by Richard Walsh, Pickleball Changes Lives

Sometimes the most revealing stories in sport are not about winning. They are about what happens when everything that made you a player is taken away and you decide, quietly, that you are not finished.

At 74, Jamie Elliott is still on court. That, in itself, is not unusual in pickleball. What is unusual is how she got there.

Key Takeaways

  • Jamie Elliott returned to pickleball in a wheelchair after a rare cancer diagnosis and multiple surgeries — proving that the sport’s accessibility extends far beyond the able-bodied game.
  • The biggest barrier to wheelchair pickleball is not physical — it is social understanding and the quiet exclusion that comes from players not knowing how to include.
  • Elliott now co-leads clubs and runs programmes for wheelchair players, building the infrastructure that makes the sport genuinely inclusive.

A decade ago, she was already part of the sport’s foundation, working as a USA Pickleball Ambassador, helping introduce new players and build local communities.

Then came the diagnosis. Chondrosarcoma. Rare. Aggressive. What followed was not a single setback, but a sequence of them. Surgeries that removed ribs. Tumours taken from her spine, lungs, liver. A body steadily stripped back.

Four months later, she stood. And then she kept going.

A Different Way to Stay in the Game

When Jamie returned to the court in 2021, she did not come back as the same player. She came back in a wheelchair.

For most people, that is where the story would end. For her, it was simply an adjustment. She named her sports chair “Barney”, after one of pickleball’s original founders.

What changed was not her connection to the sport. It was the way she moved through it.

If you’re following how the global game is shifting week by week, the World Pickleball Report breaks this down every Wednesday.

The Reality of Returning

The hardest part was not physical. It was social.

That moment matters more than any rally. Because it is where most stories like this stall. Not through lack of effort, but through quiet exclusion.

Jamie’s response was not to step away. It was to stay. To explain. To demonstrate. To play. One rally at a time.

What She Built Next

Pickleball did not just give her a way back onto court. It gave her something to build.

Jamie now co-leads clubs and runs programmes for wheelchair players, helping others who have been through their own version of that moment — the one where life narrows suddenly and permanently.

This is where the story shifts. It is no longer about recovery. It is about access. Because the sport does not automatically include everyone. It has to be made that way.

A Different Definition of Progress

It is not about returning to what was. It is about creating something new that did not exist before.

A space where wheelchair players are not accommodated, but expected. Where the first rally is not awkward, but normal. Where someone who arrives unsure leaves with a game to come back to.

Still on Court

Jamie Elliott is still playing. Still showing up. Still proving, in small, repeatable moments, that the game is bigger than the version of it most people first encounter.

There are faster players. Stronger players. Players with better results. But very few who change what the sport looks like for the people coming after them.

And that is the part that lasts.

This article appeared in the April 2026 issue of World Pickleball Magazine.

If you want the full breakdown, including deeper analysis, additional insights, and exclusive content, you can download the full April issue of World Pickleball Magazine here:

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Chris Beaumont

Founder and Editor-in-Chief
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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…

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