment.

A sponsor often looks at:

  • Brand exposure (jersey logos, social media mentions, event visibility)
  • Professional behaviour (sportsmanship, discipline, positive public image)
  • Consistency (active playing schedule, attendance at events, steady social posting)
  • Long-term growth potential (not just performance, but influence and character)
  • Brand loyalty (avoiding competitor brands, being consistent with messaging)

To a sponsor, an athlete is not just a player — they become a representative of the brand.

Sponsors want athletes who uplift the sport, stay humble, connect with the community, and embody the image the brand stands for.

What Sponsored Players Expect

Players, on the other hand, see sponsorship as support, especially in a growing sport where costs can quickly add up.

Players usually expect:

  • Financial or equipment support
  • Reduced cost burden for tournaments, travels, or gear
  • A sense of being valued and recognized
  • Opportunities to grow through brand events, training, or networking
  • Clear communication on what the brand wants in return
  • Respect for their playing journey (not all improvements happen overnight)

Most players want a sponsor who believes in them — not only when they win, but also when they’re still learning and growing.


Sponsor vs. Player: Clear Comparison

CategoriesWhat Sponsors Focus OnWhat Players Focus On
Main ObjectiveBrand visibility & representationSkill growth & career support
Value PerceptionROI, engagement, professionalismStability, recognition, opportunity
Performance ExpectationConsistent presence in tournaments & contentRealistic support regardless of wins/losses
CommitmentWearing brand gear, promoting products, brand loyaltyTraining hard, showing progress, representing honestly
Risk ConcernAthlete switching to competitor brands or bad behaviorSponsor making unfair demands or unclear terms
Communication StyleClear deliverables & timelinesOpen, supportive, flexible partnership

Both sides want success — but they define success differently. Understanding these differences is the first step toward better partnerships.


Guidelines Before Signing a Sponsorship Agreement

Whether you’re a sponsor or a player, entering a sponsorship without clarity can lead to misunderstandings. Here are guidelines both parties should follow before shaking hands.

Guidelines for Sponsors

  1. Define your purpose clearly
    Are you supporting skill development? Building brand awareness? Expanding into the sports market?
  2. Choose players based on character, not just medals
    A polite, consistent, community-driven player brings more long-term value.
  3. Set realistic deliverables
    Number of posts, appearances, tournaments — be reasonable.
  4. Provide clarity in writing
    Support amount, duration, expectations, product usage rules.
  5. Avoid restricting their growth too much
    Allow players freedom to evolve while keeping core agreements intact.

Guidelines for Players

  1. Know your value — beyond performance
    Your behaviour, consistency, and attitude matter as much as winning.
  2. Understand the commitment
    Sponsorship is not “free gear” — it’s a professional relationship.
  3. Be loyal to the brand
    Mixing competitor products or showing inconsistent support damages trust.
  4. Be transparent about your schedule and availability
    Tell sponsors your tournament plans, content limits, or personal commitments.
  5. Ask questions before saying yes
    What will I receive? What do I need to deliver? How often? In what form?

How to Maintain a Healthy Sponsorship Relationship

A sponsorship works best when both sides grow together. Here’s how sponsors and players can maintain a long, positive partnership:

1. Communicate openly and frequently

Avoid assumptions. Share updates, changes, concerns, or new opportunities.

2. Respect each other’s expectations

  • Sponsors should avoid over-demanding.
  • Players should avoid taking support for granted.

3. Be consistent

  • Players: keep improving, stay active, maintain professionalism.
  • Sponsors: fulfill promises and provide timely support.

4. Stay loyal

Loyalty builds trust — trust builds long-term partnership.

5. Show support both ways

  • Sponsors should attend matches when possible, repost content, and celebrate athlete wins.
  • Players should highlight the sponsor naturally, not forcefully.

6. Grow together

Explore:

  • Brand events
  • Player clinics
  • Community activities
  • Social collaborations

A sponsorship is strongest when both sides contribute to the sport’s growth.


Sponsorship is More Than a Deal — It’s a Partnership

In the pickleball industry, sponsorships shouldn’t feel transactional.
They should feel like two parties supporting each other’s journey.

Sponsors invest because they believe in the athlete.
Athletes commit because they believe in the brand.

When expectations are aligned, communication is open, and respect goes both ways — sponsorships don’t just benefit two parties; they uplift the entire pickleball community.

Let’s continue building partnerships that are healthy, meaningful, and beneficial for the long-term development of pickleball in Malaysia.

Drills, Social Game, or Competitive Game — Which One Helps You Improve More?

As pickleball players, we all want to play better — sharper shots, faster reactions, smarter strategies. But here’s the million-ringgit question every player eventually faces: What’s the best way to improve? Should I spend more time drilling? Join more social games? Or sign up for every competitive match I can find?

From our experience as a club that trains, plays, and competes together, the answer isn’t as simple as “one is better than the other.” Each has its own purpose — and when used together in the right balance, that’s where true improvement happens.

Let’s break it down:

If you want to sharpen your techniques — whether it’s your third shot drop, dinks, volleys, or resets — drilling is where real progress begins.

Drills are structured and focused. You get to isolate one skill and repeat it until it becomes muscle memory. It’s not about winning or losing points — it’s about building consistency and confidence.

When you drill regularly, you start noticing small improvements: fewer unforced errors, better ball placement, and smoother footwork. It’s also the best place to experiment with new techniques without the pressure of a game score.

There is a very good word by our club coach:

That’s what drilling does for your game.

Social games are the heart of every pickleball community. You laugh, you experiment, and sometimes you accidentally invent new shots (which might or might not work ). But more importantly, you develop game sense — how to position yourself, anticipate opponents, and react under semi-real pressure.

When you play with friends or within a club’s social setting, you’re free to test what you’ve learned in drills without the intensity of competition. Plus, social games help you build rhythm, confidence, and — let’s be honest — friendships that keep you coming back to the court.

Social play might not replace drilling, but it gives players the freedom to explore their creativity — something every great player needs.

Competition brings pressure — and pressure reveals your true level.

Tournaments and competitive matches are where you test everything you’ve learned in drilling and social play. You’ll learn to handle nerves, adjust under pressure, and make quick decisions when every point matters.

Yes, it’s intense — but it’s also where mental growth happens. Win or lose, you’ll walk away with lessons no training can teach.

Just remember: competition isn’t about proving you’re better than others — it’s about measuring how far you’ve come.


So… Which One Helps You Improve More?

The real answer: All of them — when balanced correctly.

  • Drilling sharpens your skills.
  • Social games strengthen your adaptability.
  • Competitive games test your mindset and composure.

It’s like building a triangle — if one side is missing, your growth becomes unstable.

Our advice?

  • Drill weekly — even if it’s just 30 minutes before social play.
  • Join social sessions often to keep the game fun and fluid.
  • Enter tournaments occasionally to push your limits and gain experience.

When you mix all three, you’ll start to see your performance jump — not just in technique, but in confidence, strategy, and love for the sport.


At ReSkills Pickleball club, we’ve seen players grow fastest when they combine discipline with enjoyment. Improvement isn’t just about more court hours — it’s about how you spend them.

So the next time you pick up your paddle, ask yourself:
Am I training, playing, or testing myself today?
If you’re doing a bit of all three — you’re already on the right path.

Let’s keep learning, playing, and growing — together. 💪🏓

What Every Social Club Can Do to Strengthen Malaysia’s Pickleball Scene

As a pickleball club, we’ve witnessed firsthand how fast this sport is growing in Malaysia. From friendly games at neighbourhood courts to official tournaments that attract players from across the country, the energy is undeniable. But for our pickleball scene to truly thrive — sustainably and inclusively — every club, big or small, plays a vital role.

Here are some things we believe every social club can do to help grow Malaysia’s pickleball industry together 👇


1. Create a Welcoming Community, Not Just a Court

Growth doesn’t start with equipment — it starts with people. A good club culture encourages newcomers to try the game without fear of being judged. Whether it’s offering “beginner-friendly” sessions, assigning mentors, or celebrating small wins, creating that safe and fun environment keeps players coming back — and inviting friends along.

Pickleball Friends

2. Collaborate, Don’t Compete

While healthy competition is part of sports, building the pickleball ecosystem requires teamwork off the court. Clubs can support each other through friendly matches, inter-club leagues, and shared events. When one club grows, it sparks interest that benefits the entire community. After all, we’re not rivals — we’re partners building the same movement.

3. Support Official Pathways & Registrations

To make pickleball recognized as an official sport in Malaysia, it’s crucial that players register with the Malaysia Pickleball Association (MPA). As clubs, we can educate our members about why these registrations matter — from player ranking systems to national representation — and help make the process easy and accessible for everyone.

4. Nurture Juniors and Casual Players

Every strong sport has roots in youth development. Setting up junior programs, beginner drills, or family sessions can turn curiosity into lifelong passion. Not everyone will chase medals — but every casual player helps fill the courts, sustain club income, and create a balanced pickleball ecosystem.

5. Promote Education and Sportsmanship

Pickleball may look simple, but there’s real technique, strategy, and etiquette behind it. Clubs can host workshops, rule refreshers, or “coach clinics” to help players grow with the right foundation.

To take things further, clubs can collaborate with professional bodies or certified coaches — such as national associations, sports academies, or experienced pickleball trainers — to organize structured training programs, coaching clinics, and development workshops. These collaborations ensure players receive proper guidance, learn safe and effective techniques, and understand the values of sportsmanship that represent the sport at its best.

When players understand the game better, they play better — and represent the sport more proudly.

6. Be Visible, Be Active

Social media, community events, or local collaborations (schools, companies, fitness centers) help spread the word. Sharing photos, stories, and player journeys gives pickleball a human touch that inspires others to join. Every post, event, and conversation adds another brick to the foundation of this growing sport.

At the same time, clubs should also encourage socially active behavior among players — to spread positive vibes, inclusivity, and good sportsmanship both on and off the court. When players support, cheer for, and uplift one another, it creates an environment where everyone feels valued and motivated to grow. That kind of positive culture doesn’t just attract new players — it keeps the community healthy and united.

7. Stay Humble, Stay United

No single club can grow the sport alone. It takes a collective mindset — where we celebrate each other’s wins, share knowledge, and stay connected as one community.

Building strong partner clubs is also crucial for long-term growth. When clubs form partnerships, they can support each other during events, share facilities, exchange coaching expertise, and lend helping hands whenever needed.These collaborations create stability and unity — ensuring that when one club rises, the whole community rises together.

Whether you’re from KL, Penang, or Johor — we’re all ambassadors of Malaysia’s pickleball movement.


Pickleball’s future in Malaysia looks incredibly bright. But its success depends not just on facilities or funding, but on how we work together as clubs, players, and enthusiasts.

Let’s keep the spirit of collaboration alive — nurture the next generation, welcome every newcomer, and keep this sport as fun and inclusive as it was meant to be.

Together, we don’t just play pickleball — we grow it. 

If your club or organization shares the same vision, we’d love to connect! 
Reach out to us for collaboration discussions, inter-club activities, or community projects — because together, we can make Malaysia’s pickleball scene stronger than ever.

The First-Ever Asia Pickleball Summit: Building the Future of Pickleball On and Off the Court

Pickleball is no longer just a trending sport—it’s becoming a movement. And this July, that movement took a major leap forward with the launch of the first-ever Asia Pickleball Summit, proudly organised by ReSkills, in collaboration with AFA and Asia Pickleball TV.

Held in One World Hotel, Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia, this groundbreaking event gathered 29 renowned speakers from around the world, including industry pioneers, brand founders, professional players, coaches, and league organisers. It wasn’t just about paddles and courts—it was about people, purpose, and the bigger picture of where pickleball in Asia is headed.

Global Icons Take the Stage

The speaker lineup was nothing short of iconic. We welcomed:

Alongside them were passionate voices shaping the future of pickleball—from startup brand owners to grassroots community builders, from rising pro players to visionary league organisers. Their shared goal? To create synergy and strengthen the pickleball ecosystem across Asia and beyond.

Growing the Game—Beyond the Court

While skills and drills still matter, the summit emphasized something even bigger: pickleball’s off-court potential.

From building clubs to forming associations, from sports tech to tournament operations, we dove deep into how the business and community side of pickleball is just as important as gameplay. Because to grow the sport sustainably, everyone—players, coaches, clubs, and even government bodies—must work in harmony.

As Mr. Jin Tan, Founder of ReSkills and President of ReSkills Pickleball Club, powerfully stated:

“If a player wants to go higher and further, they can’t just keep practicing on the court. Off-court growth—mental strength, discipline, teamwork—is just as important. We need to empower the whole ecosystem.”

A Strong Signal from Government Leaders

The summit also gained strong support from national leaders. YB Hannah Yeoh, Malaysia’s Minister of Youth & Sports, addressed the audience with a clear message:

“Pickleball is more than just a sport—it’s a trend that promotes health, opens up new job opportunities, and attracts investment. But most importantly, we must stop fighting each other. If we want pickleball to thrive in Malaysia, we must collaborate.”

Meanwhile, YB Dr. Kelvin Yii, Political Secretary for the Ministry of Human Resources, shared his personal journey—from trying pickleball a few months ago to becoming a full-on enthusiast. He even started a club to introduce the game to others in the ministry!

“This sport is easy to learn, fun for all ages, and addictive. Now is the time to unite all state associations under a common goal and move forward together.”

Unity is the Way Forward

The Asia Pickleball Summit wasn’t just a conference—it was a call to action. A reminder that this sport is growing fast, and the only way to manage that growth is through unity, shared knowledge, and inclusive leadership.

As we move ahead, let this summit be the spark for more collaboration, more innovation, and more love for the game. Whether you’re an industry player, a curious beginner, or a lifelong competitor, now is the time to step up, reach out, and be part of something bigger.

Because pickleball isn’t just played on the court—it’s built by everyone who believes in it.

What Can We Expect From The Malaysia’s Pickleball in the Next 3 Years?

If you’ve been around the courts lately, you’ve probably noticed the same thing I have — pickleball in Malaysia is growing fast. It’s no longer just a “new sport from the West” that people try once and forget. It’s becoming a real movement.

From KL to Penang, and even smaller towns like Miri or Seremban, more people are picking up paddles, courts are getting busier, and tournaments are popping up more often. For those of us already in the game, it’s honestly exciting. But it also makes me wonder:

Where is all this momentum taking us? What will Malaysia’s pickleball scene actually look like in the next 3 years?

Here’s my take — from a player’s perspective.

1. More Courts, More Communities, More Access

Right now, one of the biggest signs of growth is the number of new courts being built. We’re seeing private facilities, converted badminton halls, even shopping mall rooftops turning into pickleball zones. And that’s only going to continue.

In three years, I believe we’ll see pickleball courts become as common as futsal or badminton venues in Malaysia. That means more access, more places to play, and most importantly — more chances to build communities around the sport.

And once that happens, the growth becomes self-sustaining. Because when people have places to play regularly, they’ll stay in the game longer — and bring others along.

2. Tournaments Are Going to Get Bigger and Better

If you’ve been to recent tournaments like the Skechers Invitational or the Sarawak Junior Invitational, you’ve probably felt the energy. These aren’t just small community events — they’re starting to look and feel like serious competitions, with proper setups, good prize pools, and even sponsors.

Looking ahead, I see Malaysia becoming a regional host for Southeast Asia tournaments. With more local organizations pushing the sport and more brands stepping in, tournaments will become more frequent, more competitive, and more inclusive — welcoming everyone from juniors to 60+ veterans.

It’s not just about the trophies — it’s about building a stage where local talent can shine.

3. Coaching, Training & Pathways Will Level U

Right now, if you want to get better at pickleball in Malaysia, there are limited coaching options — especially if you’re outside the Klang Valley. But that’s changing fast.

We’re starting to see more certified coaches, structured group classes, and even early signs of youth academies forming. Give it another 1–2 years, and I believe we’ll have coaching pipelines similar to what we see in badminton — structured training from beginner to elite levels.

This is huge, especially for younger players or those who really want to improve. Because when proper coaching becomes more accessible, the overall level of play in Malaysia will rise — and that raises the entire scene.

4. Pickleball Culture Will Hit the Mainstream

Right now, we still explain to new people: “It’s kinda like tennis and ping pong mixed together, but easier to start.” But in a few years, we might not have to explain it anymore — because pickleball will be everywhere.

More media coverage. More social content. More influencers showing off rallies or trick shots. More schools introducing it in PE. When that happens, it becomes part of everyday life — and that’s when you know a sport has truly arrived.

We’ll start seeing casual players, hobbyists, competitive athletes, and even weekend warriors all co-existing on the same court. And honestly, that’s one of the best things about this sport.

So What’s Our Role in All This?

It’s simple. Keep playing. Keep supporting local courts. Bring your friends in. Sign up for competitions even if you’re unsure. Be the kind of player who makes others want to return.

Because the future of pickleball in Malaysia isn’t just in the hands of brands or sponsors or federations — it’s in ours. Every game we play, every person we introduce, every community we help build… it adds up.

We’re still early in the journey. But the way things are growing? Malaysia could easily become one of Asia’s top pickleball powerhouses in just a few short years.

And when that happens, you’ll get to say:

“I was there when it all started.”