The PPA Tour Asia calendar is expanding again, with two new events in China confirmed for 2026. But beyond the schedule, something more deliberate is taking shape. In Asia, the PPA is introducing a structured pathway that does not yet exist within its US system.
- PPA Tour Asia will run 12 events in 2026, with China hosting four stops
- A new 125-tier excludes top-20 players, creating a defined route for emerging talent
- The model differs from the contract-driven system used in the US, offering a clearer progression pathway
A growing calendar — and a different structure behind it
The Beijing Open will take place from 17 to 21 June at the National Tennis Centre, followed by the Shenzhen Open from 20 to 23 August at the Shenzhen Bao’an Sports Centre Gymnasium. These additions bring the Asian circuit to 12 events, with China now hosting four stops.
On its own, that reads as expansion. Alongside it, the structure tells a different story.
The introduction of the PPA Asia 125 series creates a defined entry point for emerging players. It is not simply a lower-tier competition. It is a closed tier, with players ranked inside the world’s top 20 excluded.
That decision removes a familiar barrier. Instead of facing established professionals early, players compete within their own field. Progression is based on results, not access. Winners earn ranking points, prize money, and direct entry into higher-level events on the PPA Tour Asia calendar.
In Singapore, that system has already produced its first winners. Nineteen-year-old Charles Yong came through a tight final against Malaysia’s Timothy Foo, while 18-year-old Sophia Tran edged past Lai Pei-Yu in the women’s draw.
The margins were small. The pathway is not.
One organisation, two models
What makes this shift notable is not just the structure itself, but where it sits.
This is not an independent tour building an alternative system. It is the PPA applying a different model within its own ecosystem.
In the United States, the professional game has developed around contracted players and restricted access to top-tier competition. Movement into that group is limited, and often unclear. Recent events, such as the Sacramento Open, have reinforced how tightly controlled that top level remains.
In Asia, the approach is more direct. Progression is built into the calendar. Players move through defined stages, with each level feeding into the next.
Figures such as Andre Agassi, who has been actively promoting the sport in China, bring attention to the region. But attention alone does not create competitive depth.
A system does.
If you’re following how the global game is shifting week by week, the World Pickleball Report breaks this down every Wednesday.
What this could change
For players in Asia, this removes a long-standing problem.
They no longer need to break into a closed group to gain relevance. They move through stages that are designed to lead somewhere. That creates continuity, and it creates a clearer sense of progression.
If the pathway works, it gives the PPA a controlled way to develop players outside its core market. It also creates a live comparison within the sport itself.
Two systems. One organisation. Different outcomes.
The question is not simply whether Asia produces talent. It is whether this model proves more effective over time.
Further details on the expanding calendar can be found via the official PPA Tour platform.
A system under construction
This is still early. The pathway has only just begun to produce results, and the calendar continues to evolve.
But the direction is clear. The PPA is not only expanding geographically. It is testing how the sport itself should be built.
For a clearer view of where the sport is heading each week, you can join the World Pickleball Report here.
Further Reading
- Latest pickleball news from around the world
- Tournament coverage and results
- Rankings and player profiles
- Regional pickleball coverage

Chris Beaumont is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of World Pickleball Magazine. Chris follows the global game closely, reporting on the latest news, developments, stories and tournaments from all five continents. He also hosts the World Pickleball Podcast, interviewing people at all levels of pickleball. Chris is also an avid player, currently struggling to make the breakthrough from 4.0 to 4.5.
