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Pickleball's Big Leap: February 1968 Changed Everything

PickleBall Daily - On this day in Pickle Ball History

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Episode  ·  3:13  ·  Feb 18, 2026

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On February 18, 1968, Joel Pritchard, along with Barney McCallum's son David and two other friends, formed Pickle Ball Incorporated, a key moment that turned a casual backyard game into an organized sport with real structure and protection. According to the official history from USA Pickleball, this corporation was created to promote and sell pickleball equipment, marking one of the earliest steps toward its national growth. Pickleball52 dot com and the Pickleball Portal blog both confirm this event happened in February 1968, right after the first permanent court was built in 1967 by Bob O'Brian in his backyard on Bainbridge Island, Washington. Picture this: just three years earlier, in 1965, Pritchard, a future United States congressman from Washington state, and his friends Bill Bell and Barney McCallum invented the game on a lazy summer afternoon. Their kids were bored, so the dads grabbed ping-pong paddles, a perforated plastic whiffle ball, and lowered a badminton net to 36 inches high on an asphalt court. What started as kid entertainment hooked the adults too, with its blend of tennis power, ping-pong precision, and badminton court size, all on a smaller 20 by 44 foot playing area. By 1967, neighbors were hooked, leading to that first dedicated court. Forming Pickle Ball Incorporated on this date was huge because it protected the inventors' creation legally and kicked off equipment manufacturing, like better wooden paddles and balls. Wikipedia notes it as Pickle Ball Inc., emphasizing how Pritchard, McCallum, and others saw potential beyond Bainbridge Island. This company laid groundwork for everything to come, from the first tournament in 1976 in Tukwila, Washington, where David Lester beat Steve Paranto in men's singles using oversized paddles, to the United States Amateur Pickleball Association in 1984, which published the first rulebook. Without this February 18 incorporation, pickleball might have stayed a local secret. Instead, it spread, hitting all 50 states by 1990, exploding in popularity in the late 2010s, and now boasting millions of players. Court Reserve and Slip Doctors blogs highlight how this business move made paddles and balls widely available, sparking clubs and tournaments in the Pacific Northwest and beyond. Imagine the excitement of those early days, friends gathering on summer evenings, whacking that plastic ball back and forth, refining rules through trial and error, all leading to a sport that's easy for families yet competitive for pros. Today, pickleball thrives with pro tours, televised events like the 2016 US Open on CBS Sports Network, and even a dedicated stadium in Florida. That 1968 decision on February 18 was the spark that fueled it all, proving backyard fun can become a global sensation. Thank you for tuning in, listeners, and please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out Quiet Please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

3m 13s  ·  Feb 18, 2026

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