The 7 Types of Opponents You’ll Meet at Every Tennis Club (2026)

May 18, 2026

by Peter Wong

5 minutes

Twenty-five years of club tennis has introduced me to a very specific cast of characters. They exist at every club, in every Canadian city, in every era of the sport. You know all of them. You’ve played against all of them. One of them is you. Here are the 7 types of opponents every recreational tennis player meets — and how to handle them in 2026.

1. The Grunter 🎵

Every shot. Every. Single. Shot. You’re not sure if they’re playing tennis or moving a refrigerator. The volume scales with match tension — deuce points sound like industrial machinery. You’ve started grunting back involuntarily. Your hitting partner has asked if you’re okay. The ATP has studied this phenomenon and still has no good answer for why it happens.

Weakness: Their own grunting drowns out the sound of your ball contact. Sneak attacks with soft drop shots are psychologically devastating. They hate variety because it breaks their rhythm.

2. The Excuse Machine ⚙️

Down 5-0? The sun was in their eyes for games 1 and 3. Just restrung — the tension feels completely different. Slight hamstring issue that appeared at 0-3. The court surface seems slicker than usual. You’ll beat them next week when conditions are fair. Conditions are never fair.

Strength: Completely undefeatable psychologically — they’ve never actually lost a tennis match in their own internal narrative. You will never receive credit for your win. Accept this and move on.

3. The Pusher 🧱

Technically excellent. Emotionally devastating. Everything comes back. Slowly. At exactly the height that makes you rush your shot. You came here to play tennis and instead you’re engaged in a philosophical debate about whether this still qualifies as tennis. You lose 6-0 to someone who hit zero winners and feel genuinely robbed.

If you’re struggling with your groundstroke consistency against pushers, our backhand guide and serve improvement plan might help you develop some offensive weapons to break through. Pushers are beaten by patience and selective aggression — not by trying to overpower them.

4. The Former Junior Player 🏆

Played competitive juniors twenty years ago. Still mentions it. Has impeccable technique and absolutely no match fitness after two decades of minimal exercise. Will crush you in the first set with beautiful groundstrokes, then slowly unravel as their legs give out. Will attribute the loss to “not having played in a while.” They haven’t played in a while. They’ve played every week for twenty years. This is just how their game works now.

How to beat them: Make them run. Long rallies. Cross-court patterns. Drop shot, lob, drop shot. Their technique never leaves but their fitness does. By the third set, you have all the advantages.

5. The Gear Obsessive 🛍️

New racket every few months. Latest shoes. Three dampeners. Personalized bag. Heart rate monitor for a recreational Tuesday evening match. Playing level: enthusiastic intermediate. Gear investment: touring professional. You respect the commitment while gently questioning the priorities.

(Note: I am occasionally this person. The HEAD Tour Team bag is objectively excellent — see our tennis bag guide. And our racket guide. And our shoes guide. Don’t judge.)

6. The Social Butterfly 🦋

Doesn’t really care about the score. Wants to discuss your weekend between every point, your job between every game, and their holiday plans at every changeover. Genuinely lovely human being. You lose track of the score completely somewhere around 3-2, and you notice you don’t actually mind that much.

The Social Butterfly is, secretly, the most valuable hitting partner in your entire tennis life. Tennis is supposed to be fun. They remember this. The rest of us forget regularly.

7. The One Who’s Just Better Than You 📈

No excuses. No gimmicks. No special equipment. Just solid, consistent tennis, week after week. You’ve never beaten them. You’ve come close twice. You keep scheduling matches with them because you’re getting closer, and you know it.

This is the person who’s making you better. This is why you keep coming back to the club. One day it’ll happen. Until then, you keep showing up.

Which One Are You?

Be honest. We’re all the Gear Obsessive sometimes. We’re all the Excuse Machine occasionally. We’ve all been the Social Butterfly when we needed a break from taking ourselves seriously. Tennis at the recreational level is human, messy, and full of personality. That’s what makes it great.

Share this with your regular hitting partner and see which one they say you are. Then check out our 10 Thoughts Every Recreational Player Has During a Match for more relatable tennis therapy.

🎾 The Perfect Gift for Each Type

Got a long-suffering hitting partner who fits one of these descriptions perfectly? The LooseTennisBalls collection has the right shirt for every type. “Just shut up and serve” for the Grunter. “I’m not arguing — Just returning your serve” for the Excuse Machine. “You’ve met your match” for the One Who’s Just Better Than You.

Shop the LooseTennisBalls Collection on Redbubble

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The Bottom Line

Every tennis club has all 7 types. Most weeks, you’ll be one of them — possibly several. That’s the joy of recreational tennis. The personalities are part of the package. Embrace your type, recognize the others, and keep showing up. The court doesn’t care which type you are. Just that you played. 🎾

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