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PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

“Pickleball is growing rapidly, and this is a chance to be in on the ground oor in bringing team pickleball to the Champions Pro (ages 50 and older) scene,” said Chris Montgomery, who has played the sport recreationally and in tournaments since 2014. “I’ve always dreamed of owning or being part of a sports team, and this is our opportunity. It is also important to me that we have a team in Colorado.”

Not only is pickleball growing rapidly, it’s the fastest-growing sport in the country. As reported by CNN, the number of people playing pickleball grew by more than 150% in three years to 8.9 million in 2022, according to the Sports & Fitness Industry Association.

Mario Boschi said it’s almost like “ e Curious Case of Benjamin Button.” e sport has grown out of interest from older audiences, and that interest has trickled down to younger players in recent years.

“I’ll go back 10 years,” Boschi said. “ e (average) age group was maybe 62. You go back ve years, it goes down to about 42. Now, the age group from a year or two years ago, you could be looking at anywhere between 28 to 35. Give it another couple years, you’re going to see this thing go down to anywhere between ages 20 to 25.”

Montgomery recalled the rst time he played. He was an avid basketball and racquetball player and missed being able to compete like he used to. A year after moving to Colorado from Austin in 2013, he said he just assumed racquetball would still be around like it was in the 70s and 80s.

“I saw an ad in the paper for, ‘Hey, come out and play pickleball at the tennis center,’” Montgomery said. “I wasn’t a tennis player, so I just jumped out there and said, ‘I don’t know what this goofy sport is but I’ll give it a shot.’ I just got hooked right away.” e youngest guy there, other than Montgomery, was 65.

“I jumped in with them anyway and they were like, ‘Oh, you’re the young guy!’ And I’m like, I’m 47,” he said. “Now, we go out there every day and there’s another group of people in their 20s and 30s trying it for the rst time.”

After that match, the rest was history. He began playing tournaments in 2014, and when the opportunity came up to play professionally, representing the place he found his new passion, it was a no-brainer.

Boschi said the reason it’s becoming so popular so quickly is because it is easy to learn, is accessible and inexpensive like disc golf, and it’s simply fun. He holds a Level II IPTPA (International Pickleball Teaching Professional Association) certi cation and teaches pickleball in Steamboat Springs and Denver. Boschi’s only been playing for about two years, after trying out the sport on a whim when invited by his friends.

Now, he’s hooked, and playing at a high level. But in the Champions Pro scene, that’s the only option,

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