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You are here: Home / Sports / The Power of the Paddle Tap

The Power of the Paddle Tap

August 20, 2025

In pickleball, the little things matter. Not just the soft dink. Not just the third-shot drop. But the paddle tap, that quick, automatic gesture between partners, carries real weight.

It’s more than a habit. It’s a connection.

A Silent Message

Two players touch paddles. That’s it.

But in that moment, a silent message passes between them: “We’re in this together.” After a winner? Let’s go. After an error? No big deal.

Pickleball Is Mental

Pickleball isn’t just physical. It’s mental warfare. One mistake can shake your confidence. One missed return can rattle your rhythm.

The paddle tap helps stop the spiral. It resets your mindset. It says, “Next point. Lock in.”

See our Pickleball Slogans and Captions.

The power of the paddle tap.

The Basketball Comparison

Think of basketball. After every free throw – make or miss – teammates walk over and slap hands. No one questions it. It’s just what you do. That touch builds chemistry. Trust. Presence.

The paddle tap is pickleball’s version of that: compact, quiet, and powerful.

Why Touch Matters

Sports psychologists have studied team touch. The verdict is clear: physical contact builds trust, boosts morale, and improves performance.

NBA teams that touch more win more. Seriously.

In a sport like pickleball, with just two people on a team, that bond is everything.

Don’t Let Frustration Win

Your partner hits into the net. Or you do. You sigh. You tense. Maybe you start pulling away.

That’s when the paddle tap matters most.

It interrupts the frustration. It says, “We’re still good. Let’s move on.”

See our Pickleball Dictionary for terms and definitions of the game.

Doubles Is a Partnership

Doubles isn’t about two people playing side by side. It’s about two people moving as one. Good communication isn’t optional, it’s required.

And the paddle tap? It’s your rhythm check. A physical cue that keeps you aligned.

When It’s Missing

Watch teams who stop tapping. They lose a point, turn away, stay silent. No contact. No eye lock. Suddenly, they’re not a team. They’re just two players standing on the same side.

Their energy’s off. Their body language says it all.

Rebuild the Vibe

Down 7–1? Out of sync? Tap anyway.

Not because you’re celebrating, but because you’re reconnecting.

The tap isn’t about the last point. It’s about the next one.

See our Pickleball Court Dimensions and Rules of the Game.

Celebrate Together

Big rally? Clean putaway? Wild dig? Tap it up.

Celebrate the highs. Share the spark. It’s more than “nice shot.” It’s “we did that.” Build emotional momentum. It adds up.

Make It a Ritual

Rituals bring consistency. Confidence. Calm.

Build the paddle tap into your game. Make it automatic. Like your ready position. Like your pre-serve bounce.

Let it become second nature, especially under pressure.

Speak Without Talking

Nonverbal communication wins matches. A glance. A nod. A tap.

You don’t always need words. Sometimes, presence is enough. And sometimes, it’s everything.

For Every Level

Beginners? Start the habit now.

Veterans? Don’t get sloppy.

Even at the pro level, you’ll see it: the paddle tap after nearly every point. Why? Because it works.

Mean It

Lazy taps don’t count.

Tap like you mean it. Be present. Add a nod, a glance, a smile. Something.

It’s not just about doing it. It’s about sending it.

When Tension Hits

You’re frustrated. Your partner’s off. Emotions run hot.

This is the hardest time to tap, and the most important. Force the reconnection. Use the gesture to steady the ship.

You don’t need to talk it out. Just tap it out.

Build Trust in Layers

Trust is built in small moments, not dramatic speeches.

Every tap is a layer. A thread. A signal that says, “Still with you.”

Do it often. Do it well. The foundation will hold when it matters most.

Tap Every Point

Not just the winners. Not just the rallies.

Every. Single. Point.

Win or lose, tap it out. It keeps you synced. Keeps the emotions stable. Keeps the team united.

Set the Tone

Good energy spreads.

When you and your partner tap every point, others notice. You raise the bar for sportsmanship. You lead by example.

Be the team that others respect and want to be.

Kids Are Watching

Whether you’re coaching or playing rec, know this: younger players are watching.

They mimic what they see. Set the tone.

Show them what teamwork looks like, not just in skill, but in spirit.

Use What Works

In COVID days, we used air taps, elbow bumps, and subtle nods.

That’s fine.

What matters isn’t the form, it’s the connection. Choose your signal. Use it consistently.

More Than Mechanics

Pickleball is about more than drops and drives. It’s about how you manage nerves, energy, and each other.

The paddle tap is your tool for all of that. It’s the glue between you and your partner.

Small Gesture, Big Impact

The paddle tap costs you nothing.

It doesn’t drain stamina. It doesn’t take time. But it delivers, emotionally, mentally, and strategically.

Use it. Mean it. Let it work for you.

Final Word

Pickleball is a game of angles, inches, and instincts.

But the best teams, the ones that thrive in pressure, rally from behind, and play with heart, they tap paddles after every point.

They don’t need to be told. They do it.

So tap early. Tap often. Tap like a team.

Because at the end of the day, connection wins matches.

About Mike O'Halloran.

By Mike O’Halloran

Founder and Editor, Sports Feel Good Stories

Mike O’Halloran founded Sports Feel Good Stories in 2009. He co-authored four trivia books for kids under the Smart Attack line. Mike coached basketball for 15 seasons, taught tennis, and has written four books on basketball coaching. He has been a contributing writer for USA Football, the youth arm of the NFL. Mike is the founder of the Fantasy Football Team Names Hall of Fame.
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You are on our The Power of the Paddle Tap feature.

You might like the following:

Is Serving First an Advantage in Pickleball

Winning the First Five Minutes of Any Pickleball Match

Filed Under: Sports

Gravatar image of Mike O Halloran

About Mike O'Halloran

Mike founded Sports Feel Good Stories in 2009 and serves as its publisher and editor. He has coached over 20 youth sports teams. An author of four basketball coaching books, he is also the publisher of the Well-Prepared Coach line of practice plans, off-season training programs, and editable award certificates.

He's a former contributing writer for USA Football, the youth arm of the NFL. He founded the Fantasy Football Team Names Hall of Fame in 2021.

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