Main Court

Category: Tournaments

Increase Pickleball Tournament Registrations: 7 Methods

You spent three weeks planning the perfect tournament. Secured the courts. Designed balanced divisions. Organized the schedule down to the minute. Then you posted it on Facebook and waited.

Three days before registration closes, you only have 16 players signed up.

This scenario repeats across pickleball communities every week. Tournament organizers pour countless hours into planning, but skip the one step that actually gets players through the door: promotion.

Here’s the hard truth: creating a tournament is only half the battle. The other half—the part that determines whether your event succeeds or fails—is reaching the players who want to participate.

Why Tournament Promotion Matters (More Than You Think)

Many organizers treat promotion as an afterthought. But it’s not. Promotion is tournament management.

More registrations mean larger, healthier divisions. Healthy divisions mean better matchups, more engaged players, and ultimately, better experiences for everyone. Full tournaments generate more revenue, which keeps your events sustainable and allows you to run better competitions.

But here’s what most organizers don’t realize: empty divisions also create problems. When divisions don’t fill, players get frustrated. Withdrawals increase. Word of mouth becomes negative. The next tournament you organize starts with a disadvantage before you even announce it.

Successful tournaments aren’t successful because they have better brackets or prettier scorecards. They’re successful because organizers treated promotion with the same care they gave to planning.

The Problem: Players Are Everywhere

Here’s what makes tournament promotion hard: your players aren’t all in one place.

Some live in WhatsApp groups. Others are active in Facebook groups. Some get their event information through text messages. Instagram users see event posts. Email works for some. Club communities spread the word through their own channels.

Trying to reach all these different groups using the same method doesn’t work. You end up copying and pasting the same tournament link across five different platforms, hoping something sticks. You spend hours on marketing instead of organizing.

The worst part? Even when you do all that work, you still miss people. Players who don’t use Facebook miss your Facebook post. Players who check WhatsApp once a day never see your text.

The 7 Methods That Actually Work

1. Share With Existing Player Communities

Clubs, groups, and established communities are where players already gather. Post in those spaces first. These are your warmest leads.

2. Encourage Players To Share

Your players are your best marketers. Make it easy for them to invite friends. A single player can reach 50 people in their network—do that 10 times and your tournament is full.

3. Start Promoting Before Registration Opens

Build anticipation. Create buzz. Let players know a tournament is coming. Early awareness drives early registrations, which creates social proof that drives more registrations.

4. Keep Promoting Throughout Registration

Don’t stop after launch day. Continued promotion fills the gaps and catches players who missed the initial post. Reminder posts are not spam—they’re how you reach busy people.

5. Use Multiple Channels Strategically

Meet players where they already are. Text, WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, email—use the platforms your community actually uses. Different players prefer different channels.

6. Make Registration Simple

Reduce friction. The easier you make sign-up, the more registrations you get. Three clicks to register beats three pages of forms every time.

7. Leverage Social Proof

When players see that 30 other players have already registered, they’re more likely to join. Show registration numbers prominently in your promotion.

Why Word of Mouth Beats Paid Ads

Many organizers assume they need paid advertising to fill tournaments. They don’t.

Most successful pickleball tournaments grow through community sharing and player networks. When your friend tells you about a tournament, you listen. When an algorithm shows you an ad, you scroll past.

Word of mouth and player recommendations remain the most powerful forms of marketing in pickleball. Your job as an organizer is to make sharing easy, not to become a marketing expert.

The Manual Promotion Problem

Here’s where many organizers get stuck. They know they need to promote across multiple channels. So they:

  • Copy the tournament link and paste it into Facebook, then Instagram, then WhatsApp, then email
  • Type out tournament details separately for each platform
  • Send individual text messages to key contacts
  • Hope players share the event (but don’t make it easy)
  • Spend hours on marketing instead of organizing

This approach wastes time and misses reach. There’s a better way.

How Modern Tournament Tools Make Promotion Simple

Tournament software should do more than manage brackets and scorecards. It should help you reach players.

The best platforms allow organizers to:

  • Share tournaments with one click across every major platform
  • Post events to player groups and communities directly
  • Send tournaments through text, WhatsApp, Facebook, and email from a single interface
  • Track which promotion methods drive the most registrations
  • Enable player-driven growth by making it easy for players to invite friends

You don’t need special marketing skills. You need tools that eliminate the busywork.

The Main Court Advantage

This is where Main Court changes the game for tournament organizers. With our easy tournament promotion and sharing tools, organizers can reach players wherever they already communicate—without doing the work manually.

Create your tournament once. Share it to players, groups, the Main Court social feed, text messages, WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, email, Messenger, or any app on your phone. All from the same place. All with one tap.

No special skills required. No hours spent copying and pasting. No players missed because they don’t use the platforms you chose.

The result? More registrations. Fuller divisions. Better tournaments. Better experiences.

Manual Tournament Promotion vs. Main Court

The Old Way With Main Court
✗ Copy and paste across 5+ platforms ✓ Share with one click across all platforms
✗ Type tournament details separately each time ✓ Create once, share everywhere
✗ Spend hours on manual marketing ✓ Focus on organizing, not marketing
✗ Miss players who don’t use your chosen platforms ✓ Reach players wherever they communicate
✗ Difficult to track what works ✓ See which channels drive registrations
✗ Players can’t easily invite friends ✓ One-tap sharing encourages player growth

The Bottom Line

Tournament software shouldn’t just run tournaments. It should help you fill them.

Because the best tournament in the world means nothing if nobody shows up. But a well-promoted tournament—even a simple one—will always outperform a perfectly organized event that no one knows about.

The easier it is to share events and reach players, the easier it becomes to grow registrations and create better experiences for everyone in your pickleball community.

Ready to fill your next tournament? Download the Main Court app today and see how much easier tournament promotion can be.

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How to Fill a Pickleball Tournament Bracket Successfully

Your bracket's at 60% capacity with two weeks to go, and you're still chasing down players individually via text. Sound familiar? The struggle to figure out how to fill a pickleball tournament bracket keeps tournament organizers up at night. Manual recruiting, one-by-one outreach, and hoping players remember your event—it's exhausting. And it doesn't work. Half-full tournaments don't generate momentum, and they certainly don't build the reputation needed for stronger fields next time.

The Half-Empty Bracket Problem

You posted your tournament. You emailed your regulars. You asked for signups on the Facebook group. And then... nothing happens until the week before, when a flood of last-minute RSVPs creates chaos, or worse, you're still one court short with five days left.

The problem isn't interest—it's attention. Players juggle multiple tournaments, other sports, and life. A one-time post or email gets buried. They forget you're offering spots, or they assume the bracket's already full. Meanwhile, you're burning cycles trying to chase them down, and each manual outreach feels increasingly awkward.

Why Manual Recruiting Fails

Manual recruiting creates friction at every step. You remember Player A loves Thursday mornings, but you forget to reach out until Tuesday. You know Player B signed up for the last three of your events, but there's no system reminding them this one exists. And when you do text someone directly, it feels personal at first—until you're doing it for 40 players at different skill levels and schedules. The human bandwidth doesn't scale.

Here's the hard truth: if filling your bracket depends on your effort to remind people, you're already losing. Main Court's personalized tournament notifications remove that dependency entirely.

The Manual Way Main Court Approach
✗ Text individual players Personalized in-app notifications to right skill level & radius
✗ Hope they see your email ✓ Timed reminders at each stage (4 wks, 3 wks, 2 wks, 1 wk out)
✗ One-off signup form ✓ One-tap RSVP in the app—no friction
✗ No follow-up on "maybes" ✓ Smart reminders convert wavering players

Find Out More →

Download the Main Court app

Join thousands of pickleball players. Free on the App Store and Google Play.

Download on the App Store Get it on Google Play

Learn More

How to List Your Pickleball Tournament and Fill It With Players

You've got the courts booked, the format locked, and the prizes figured out. But three weeks before your pickleball tournament launch, you're already scrambling. Your Facebook post has fourteen likes. The email to your club got lost in inboxes. That WhatsApp group you started? Half the players never saw it. Meanwhile, some spots are filling with players you're not sure about skill-wise, and the bracket still has critical gaps.

This is the hidden tax of running a tournament: promotion is harder than planning the bracket itself.

Reaching the Right Players Takes Way More Work Than It Should

The traditional way of promoting a pickleball tournament looks like this: you send emails, post in Facebook groups, text friends, and hope it catches on. You get a flurry of interest followed by radio silence. Some people sign up without confirming their skill level. Others ask you repeated questions about details you already posted. A week before the event, you're chasing down payment from three players and fielding late cancellations.

The Manual Approach:

"Just posted our Men's 3.5 tourney on Facebook. $35 entry, doubles bracket, Saturday at Riverside Courts. Who's in? Also looking for one more woman's 2.5 team if anyone knows someone..."

Three days later: A DM from someone asking if they can play even though they've "never formally played but used to play tennis." Five people saying "I'm in!" but never confirming their teammate. One person tagging their friend in the comments. Another asking where Riverside Courts is. You're managing all of this across three platforms and still don't have a full bracket.
What You Actually Need The Manual Way Main Court
Reach players at your skill level Hope people self-report honestly Players verified by ratings and match history
Get confirmed registrations quickly Scattered across email, texts, DMs All signups in one place with automatic confirmations
Reach beyond your immediate circle Limited to your networks and groups Access to players searching for local events
Handle payments and logistics Venmo requests, cash on the day, no tracking Integrated payment processing and records

💡 Tip: The moment you post your tournament, it matters who sees it. Broadcasting to "everyone" means you get everyone--including players outside your skill band and people who won't show up. Targeting the right audience from the start saves you hours of back-and-forth and last-minute scrambling.

Skill Matching: The Thing Nobody Talks About Until It's Too Late

Here's what happens in a typical manually-promoted tournament: someone signs up as a "3.5" but they haven't played in two years. Another person undersells themselves because they're modest. You end up with lopsided matches, frustrated players, and an event that doesn't feel competitive or fun for anyone.

How to List Your Tournament - The Right Way

Main Court tournament promotion dashboard showing event creation and player engagement
Manage all registrations, payments, and bracket details in one place

Once your event is live, players in your area searching for tournaments at your skill level get a notification. No email list required, no group chat to manage, no hope that someone forwards it to a friend. The players who see your tournament are already looking for exactly what you're offering.

Stop Promoting Tournaments the Hard Way

Tournament organizing is hard enough without promotion being the bottleneck. When you list your event on a platform built for pickleball players, you stop guessing who to reach and start filling brackets with the right players.

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