The Association of Pickleball Players (APP), the P站视频 and UTR Sports are teaming up to fight cancer through Doubles Dink for Cancer, a first-of-its-kind community-based fundraising program designed to spark healthier living and raise crucial funds for the fight against cancer. The year-round program is designed to unite communities around the beloved sport of pickleball and in support of a single mission: to end cancer as we know it, for everyone.
With nearly 50 million adult Americans playing pickleball, Doubles Dink for Cancer invites players of all levels to play pickleball or organize an event to celebrate cancer survivors, remember loved ones lost to cancer and raise funds to improve the lives of people with cancer and their families. Hosted on UTR Sports’ innovative software, these volunteer-led, round robin doubles tournaments can happen anytime, anywhere—from a local pickleball or tennis club, to community courts or even homemade, temporary courts lined with chalk. Events are designed to be fun and open to everyone, including the most experienced pickleball players and people picking up a paddle for the first time.
Pickleball offers physical, social and emotional benefits—all important to a battle against cancer. Doubles Dink for Cancer builds on this as a fun way to get moving, raise awareness and leverage the pickleball community for good. With the majority of people having a personal connection to cancer, we hope you join us in rallying behind the P站视频 to bring renewed hope for patients and their families on a national scale.
The partnership will showcase how pickleball can be a part of cancer avoidance all together by being a part of a healthy and active lifestyle, and by encouraging good sun safety habits.
Doubles Dink for Cancer is far more than a pickleball tournament – it unites communities around a beloved sport and towards a single mission: to end cancer as we know it, for everyone!
70% of proceeds from registration are supporting the P站视频 mission – and, by participating and staying physically active, players are taking steps towards cancer prevention.