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Sports

Beginner's guides for sports hobbies — gear that matters, gear that doesn't, and a real plan for your first month.

  • Man playing pickleball on a blue court.

    Pickleball

    Welcome to the fastest-growing sport in America. The good news: pickleball is one of the cheapest sports to start, and you can be playing real games within a week. Here's exactly what you need — and just as importantly, what you don't.

    Read the Pickleball guide →
  • a man playing ping pong

    Ping Pong

    Ping pong (or table tennis, depending on how seriously you take it) is the most-played racket sport in the world and one of the cheapest hobbies to truly enjoy. The gear is simple: a paddle, a few balls, and a surface to play on. The trap is that the right paddle and the right table look almost identical to the wrong ones.

    Read the Ping Pong guide →
  • a man standing on a tennis court holding a racquet

    Racquetball

    Racquetball is the most physically punishing of the racket sports — fast, indoor, walls in play, hour-long sessions that leave you genuinely drained. The gear list is short but specific, and one item is non-negotiable: eye protection. The ball moves at 150 mph in tight spaces. People have lost eyes. Read this guide before you hit a court.

    Read the Racquetball guide →
  • a man standing on a tennis court holding a racquet

    Tennis

    Tennis has a steeper learning curve than pickleball but a longer ceiling — there's something to chase for decades. The gear is more involved, but you don't need most of what tennis sites push at you. Here's the honest starter kit and what to skip.

    Read the Tennis guide →
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