How to organize a padel round robin without losing your mind on the rotation
Round robins (the "americanas" most clubs run) are probably the most-used format anywhere. They've got something a serious tournament doesn't always have: atmosphere. But putting one together properly has its tricks. We've been organising them for a few years (and lost a few afternoons fighting with the rotation), so here's what actually matters.
What is a round robin?
A round robin (Spanish-speaking clubs call it "americana") is a format where everyone plays everyone. Nobody gets eliminated. You rotate partners and opponents, and each player adds up their own points at the end.
Why people like them so much
The hard part: doing the rotation by hand
Imagine you're running a 16-player round robin. That's 8 matches each and 64 matchups in total. You sit down with the Excel: "John with Mary against Pedro and Ana, then John with Ana against...". Three hours later you're still not done, and you've already noticed that John plays three times in a row while Mary's been on her second round in the cafe.
putting rotations together by hand
for some kind of mistake to slip into the rotations
complaints about uneven rest
Types of round robin, depending on what you want
Classic round robin (mixed)
Everyone against everyone, changing partner and opponent each match. The most social one, and the one that works best if the idea is to mix people up.
Pairs round robin
Pairs stay fixed and only the opponents rotate. Useful when you want to play with your usual partner without any complications.
Team round robin
Several teams compete and points add up by team. Usually what gets used for inter-club fixtures.
The easy part: let the algorithm sort it for you
What FenixPlay does in a second
Well distributed rotation
The algorithm generates all the rounds balancing partners, opponents, rest and courts at the same time.
Live ranking
Players see the standings updated on their phone. Goodbye to the whiteboard at the entrance.
Match notifications
Each player gets a notification when they're up: who they're playing with, against, and on which court.
Public view
Family and friends can follow the round robin without being at the club. Sometimes they get hooked.
An example: 24-player round robin in Madrid
Before, by hand
- Six hours planning rotations in Excel
- Some errors that show up once the event has already started
- Complaints about uneven rest
- Manual ranking with the odd point getting in wrong
- End result: a mess and angry players
Now, with FenixPlay
- Three minutes of initial setup
- Rotations well distributed without errors
- No arguments about rest
- Ranking that updates on its own
- End result: round robin runs smoothly, no hassle
Conclusion
Round robins work in nearly any club because they pull a lot of people in for not much effort. The bit that gets complicated is the logistics, and that's where an automatic tool takes most of the hassle off your plate.
"I used to put in four hours to get a 16-player round robin ready. With FenixPlay it's two minutes. And players are happier because rotations are fair and they see the ranking live."
— Laura G., organiser, Barcelona
Run your next round robin with it
Download FenixPlay and try it with a small group before throwing a big round robin at it. Fastest way to see if it fits.
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