Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Idle

Over Half a Century, Bill Gates Has Been Playing Pickleball (gatesnotes.com) 43

"I started playing pickleball more than 50 years ago," Bill Gates says in a new video — not long after the game was invented...

Now the 66-year-old Microsoft co-founder writes in a blog post that "I've been a little stunned — and delighted — by the sudden popularity of one of my favorite pastimes..." Largely confined to the Pacific Northwest for decades, it has now emerged as America's fastest-growing sport.... It's best described as a mash up of tennis, badminton, and ping-pong. And if you haven't heard of it, I expect you soon will....

Boredom was what got this sport started in 1965. Three dads living on Bainbridge Island, near Seattle, came home one summer evening to find their children complaining that there was nothing for them to do. So, they found a net, a Wiffle ball, some ping-pong paddles, and created a game on an old badminton court that the entire family could play together.... Over the next year, the three friends worked together to develop a set of rules, formalize the court layout, and introduce a larger plywood paddle that was good for striking the ball. And they decided to call it pickleball... Meanwhile, word slowly spread in Seattle of this odd new pastime.

My dad was friends with the game's inventors, Joel Pritchard, a state legislator and later Washington's lieutenant governor, Barney McCallum, and Bill Bell. He learned about their creation and by the late 1960s, he got inspired to build a pickleball court at our house. I've been playing ever since. At the time, the pickleball community was very small. I doubt there were more than a thousand people in the Seattle area who had ever seen the sport when my family picked it up. And I don't think anyone expected it would ever become a national phenomenon.

Today, there are more than 4.8 million players nationwide, a growth of nearly 40 percent over the last two years. And I expect it will only get bigger....

The best thing about pickleball, however, is that it's just super fun. I look forward to playing a pickleball game with friends and family at least once a week and more often during the summer.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Over Half a Century, Bill Gates Has Been Playing Pickleball

Comments Filter:
  • by marcle ( 1575627 ) on Sunday July 31, 2022 @11:39AM (#62749358)

    "I started playing pickleball more than 50 years ago," Bill Gates says.
    Geez, don't you think it's time for a breather?

    • Conceiving his two kids must've complicated the game (and the act) quite a bit - I'm surprised he got Melinda to go along with it.

  • Pickleball AKA slow tennis

    • Geriatric Tennis like how Tai-Chi is geriatric Kung-Fu.

      BillG remembering the inventors of Pickleball like he remembers the inventors of DOS.

  • I played this in middle school or high school gym class around the early 2000s. It was probably my favorite gym class game; I don't like most sports. If memory serves, it was pretty popular with the class.
    • I'm fairly close to Bill's age, and I believe he grew up in western Washington like I did. Pickleball was very popular in junior high gym classes around here, especially on rainy winter days - of which (as you might have heard) there are a lot.

      Most of us moved on to stuff like tennis or racquetball, but I'm not going to fault the guy for sticking with pickleball. There are plenty of other things to still fault him over, in any case.

  • If you're going to combine sports make them fun and exciting. Pickelball (had to look up Youtube videos to find out what it was) just looks slow and boring.

    • Could it ever be as boring as baseball?
    • It is really fun to play. It has some techniques of table tennis (such as putting spin on the ball and being able to place it just where you want) along with the movement of tennis (running around a court); but it de-emphasizes the serve (as in tennis where in men's tennis scoring is 90% about the serve), does not require extreme agility to be able to play (you can play much longer than tennis), and doesn't require the hours of practice to be competent like table tennis. It is more active than things like s
  • My mom bought a nice house across the street from a park a while back. Unfortunately pickle ball came into fad and now she can hear them playing at all hours of the day throughout her house even with the windows closed. Pickle ball is a noisier game than tennis and the tennis courts in the park were not placed properly for such a noisy game.

    For all those playing, if you must play on courts near people's homes at least don't do it before 9am.

    • it is popular in a lot of gyms here in the northeast because it is indoor and can work with a small court much like badminton. tennis courts are much bigger.

    • There was a big snit about this around Victoria BC some months ago, when they introduced pickleball courts at a local park. Nearby residents lost their shit over it. I think they had it stopped. I saw it played on Vancouver Island in a small town I was staying in for a few weeks. I never saw it before and had to watch a few minutes. It is loud. So I don't blame those folks. It needs to be located a ways away from homes. FWIW, it seems to be a growing thing on Vancouver Island, but I haven't seen it on the m

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday July 31, 2022 @12:08PM (#62749456) Journal

    I don't know what pickleball is, but I hope to god it's something sexual.

  • It seems that he is keeping himself fit. I suspect that many /. readers do not do enough exercise.

  • He's probably got a pickleball court in his basement.

    Past the movie theater and the bowling alley. Take a right at the indoor rifle range and there it is.

  • While I have not played pickleball, I certainly know about it. The large local pickleball community has been lobbying to convert public tennis courts to pickleball. Fortunately, tennis players have fought back and come tennis courts remain, but I'll admit that demand for pickleball is greater than for tennis, though both are almost always in use. And that's over a thousand miles from Seattle.
  • It's a well known fact that pickle ball is a favorite pass time of the Illuminati. Every non-sheep who does their own research already knows this.
  • We just love our vampire billionaires, don't we, children! It's so charming that I almost forgot about Gates' relationship with Jeffrey Epstein that Melinda Gates claims ended their marriage.
  • We played 'paddleball' at school when I was 10-12 yrs old (mid 60's).
    A heavier, slightly larger ping-pong paddle, tennis ball, tennis court or playing against a wall, singles or doubles.
    Myself and Ollie Matters won the doubles championship when I was 12. Tennis rules and scoring.
    The advantage was the custom made paddle, having the size and weight just right for the tennis ball.
    Maybe someone had heard of the game played over in the States, but it seemed just a progression from hand ball.

  • I watched some of a pickleball tournament's highlights. These looked like people in their 20s-30s playing, but for some reason they kept hitting the ball back and forth very gently. Like I said, this was a tournament match, not casual play. I wondered why nobody tried to smash the ball, so I guess they have rules against that? Maybe it's a game designed for old people then.
  • He was playing old-people sports before he was old.

  • Did billg post on how him and Ballmer plotted on how to claw back Paul Allens shares before Allen died of Hodgkin’s disease?

    When billionaire geeks fall out: Bill, was the big meanie of Microsoft, claims co-founder who says Gates 'tried to cut him out when he got sick with cancer' [dailymail.co.uk]
  • Melinda Gates no longer gets busy with Bill Gates' pickle'n'balls, but I'm sure plenty of Epstein's girls copped some of Billy Goats' pickle over the years. And Epstein didn't kill himself.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

Working...