There’s a moment most players recognise. Not when things are comfortable. Not when you’re winning easily. The other one. When the pace feels different. The margin disappears. The shots that worked all morning suddenly stop working.
For Bálint Bakó, that moment came in Malmö.
He had gone there with a clear purpose. Not to win. Not to prove anything. Just to find out.
Then he beat James Chaudry.
Key Takeaways
- Hungarian player Bálint Bakó beat one of Europe’s top players at Malmö — then lost the rematch, learning the critical difference between winning once and sustaining that level.
- Elite players don’t disappear after a loss — they adjust, watch, and come back with answers. That second-match adaptation is what separates levels.
- Most players avoid testing themselves against better competition — but those uncomfortable matches are the ones that reveal the truth about where you stand.
The Match That Actually Mattered
Chaudry came back. That is the part most people forget. At the top level, players don’t disappear after a loss. They adjust. They watch. They come back with answers.
Bakó made the final. Chaudry was waiting again. Same opponent. Same day. Different match. This time, the result flipped.
Beating someone once tells you what happened. It doesn’t tell you what happens when they’ve seen you, understood you, and taken something away.
If you’re following how the global game is shifting week by week, the World Pickleball Report breaks this down every Wednesday.
What Elite Players Do Differently
The shift wasn’t dramatic. It rarely is. The patterns changed. The space closed. The same shots didn’t land the same way.
That’s what higher level looks like. Not bigger shots. Not highlight moments. Just better decisions, fewer errors, and a faster read on what’s in front of you.
Why He Was There in the First Place
Bakó’s path into pickleball isn’t unusual on the surface. A strong tennis background. Years inside a system. Close enough to the top to understand what it takes.
Pickleball offered something different. After his first session, the shift in thinking was immediate.
The Test Most Players Avoid
Most players don’t go looking for this. They stay where they’re competitive. They play the same opponents. They win enough to feel like they’re improving.
Bakó went the other way. That meant playing better players early. Taking matches where the outcome wasn’t clear. Putting himself in situations where the answers would be honest.
Malmö gave him exactly that.
What He Actually Took From It
He didn’t leave with a title. He left knowing where he stood. He had seen what worked when the opponent didn’t have time to adjust. He had seen what stopped working once they did.
That’s not always comfortable. But it’s useful. Because once you see the gap clearly, it stops being abstract.
The Bit That Applies to Everyone
Every player says they want to improve. Fewer are willing to find out how far away they are.
Because that means playing matches you might lose. Matches where your strengths don’t hold up. Matches where the other player figures you out.
Those are the ones that tell you the truth.
Back to Malmö
Bakó didn’t leave Malmö thinking he had arrived. He left knowing he hadn’t.
The win got attention. The loss gave him direction.
That’s what testing yourself against the best does. Not confidence. Clarity.
This article appeared in the April 2026 issue of World Pickleball Magazine.
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