Why You Aren't Improving
We get asked this all the time:
“If I buy this racket, will it improve my game?”
The honest answer is no.
A racket can help. It can suit your style, feel better in your hand, maybe even give you a bit more confidence. But it won’t fix your technique — and that’s what actually makes you better.
The uncomfortable truth
If you want to improve at padel, there’s a slightly painful shortcut:
Play fewer matches. Get more coaching. Padel looks simple, but technically it’s quite different from tennis or squash. The use of the glass, positioning, volleys — it all has its own feel, and it’s not something you properly learn just by playing games. You learn it through repetition, and usually with someone correcting you.
Most people do the opposite. They play a few matches every week, never work on anything specific, and then wonder why nothing really changes.
Why people avoid lessons
Lessons take a bit of discipline. It means turning down a game and booking a session instead. And yeah, they can be expensive — but there are easy ways to make it work. Split a lesson with a couple of friends. Swap out one match every week or two for a coaching session. Even a small change like that will do more for your level than another racket ever will.
The awkward bit
The other reason people avoid coaching is simple: You might get worse before you get better.
A coach might change your grip, your overhead, or how you move at the net. When that happens, everything can feel off. Timing goes, shots feel strange, and you might lose a few matches.That’s normal. Improvement isn’t a straight line. It’s a short step back so you can actually move forward.
Leave the ego at the door
This is the hardest part. No one enjoys feeling worse than they did last week. But if you want to improve, you have to get comfortable with it. The truth is , no one really cares about your Playtomic rating anyway.
So if you actually want to get better: Play a bit less, Learn a bit more. That’s what makes the difference.
