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Lily James, Andy Murray and a million Britons: padel’s rise nears milestone

about 12 hours ago
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It was once seen as a quirky upstart or continental fad.But padel now has nearly a million players across the UK after participation levels more than doubled in 2025.According to LTA figures seen by the Guardian, 860,000 Britons played padel at least once last year – up from 400,000 in 2024 and 129,000 in 2023 – as the racket sport’s dizzying rise continued.The LTA, tennis’s national governing body, puts the extraordinary boom down to padel’s accessibility, with beginners able to play in minutes, more courts, and the cool factor from celebrities such as Eva Longoria, Lily James and Cristiano Ronaldo taking up the sport.Rapper Stormzy and tennis star Andy Murray have also become vocal advocates for the fast-paced racket sport, which combines many of the rules and scoring system of tennis with some elements of squash, including a back wall.

However it is easier to learn as all serves are underarm and the court is a third of the size of a standard tennis court,Tom Murray, the LTA’s head of padel, told the Guardian: “The growth of padel, both in Britain and globally, is undeniable, with participation rising at an exponential rate,It’s a fun, fast-paced and accessible sport that is attracting new players every day,“As more courts are built across Great Britain, more people than ever are stepping on to the court to try it for themselves,” he added,“From high-profile figures in entertainment and sport, such as Lily James, Eva Longoria, Andy Murray and Cristiano Ronaldo padel’s visibility continues to increase, inspiring more people to pick up a racket.

Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.If you already have the Guardian app, make sure you’re on the most recent version.In the Guardian app, tap the Profile settings button at the top right, then select Notifications.Turn on sport notifications.“What makes padel particularly appealing is how easy it is to get started, many players can rally and play points from their very first session, immediately enjoying the physical, social and mental health benefits.

”By the end of 2025 there were 1,553 padel courts across 559 venues in the UK.That figure is up from 870 courts across 293 venues in 2024, and just 69 courts when the LTA took over the governance of the sport in 2020.The LTA expects those figures to rise again in 2026, although there has been occasional pushback from some residents about the noise of the game.Last month, for instance, a bid to build four new padel courts in York was rejected after residents complained that “having floodlights on seven days a week and the gunshot sound of the padel racket” would “discourage the birds and animals we share this location with”.However little seems able to stop padel’s momentum, given the sport - which was invented in Mexico in the late 60s - has surged in popularity at amateur and professional level since the pandemic.

In August, London will stage the biggest professional tournament ever held in the UK when the Premier Padel Tour arrives for the first time.Last week the International Padel Federation also announced that the sport would be a medal event at next year’s European Games in Istanbul – which it said was “a fundamental step on the pathway towards Olympic participation”.And while the sport is seen as middle class, the LTA found the average off-peak court booking cost about £7 per person per hour – based on four people playing.“With 860,000 people playing in 2025, over 10 million expressing interest in trying the sport, and around 1,600 courts now in place across hundreds of venues, padel’s momentum is undeniable,” added Tom Murray.
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‘Audiences told us we didn’t show enough teacher sex’: how we made Waterloo Road

‘In series one, it was bullying, drugs and alcohol. Twenty years on, it’s vapes, cyber-bullying and bloody energy drinks’I was working on women’s prison drama Bad Girls when the idea for Waterloo Road came up. Bad Girls creators Maureen Chadwick and Ann McManus had a fiery belief in social justice and did rigorous research. Those are often the foundations of successful serial drama. Ann had once taught in a Glasgow comprehensive and was passionate about education: she believed we write off young people too readily

2 days ago
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What does loneliness smell like? Inside the strangely soothing world of fragrance TikTok

I was bestowed with a nickname throughout my younger years: Smellanor. When I decided to go by Elle, the nickname evolved with it: Smell. I’m always a sucker for a fun rhyme. But it did make me hypervigilant about maintaining what I actually smelled like, vowing that this moniker would never manifest itself into reality. Thus began my ongoing journey into the wild world of fragrances

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Claire Hooper: ‘People have different forms of therapy. Songs for the Deaf by Queens of the Stone Age is mine’

The premise of your new standup show, Fun Show xx, is that you are not a fun person. What is the least fun thing about you?The minute my husband leaves the house, I turn the music off. I love silence. For my 40th birthday my husband, my two babies and I flew to Adelaide and hired a car to drive to the Barossa. My husband said, “It’s your birthday, you get to choose the playlist!” and I said, “Just complete silence please

4 days ago
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The Guide #235: Live from London, it’s Saturday Night! But will SNL translate transatlantically?

This weekend, after the longest hyping up period for a British comedy in ages, Saturday Night Live UK finally launches on Sky. It arrives with a degree of divisiveness that most shows don’t usually attain until at least a few episodes in, with some people willing it on, others are convinced that it will fail. Already there’s been a note of pre-emptive schadenfreude online, with every last piece of promotional material – even a fairly innocuous advert with the letters S N and L spelt out in baked beans – pounced on as evidence that the show will be a complete bin fire.And maybe it will. I’m hopeful that SNL UK will prove better than many expect: there are some good young comics attached; some shrewd people behind the scenes (it’s heartening to see a couple of members of the great sketch group Sheeps on the writing staff); and the steely presence of original SNL creator Lorne Michaels, keeping an eye on things as exec producer

5 days ago
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I was struggling to understand my autistic son - until we watched an episode of Doctor Who

A combination of autism and ADHD caused outbursts, confusion and stress that my son couldn’t understand – until he saw David Tennant behaving the same wayThe film Elf is a no-go in our house. My son interprets it as the psychological horror story of a man who is telling the truth but is constantly disbelieved. He loves The Traitors and rewatches entire series of it – knowing who the traitors are gives him an autonomy and comfort watching the game. Any other kind of conflict on screen and he’ll leave the room or wind it forward. I tried to explain that there are no stories without conflict

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From Project Hail Mary to Saturday Night Live UK: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Scientist Ryan Gosling is alone in deep space – or is he? – and America’s famed topical satire is given a British angleProject Hail MaryOut now Novelist Andy Weir’s brand of comic, semi-plausible sci-fi led to Ridley Scott’s The Martian – now Phil Lord and Christopher Miller will be hoping to repeat something of the same success. Ryan Gosling is the lead of a caper in which a science teacher wakes up on a spaceship on a desperate mission in deep space.La GraziaOut now Italian star Toni Servillo reunites with director Paolo Sorrentino for another collaboration exploring conflicts between personal freedom and public obligations. This time, an Italian president must navigate various moral dilemmas, including potentially pardoning two murderers.Broken EnglishOut now Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard’s documentary about Marianne Faithfull eschews convention to explore its topic through devices including the Ministry of Not Forgetting – an imaginary space where actual memories can collide with myth-making

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societySee all
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More frequent ejaculations may boost men’s fertility, research suggests

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Polyurethane coating reduces implant complications after mastectomy, cancer study finds

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Public satisfaction with the NHS rises for first time since 2019

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My child should have been offered meningitis vaccine by the NHS | Letter

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Girlguiding gives trans girls and women until September to leave UK organisation

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Meningitis B vaccine scheme widened to include some year 11 pupils in Kent

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