What’s the Score?
The United Pickleball Association (UPA) has fired a warning shot heard around the pickleball world. The organisation officially terminated the contracts of top professionals James Ignatowich, Ryan Fu, and Vivian Glozman, effectively immediately. The drastic measure was taken after the players participated in unsanctioned events organized by the Pickleball Japan Federation in Tokyo, a direct violation of their exclusivity agreements. PPA Tour CEO Connor Pardoe described the violation as a “clear breach,” noting that the players allowed their likenesses to be used to promote a competitor in a key strategic market.
Hit it deeper!
This was not a simple case of playing a pickup game abroad. The terminated players were featured in advertising that leveraged their status as UPA and MLP champions to market the Japanese events. Pardoe emphasised that the UPA invests over $30 million annually in player salaries specifically to secure these exclusive rights. He argued that allowing contracted players to support competing organizations in Japan—where the PPA and MLP are actively negotiating their own partnerships—would be “catastrophic” to the business.
The situation draws a sharp contrast with fellow pro Parris Todd, who also attended the events but potentially faces different sanctions. Todd had requested and received a limited waiver for a specific camp. Although her activities exceeded the scope of that waiver, UPA officials acknowledged she followed protocol by asking for permission, unlike the others who “deliberately hid” their plans.
The fallout is immediate and severe. Ignatowich and Fu are effectively banned from the PPA Tour, and their Major League Pickleball (MLP) teams, the Chicago Slice and SoCal Hard Eights, are now scrambling to fill roster spots for the 2026 season. Interestingly, while Ignatowich is out as a player, his equipment company, RPM, retains its certification, meaning his paddles can still be used on the tour he is no longer allowed to play.
The World Pickleball Verdict
This is a watershed moment for the “business” of pickleball. The UPA is signalling that the era of the “freelance superstar” is over. By firing a high-profile fan favourite like Ignatowich, the UPA is proving that no player is bigger than the league’s intellectual property rights.
While this may alienate some fans in the short term, it establishes a rigid legal framework essential for the league’s global expansion. The UPA is protecting its product: if they are going to sell the “PPA experience” to Japan, they cannot have their own stars giving it away for free to a competitor a week prior.
