COMING UP: IHRA F1 Powerboat Series (20-21 Feb)

Riabko Swaps His OptiMax for a Padel

Take two sports that shouldn’t meet, add 12 hours of non-stop action, throw in an East European powerboat racer with a sense of humour, and you’ve got Lithuania’s most unlikely tournament format of the winter.

UIM F2 racer Edgaras Riabko is bringing his motorsport mindset to the padel court, participating in Lithuania’s first 12-hour endurance tournament inspired by long-distance racing formats.

The double UIM F2 European Champion is among the participants in the Padel Endurance 12H by Paradis tournament in Kaunas. And if you’re wondering what padel is, you’re not alone.

Tennis in an Expensive Greenhouse

Padel is tennis and squash’s overachieving child. Played on a 10 by 20 metre court inside four-metre glass and mesh walls, it’s doubles only with one crucial difference: smash the ball into the glass and watch it ricochet back into play. Spain, Argentina and Portugal now have more padel players than tennis players. It’s tennis for people who enjoy geometry.

Le Mans Meets Glass Box

The tournament mirrors endurance racing formats. Eight teams compete simultaneously across four courts for 12 hours without interruption, with players rotating in and out while team managers direct strategy. Replace “lap times” with “game scores,” “fuel” with “energy drinks,” and “tyre wear” with “blistered hands” and you’ve translated Le Mans to padel.

Organised by Padel Vibe 24/7 Club, the event emerged from the club’s connection to motorsport. Many members are involved in motor racing. The “Blitz” games they’d been running apparently weren’t exhausting enough.

Riabko told Kauno Diena:

Say what you want about padel, but you can’t beat spending time with good company staying active. I signed up immediately. I even sponsored a prize.

Our 2020 photo of him expertly pulling pints at an event in Kupiškis suggests he knows how to celebrate properly, which might explain his enthusiasm for a 12-hour glass box marathon.

The man that changes his hairstyle more often than Sydney Sweeney has sponsored a prize for the tournament, though what a powerboat racer offers as a padel prize remains delightfully mysterious. An old DAC hull seems impractical for court dimensions.

Basketball Royalty on Standby

Tournament organiser Sonata Marcinkevičiūtė said registration filled rapidly. Basketball icon Paulius Jankūnas expressed interest but faces a schedule conflict. The 2.05-metre-tall Žalgiris Kaunas legend with 15 Lithuanian championships and 392 EuroLeague games brings certain tactical advantages to any court sport involving a net. If he eventually makes it to a padel court, opponents might want to reconsider their lob strategy.

Whether the motorsport-inspired format becomes a fixture or remains a creative one-off depends on how many participants can still walk after 12 hours.

But given that Riabko routinely spends time in his cramped DAC cockpit while being bounced across water, a glass-enclosed court probably feels like a spa day.