WHO WE ARE
Love Padel Club is an idea born to bring the world’s fastest-growing sport to Kutaisi, a city rich in history but ready for something new. We transformed a former Soviet factory into the first indoor padel club in Western Georgia. The club features two fully panoramic premium padel courts, one pickleball court, changing rooms and bathrooms, a café, parking, and an outdoor space. We aim to grow the padel community in Kutaisi and share our love for the game with everyone.
ABOUT PADEL
WHAT IS PADEL?
Think tennis meets squash in a glass-walled cage — but way more fun. Born in Mexico in the 1960s, padel is now the fastest-growing sport in the world, with 25+ million players across 90 countries. And now it's coming to Kutaisi!
Easy to Learn
Pick up a racket and play on day one. Seriously.
Always Social
Played in doubles — you'll make friends every match.
For Everyone
Kids, adults, beginners, pros — everyone belongs.
HOW TO PLAY
Scoring System
Padel uses the same scoring system as tennis. A match consists of three sets. Points are counted as 15, 30, 40, followed by deuce and advantage. In professional padel, at 40–40 a Golden Point is often used instead of advantage.
As in tennis, players switch sides on odd-numbered games (1–0, 2–1, 3–2, 4–3, 5–4, etc.).
Any player can hit the ball from anywhere on the court, except during the serve.
For a point to count, the ball must first bounce on the ground before hitting a wall. The only exception is the serve. After the bounce on a serve, the ball may only hit the glass wall not the fence. During rallies, the ball may hit both glass walls and fences. Players can hit the ball either before it bounces or after it bounces, depending on the situation.
Padel uses the same scoring system as tennis. A match consists of three sets. Points are counted as 15, 30, 40, followed by deuce and advantage. In professional padel, at 40–40 a Golden Point is often used instead of advantage.
Any player can hit the ball from anywhere on the court, except during the serve.
As in tennis, players switch sides on odd-numbered games (1–0, 2–1, 3–2, 4–3, 5–4, etc.).
For a point to count, the ball must first bounce on the ground before hitting a wall. The only exception is the serve. After the bounce on a serve, the ball may only hit the glass wall not the fence. During rallies, the ball may hit both glass walls and fences. Players can hit the ball either before it bounces or after it bounces, depending on the situation.
Serve
The serve is made from behind the service line. The first serve starts from the right side. The player has two attempts. As in tennis, the serve must be diagonal. Unlike tennis, the ball is not hit overhead. In padel, the player must strike the ball below waist level, around hip height.
If the first serve hits the net or is otherwise invalid, the player may serve again. If the ball hits the net and then does not land in the opponent's diagonal service box, the serve is considered a fault.
Game Etiquette
A player is not allowed to start play until all players are in position and ready.
If you touch the net with your racket, clothing, or body during play, your opponent wins the point.
CONTACT US
Nikea st. 7, Kutaisi
lovepadelkutaisi@gmail.com