
Hosted by Casie & Lauren · EN

You know that friend who texts you at 1am just because she figured out you’re both still awake? Now imagine she’s also your doubles partner, your hype woman, your matching-outfit co-conspirator, and the person who gets genuinely jealous when you drill with someone else. That’s what’s waiting for you in this episode. This week, we’re sitting down with Cecy Feld and Holly Kerr of Feld/Kerr Pickleball, two former tennis players, current empty nesters, and 50-plus pickleball influencers who decided that winning age-bracket pickleball tournaments was a great start and also not even close to enough. What began as a charity tournament on a whim turned into matching Lucky in Love outfits, a big ass calendar, a gold medal at Worlds, and a very real road to senior pro. But underneath the outfits and the gold medals is something more interesting: two women who got everything they planned for and then decided to plan something bigger. Pickleball just happened to be the vehicle. We get into: How a tennis friendship turned into a full-blown doubles partnership, including the moment they both knew it was official The real difference between PPA tournaments and APP events at the senior pro open level, and why that gap is humbling in the best possible way What their weekly pickleball training, drilling, and tournament planning actually looks like Why pickleball fashion isn’t just about looking cute, and what matching outfits actually signal to opponents before a single ball is struck Partner jealousy, blind date mixed doubles, and what happens when your regular partner drills with someone else and doesn’t text you back for two hours How playing against your partner can teach you things you’d never see from the same side of the net Why the pickleball community at tournaments like the Masters in Palm Springs and the US Open in Naples feels less like competition and more like a reunion you didn’t know you needed What competitive pickleball looks like when 80-year-olds are out there playing singles and their friends are cheering from the sidelines, and why that image changes how you think about the next few decades How women athletes over 50 are rewriting what ambition looks like, one tournament weekend at a time This one’s got gold medals, wellness wake-up calls, a very dramatic drilling betrayal, and a love letter to pickleball that might actually make you tear up a little. Fair warning. Pour something cold and press play. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. Connect with Cecy and Holly: Instagram: @feld.kerr.pickleball Tiktok: @feldkerrpickeball

It turns out the distance between a Michelin-starred restaurant and a pickleball court is shorter than anyone expected, especially when the person crossing it is already wired for pressure, creativity, competition, and just a little bit of chaos. This week, Casie and Lauren sit down with Chef Richard Blais, a chef, entrepreneur, author, television personality, and newly declared aspiring pickleball influencer. What starts as a conversation about how he found the game quickly becomes something bigger: why pickleball has a way of sneaking into your schedule, your friendships, your competitive wiring, and, if you are Richard, possibly your next business pitch. Richard brings the same curiosity to the court that made him such a recognizable force in food. He talks about learning the game from his wife, Jazmin, and discovering that pickleball, beyond the cardio, gave him a new social life, a new outlet, and apparently, a new reason to talk to himself in the car about dinking patterns. We talk about: Why Jazmin is the real origin story behind Richard’s pickleball obsession What tournament nerves have in common with cooking under pressure, and how that shapes his pickleball mindset How he talks himself through competitive pickleball moments without losing the fun Why great chefs and great doubles partners both need practice, trust, and a plan The line-call philosophy every player should probably adopt Why pickleball friends can feel surprisingly important when the rest of life is built around work What Richard thinks clubs are still figuring out when it comes to food, hospitality, and the post-game hang Why he has strong feelings about players who only drive the ball, and what that says about pickleball strategy The fine line between helpful feedback and becoming the person no one wants coaching them mid-match How rec pickleball, court confidence, and pickleball culture all collide once people start taking the game just seriously enough And the celebrity foursome that somehow turns into a full pickleball fan fiction scene Somewhere in this conversation is the thing pickleball people know but rarely say out loud: It is not just the game that gets you. It is the group texts, the partner dynamics, the small rituals, the style points, the competitive spirals, the questionable line calls, the post-game food, and the strange joy of finding yourself fully invested in something you once thought was just a casual hobby. Settle in and press play. This one’s for anyone who has ever picked up a paddle and accidentally found a whole new world. Cheers, Casie and LaurenDinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. Our listeners can buy one prescription pair and get 20% off any additional pairs at WarbyParker.com/ONTAP — and using our link helps support the show.

What happens when a Dallas pickleball duo suddenly finds themselves wearing St. Louis Shock colors? This week, we’re unpacking how we became part of the St. Louis Shock's Minor League Pickleball program while still serving as Dallas Flash ambassadors. What starts as a “how did we get here?” story quickly turns into something bigger: a look at why pickleball’s next chapter may depend less on superstar pros and more on the amateurs who want a reason to care, a team to cheer for, and a place inside the sport as it grows. We also recap our first Major League Pickleball weekend in Dallas, where we played our first Minor League Pickleball event, from rally scoring and Dream Breakers to the surprising realization that your teammates' points can feel just as important as your own. We’re joined by St. Louis Shock owner Rich Chaffetz, who shares why investing in pickleball means paying attention to the amateur player, and COO Andrew Haines, who walks us through how the Shock is building a nationwide “family” and a player experience that feels bigger than one tournament bracket. We also talk with pro Anna Bright about switching between Professional Pickleball Association play and team-based MLP, plus 13-year-old phenom Elsie Hendershot, the youngest player in MLP, on confidence, competition, and what it’s like to play at that level before most people have mastered parallel parking. We talk about: The real-world differences between PPA, MLP, and MiLP How MILP gives amateur players a way to belong to something bigger than one tournament bracket What made the St. Louis Shock’s onboarding, communication, and team culture stand out right away Why the Shock care less about having a 5.0 DUPR and more about bringing a “5.0 attitude” to the team The growing tension between elite competition, young players, and keeping pickleball fun Casie’s new pet peeve involving excessive screaming after ordinary points Between the matches, interviews, and sideline conversations, this episode reveals why connection and belonging remain at the heart of pickleball, even as the sport becomes bigger, faster, and more professional. Whether you're trying to make sense of the acronyms or curious about where pickleball is headed next, this conversation offers a front-row seat to the people and ideas shaping the sport's future. Pour something cold and press play. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to honeylove.com/ONTAP #honeylovepod Get 15% off OneSkin with the code DINKS at https://www.oneskin.co/DINKS #oneskinpod Interested in joining MiLP? Check out The Shock MiLP opportunity here: https://shockmilp.com/

This spring, DUPR hit pause on your history and asked a simple question: Who are you right now, without all that baggage? Turns out that's a harder question than it sounds. We know because Casie did the Reset, knew it didn't count, watched her number drop, and still had to talk herself off the ledge on the way home. So we brought Tito Machado, CEO of DUPR and the man who's spent years trying to convince the pickleball community that a number is just a number, back to Dinks on Tap for a second time, fresh off a DUPR Reset period that generated more player data than anyone anticipated. We get into what the Reset actually was, what it wasn't, and why so many people signed up hoping it was a cheat code, plus: Why "DUPR Reset" was never meant to be a path to a higher pickleball rating, and why everyone heard it that way anyway The myth that playing up is the fastest way to move your number (the algorithm disagrees) How DUPR accidentally became a social gatekeeper, and why Tito says that's their fault Career High, Age Ratings, and DUPR Impact: the new metrics, who loves them, and who's already mad about them Why DUPR forecast might be the perfect gambling tool (Tito's words, not ours) The AI + camera integration coming that could finally account for what everyone knows matters most: chemistry And why, when asked what the Forecast would look like if Tito's team played Casie and Lauren, he bet against himself Pour something cold and press play, this one's for anyone who's ever refreshed their DUPR after a loss and told themselves it doesn't matter. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to honeylove.com/ONTAP #honeylovepod Connect with Tito Machado: DUPR Instagram

This week, Casie and Lauren sit down with Jay Paterno, son of Penn State coaching legend Joe Paterno, and author of Blitzed: The All-Out Pressure of College Football's New Era. This one is part sports conversation, part cultural temperature check, and we did what we do best: take a sports story and find the human behavior hiding underneath it. Because it turns out that money, pressure, loyalty, ego, and identity do not stay neatly on the football field. They show up everywhere people care deeply about something, including a 20X44 pickleball court with a plastic ball and a surprisingly complicated rulebook. In this episode we talk about: The trick Jay uses to tell the truth (and why it lands better when it comes with a little plausible deniability) The NIL era, and what happens when college football starts operating more like a franchise than a tradition What the pickleball community should probably get in writing before growth outruns the pickleball culture Why the most intense person in any pickleball competition is rarely having the most fun The chaos of a game growing faster than its guardrails and what a pickleball strategy looks like when the rulebook is still being written The women in Jay's book who keep asking the inconvenient questions And the question underneath it all: when something you love becomes valuable to everyone else, does it still feel like yours The pickleball lessons here have nothing to do with your backhand and everything to do with what happens when a sport you love starts growing faster than the values that built it. So whether you're following NIL headlines or just wondering where pickleball goes from here, this episode gives you plenty to chew on. Pour something cold, hit play, and spend some time with the man who knows what happens when a game gets bigger than its guardrails. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap You can purchase Blitzed!: The All-Out Pressure of College Football's New Era by Jay Paterno here. Other ways to connect with Jay Paterno:Website Facebook XInstagram LinkedIn Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTapWebsite: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call.

It’s one thing to pick up a paddle sport on a whim. It’s another thing entirely to realize (somewhere between a rec game and an invite-only underground games scene) that this “casual hobby” has started organizing your calendar, your social life, and, subtly, your sense of self. This week, Casie and Lauren sit down with Clare Frank, former Chief of Fire Protection for the state of California, longtime leader in wildfire response, and now author of Just One More Game. What begins as a conversation about a pickleball obsession quickly turns into something more revealing: what happens when a life built on urgency, mission, and high stakes suddenly slows down… and a game steps in to fill the space. Clare didn’t set out to join the pickleball community. She showed up in flip-flops to watch. What followed was a familiar but rarely examined progression: rec game, better players, underground games, pickleball camp, tournament play, all orbiting a single, slightly uncomfortable question: why does this pickleball game get such a hold on people? The answer, it turns out, has very little to do with the game itself. We talk about: The exact moment Clare realized her pickleball obsession had crossed a line—and why that thought felt more revealing than concerning The subtle escalation from casual rec game to underground games (and what those hidden hierarchies say about status and belonging) Why adults replace “play” with productivity, and how pickleball disrupts that pattern The psychology of partnership, and why finding the right doubles partner feels suspiciously close to dating How a career in high-stakes firefighting reshapes perspective on competition, pressure, and what actually matters in tournament play The role of a pickleball mentor, and why improvement isn’t always about skill as much as identity What tournament play reveals about people that rec game culture politely hides Somewhere in this conversation is a realization most players recognize but rarely articulate: the game is just the entry point. What keeps people coming back is harder to name, and much harder to walk away from. Pour a spicy marg and press play. This one’s for anyone who’s ever wondered why this game gets such a hold on people. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap You can purchase Just One More Game by Clare Frank here. Other ways to connect with Clare Frank: Website Instagram Tiktok Youtube Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call.

What happens when two big personalities collide on the pickleball court? You get a duo that turns the game into chemistry, rhythm, and unapologetic energy! Today, Casie and Lauren sit down with Jeanne Koepke and Pam McCurry, a duo who found more than just a partner. They built a rhythm, a routine, and a friendship that reshaped this stage of life. What starts with pickleball tournaments and mixed doubles opens into something deeper. Jeanne and Pam bring equal parts of competitive fire and self-awareness. They share how they improved, built a strong partnership, and found their place within a growing pickleball community, especially in pickleball for seniors. In this episode, we talk about: The moment when they realized power alone would not carry them through higher-level play What it means to compete in their 60s, and how expectations shift The psychology of partnership, including how they manage energy and mistakes together Why the social side of pickleball matters more than people expect The unspoken rules of match etiquette, from line calls to tone How friendship and humor can matter just as much as skill for any pickleball player For those who play for fun and those who take it more seriously, there is something familiar in how this kind of connection shapes your days. So, pour something cold, settle in, and spend time with two people who remind you that the best part of pickleball might not be the game at all. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call.

Pickleball players will build an entire life around playing. Watching the pros? That’s where things get interesting. In this episode, Casie and Lauren sit down with broadcaster, commentator, and certified pickleball numbers guy, Will Daughton, to ask a deceptively simple question: if rec players are so obsessed with pickleball…why aren’t more of them watching the pickleball pros? What follows is a conversation about PickleballTV, Major League Pickleball, momentum swings, partnership dynamics, and the parts of pickleball strategy most rec players miss in plain sight. Not because the rec world needs a lesson, but because watching high-level pickleball reveals a different layer of the game entirely. They we about: We talk about: Why so many pickleball players love playing more than watching The subtle patterns pickleball pros notice immediately Why momentum in pro pickleball is more real than people think The tactical choices great players abandon the second they stop working What strong partnerships reveal on and off the scoreboard Why the human stories around Major League Pickleball may be the thing that makes more people care What PickleballTV and the broadcast side of the sport are doing to make the game more watchable This one is part pickleball strategy, part sports psychology, part broadcast-booth confessional. So whether you’re a loyal PickleballTV viewer or someone who still claims you’d “rather just go play,” this episode offers a strong argument for paying closer attention. Grab your drink, hit play, and meet the man making the pro game a lot more interesting to watch. Cheers, Casie and Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. If you love being comfy as much as we do, go to cozyearth.com, use code DINKS for up to 20% off, and get ready to live your coziest life!

Ever wonder what your parents would say if they were handed a microphone and asked to review your sports career? Would they praise your hustle… or finally reveal that one time you blamed the wind for a missed shot? In this special bonus episode, an extension of Episode 38, we invite the ultimate behind-the-scenes MVPs onto the mic: our parents. This isn’t your typical lineup of sports interviews. Instead of talking with pros or coaches, we bring on the original supporters who shaped our journey through youth sports, competitive sports, and into podcasting. Through funny and heartfelt family stories, we reflect on how sports parenting, teamwork, and a strong sports mindset shaped who we are today, on and off the pickleball court. You’ll hear: The hilarious and heartfelt family stories our parents share about raising kids in youth sports and surviving the chaos of early competitive sports What sports parenting really looked like from their perspective—from car rides and tournaments to the occasional ref-yelling moment How team culture and early lessons in athlete development shaped our confidence, leadership, and love for sports The role supportive parents and strong sports families play in building resilience and a lifelong sports mindset Why the friendships formed through the pickleball community can last just as long as the sports memories themselves How storytelling, laughter, and a little nostalgia make for unforgettable podcast storytelling Whether you grew up in youth sports, are raising future athletes, or simply love the stories that shape the people behind the paddles, this episode is full of laughs, perspective, and a whole lot of gratitude. So grab your paddle, pour something refreshing, and join us for a heartfelt episode of our favorite pickleball podcast. And hey… after listening, you might just want to call your parents and thank them for all those early morning rides to practice. Cheers! 🥂🏓 Cheers, Casie & Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call.

Ever wonder what it takes to raise a kid in competitive pickleball without turning every car ride home into a post-match press conference? A junior pickleball match only lasts so long, but parenting the player behind it is the part that follows you home. This episode gets into the family side of the game, where the travel is real, the pressure is sneaky, and keeping the joy alive can matter just as much as the result. This week, we head into the wonderfully unhinged world of junior pickleball. where the snacks are packed, the hotel check-ins are tactical, and the group text about partners somehow carries more tension than the actual match. This week, we talk with the parents behind some seriously talented young players and pull back the curtain on what sports parenting looks like when your kid is chasing the tournament circuit, eyeing the pro circuit, and learning how to compete in a sport that can hand you a highlight reel and a minor emotional spiral in the same afternoon. Glenda Calvo is a longtime volleyball coach with strong takes on the mental game, mental training, and why positive talk is not fluff, it’s fuel. Jared Messenger is a dad deep in the logistics of junior pro tournaments, managing travel, school, and the strange reality of watching a 14-year-old hold his own against grown men in competitive pickleball. And Angela Todd, the mother of Parris Todd, a recognizable face in professional pickleball, brings a hard-earned perspective on athlete development, communication, and the kind of boundary setting that keeps ambition from swallowing the whole family. We talk about: • How mental training tools like affirmations and visualization can shape confidence before a match. • Why boundary setting matters when a sport starts taking over the family calendar, budget, and nervous system. • What life on the pro circuit and tournament circuit actually looks like for families raising serious players. • How parental support can help young athletes recover from losses without turning the car ride home into a lecture series. • Why athlete development in youth athletics is as much about communication and trust as it is about reps and results. • And the sneaky truth about competitive pickleball, which is that the real drama is not always on the court. This one is funny, unexpectedly tender, and full of the kind of insight that makes you rethink what support really looks like in sport. Jared also recommends the National Junior Pickleball League as a great alternative for families looking beyond the PPA or MLP path. With divisions for beginner, intermediate, advanced, and elite players, it offers more guaranteed play through pool play followed by bracket play, making it a strong option for kids who want a competitive experience without the quick two-loss-and-you’re-done format. So grab your marg and come hang with us for a conversation about the parents behind the players, the pressure behind the paddles, and the heart behind the hustle. Cheers, Casie & Lauren Dinks on Tap Let’s keep the conversation going! Connect with us: Instagram: @dinksontap Facebook: @DinksonTap Website: dinksontap.com For those wanting to fortify their mental game on the court, check out Lauren’s Mental Caddie offerings on her website or book a Chemistry Call. If you love being comfy as much as we do, go to cozyearth.com, use code DINKS for up to 20% off, and get ready to live your coziest life!