San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Younger folks are taking up games favored by retirees.

Senior-friendly backyard sports embraced by whippersna­ppers

- By Richard A. Marini STAFF WRITER

With four children ages 3 to 10, Emily and Michael Granberry are understand­ably deliberate about where they spend those rare date nights.

So when they went out one recent Friday, they headed to the Chicken N Pickle restaurant and entertainm­ent complex on UTSA Boulevard to play their favorite new sport: pickleball.

“We were in Pennsylvan­ia this summer for my parent’s 50th anniversar­y, and all the adult cousins played,” said Emily, a stay-at-home mom. “It was so much fun, we wanted to play some more.”

Both 42, the Granberrys are part of a wave of new, younger players who’ve helped make pickleball, once the exclusive purview of retirees, the fastestgro­wing sport in the country, according to The Economist magazine.

But pickleball is not the only sport that’s attracting a younger demographi­c. Bocce, stereotypi­cally favored by elderly Italian men; horseshoes, usually associated with older country gents; and other gentle backyard games are all becoming more popular with the younger set, in part because of the ongoing pandemic.

“People started looking for

something they could do safely outside with other people,” said Herb Markwort Jr., president and CEO of St. Louis-based Markwort Sporting Goods Co., explaining these games’ sudden popularity. “They started playing games like horseshoes, which has been our No. 1 (product line). Our sales of whiffle ball sets have doubled. And we’re also selling more backyard games like badminton, volleyball and croquet.”

Most of these are being purchased, he said, by younger adults for themselves and by parents for their kids.

Pickleball

None of these games have soared in popularity quite like pickleball, however, which, for those who’ve never played, is a hybrid of tennis, pingpong and racquetbal­l — and easier to play than all three.

“The paddles are smaller and solid, so you have better control than you do when you hit with a stringed tennis racket,” said Toni Mansker, 53 who was playing on one of Chicken N Pickle’s 11 pickleball courts recently with her husband as well as daughter Catie and a friend, both 21. “And the court’s smaller so you don’t have to run as much. Even the net’s lower.”

It’s also a blast to play, they said.

“You don’t even realize you’re working out when you’re doing it,” said Catie, who reserved the court after seeing it mentioned on Instagram. “We’re definitely coming back.”

While backyard and street versions of pickleball are available, many prefer playing on courts specifical­ly built for the game.

When Michael Castillo bought FIT High Performanc­e Tennis Academy & Pickleball Fitness Center in Windcrest in December, he upgraded the nine pickleball courts, resurfacin­g them, and adding lights and wind screens to enhance the playing experience.

“The sport is growing so fast, it made sense to make the investment,”

he said. “While we’ve got plenty of retirees who play, we also have kids as young as 5, 6 and 7 years old.”

Castillo said players don’t have to be very athletic to enjoy the sport.

“It doesn’t take more than 10 minutes to learn, and you can even play if you have bad knees because there’s not as much running involved,” he said. “We have players who play with their grandkids.”

In fact, despite its reputation as the official game of Boca Raton, many of pickleball’s newest adherents are decades from retirement.

According to the latest Sports Participat­ion in the U.S. Report from the National Sporting Goods Associatio­n, a trade associatio­n for sporting goods retailers, dealers and manufactur­ers, members of the 12-to-17 age group are 55 percent more likely to play pickleball compared to the average population. By comparison, only 44 percent of those 75 and older and just 29 percent of those 65 to 74 are more likely to play the sport.

Locally, the San Antonio Parks and Recreation Department has taken notice of pickleball’s growing popularity, adding six new

courts citywide since 2019, giving the city a total of 20 outdoor and three indoor courts.

“And we’re looking for opportunit­ies to add more,” said the department’s marketing manager, Connie Swann.

To attract beginners, both Fairchild Park and Hamilton Community Center are also staffed and have equipment available to borrow for free.

Bocce

Another sport that is becoming more popular among the

younger crowd is bocce.

“When COVID hit last year, everything got real quiet,” said Richard Parrella, vice president of Massachuse­tts-based EPCO Manufactur­ing. “And then, boom, sales of our bocce sets went crazy. We’ve been making them for 40 years, and sales are up 250 percent from 2019.”

Chicken N Pickle also has several bocce courts, where the Gay family was recently playing, with sons Derek, 25, and Kevin, 23, going against their parents.

“I love yard games, like cornhole and Kan Jam, so I had a feeling I’d enjoy this,” Derek said.

There’s also been an upswing in demand for high-end backyard bocce courts, according to David Spradling, owner of Bocce Pros of Texas.

“We’ve been doing more of them recently,” he said. “We’ll probably build 10 to 12 this year alone, even though we recently raised our prices due to an increase in material costs.”

According to the company website, the basic price for a regulation court with a limestone border and crushed gravel surface is $13,500, but prices go as high as $40,000 or more for more specialize­d courts, such as those with crushed oyster shell surfaces and Texas red cedar end boards.

“Our clients usually come from California or the East

Coast, so they’re more familiar with bocce,” he said. “Usually, they already have a pool and hot tub in their backyard. Maybe a tennis court. They’re looking for another game venue.”

Chris Bailey had a court installed with a crushed granite surface and limestone block edging in his backyard in Keller, north of Fort Worth, about a year ago. He said he plays two or three times a week.

“When I was in high school, I played bocce at my uncle’s house in Las Vegas,” he said. “I always said that if I ever had the space, it’d be really neat to have one.”

He likes bocce because it’s a social game, but it’s easy enough to play so even his 5-year-old can be competitiv­e against his older brothers.

As with outdoor dining, working from home and fist bumps, no one knows if the pandemicin­duced popularity of these games will continue once life returns to normal.

But Herb Markwort of Markwort Sporting Goods, who was considerin­g dropping several lines of backyard games, including bocce, from his offerings, has reversed himself. He’s betting the age of slow, backyard fun is here to stay.

 ?? Photos by Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er ?? Kennessey Hartley returns a shot during a pickleball match at Chicken N Pickle while visiting San Antonio. The Florida resident calls the game “addictive.”
Photos by Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er Kennessey Hartley returns a shot during a pickleball match at Chicken N Pickle while visiting San Antonio. The Florida resident calls the game “addictive.”
 ??  ?? Brothers Kevin, left, and Derek Gay enjoy a game of bocce at Chicken N Pickle.
Brothers Kevin, left, and Derek Gay enjoy a game of bocce at Chicken N Pickle.
 ?? Photos by Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er ?? Jimmie and Yvonne Hawkins chase down the ball as they play pickleball at Chicken N Pickle. A recent survey found those most likely to play pickleball are younger than its stereotypi­cal fans.
Photos by Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er Jimmie and Yvonne Hawkins chase down the ball as they play pickleball at Chicken N Pickle. A recent survey found those most likely to play pickleball are younger than its stereotypi­cal fans.
 ??  ?? One company that builds backyard bocce courts reports an upswing in demand.
One company that builds backyard bocce courts reports an upswing in demand.

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