Planning Your First Tournament
Running a padel tournament doesn't require professional software or hours of preparation. With the right format and a simple tool, you can go from "let's play" to "game on" in under 5 minutes.
Here's the step-by-step process.
Step 1: Count Your Players and Courts
The most important numbers are how many players you have and how many courts are available. These two variables determine everything else — which format works, how many rounds you'll play, and how long the event takes.
Rule of thumb
You need at least 4 players per court. With 8 players and 2 courts, everyone stays active. With 8 players and 1 court, half your group sits each round.
Step 2: Choose Your Format
The three most common social formats are:
- Classic Americano — rotating partners, individual scores. Best all-rounder.
- Mexicano — standings-based matchups. More competitive.
- Team Americano — fixed partnerships rotating opponents. Great for couples or established duos.
Each format also has a Mixed variant that ensures gender-balanced sides.
Step 3: Generate the Schedule
This is where a generator saves you time. Enter your player names, select courts, and the tool produces a complete round schedule with matchups.
No more drawing brackets on paper or debating who plays whom.
Generate a schedule now
Free tournament generator — no signup required
Step 4: Play and Track Scores
Run each round, record scores, and update the leaderboard. For Americano formats, the schedule is fixed — just follow it. For Mexicano, you'll need to recalculate pairings after each round.
Tips for smooth scoring:
- Assign one person per court to report scores
- Update the leaderboard between rounds
- Announce standings to keep energy high
Step 5: Crown the Winner
After the final round, the player (or team) with the most accumulated points wins. In Americano, total points across all matches determine the ranking. Ties are broken by point differential.
It's that simple. Five steps, one tool, and your group has a proper tournament running.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Too many players, too few courts: Leads to excessive waiting. Aim for 4-6 players per court.
- Too many rounds: For groups of 8+, you don't need a full rotation. 5-7 rounds is usually enough.
- Manual bracket calculation: Error-prone and slow. Use a digital tool.
- Not tracking scores live: Players lose interest if they don't know where they stand.
Ready to organize your first tournament?
Start planning →
Free tournament generator — no signup required