Three (3) beautiful, dedicated asphalt pickleball courts are the main attraction at the new park. Play can begin at 7:30 am, however, the courts are reserved to Islamorada Foundation donors until 10:30 each morning. Public welcome after 10:30 with “drop in fee.” Courts and entire Park close at dark.
Pickleball “Pay to Play” @ Gib Reese Park
Per Person – $5/day or $40/monthly or $200/annually
Pickleball Clinics Winter/ Spring pickleball clinics (Jan-Apr) with Coach Ed Bernard, are available for those with advanced beginner to intermediate skills (2.0 – 3.5 players – see definition below), seeking to improve their game.
Clinic schedule for 2025 will be released and scheduled on TeamReach App – “Gib Reese Park Programs”. Clinics are generally offered twice weekly and limited to the first 8 players to sign up for each date. Clinics are 90 minutes and cost $25/person.
Beginner clinics are being scheduled, beginning mid-November, Wednesday afternoons 3:00 – 4:30p
Advanced beginner to intermediate clinics will begin, twice weekly in early January 2025.
Email us to sign up @ info@theislamoradafoundation.org or our contact us page.
Join us on the TeamReach App in the App store. Download App > Join, Create your profile > Search for Group > Gib Reese Park Programs > request to join.
Skill level definition
The following pickleball skill levels are a guide for evaluating your own level and determining which tournament events and/or round-robins you should play in. The purpose of rated events is to insure a consistent and competitive level of play for all players within that event as much as possible.
All skill levels should be able to demonstrate most of the skills for their level, plus the majority of the skills from preceding levels. Therefore, a 3.5 level player, for example, demonstrates most skills in the 3.5 level list as well as most skills in the 3.0 level list, and so on.
2.0 Pickleball Skill Level
- Moves around court in balanced, safe manner
- Gets some serves “in”, perhaps not regularly
- Realizes aspects of scorekeeping, rules and where to stand on court during serve, receipt of serve, and general play
- Has some basic stroke skills
2.5 Pickleball Skill Level
- This player has limited experience. Can sustain a short rally with players of equal ability. Basic ability to keep score.
- Able to serve “in” more regularly
- Knows two-bounce rule and demonstrates it most times
- Knows where to stand on the court during serve, receipt of serve and general play
- Attempts to dink but not always effective at it
- Working on their form for ground strokes, accuracy is variable
- Can keep the ball in play longer
- Sometimes lobs with forehand with varying degrees of success
3.0 Pickleball Skill Level
- Working to keep the serve and serve receive deep
- Moves quickly towards the non-volley zone when opportunity is there
- More aware of their partner’s position on the court and moving more as a team
- Developing more power in shots
- Beginning to attempt lobs and dinks with little success and doesn’t fully understand when and why they should be used
- Demonstrates improved skills with all the basic shot strokes and shot placement but lacks control when trying for direction, depth or power on shots
- Working on consistency
- Knows the fundamental rules and can keep score
- Regularly gets serves “in” to mid-court or deeper
- Dinks mostly in opponent’s kitchen and is dinking lower over the net
- Able to sustain dinking in the game
- Using both forehand and backhand on returns and forehands on overhead returns
- Moves quickly towards the non-volley zone when opportunity is there
- Somewhat a uni-dimensional player working at broadening their playing repertoire
3.5 Pickleball Skill level
- Demonstrates a broad knowledge of the rules of the game
- Gets a high majority of serves in deep & returns serve deep
- Often hits to the weak side of opponent
- Demonstrates strategies of playing during games
- Actively works with partners in communicating, covering court, moving to net
- With varying consistency executes: lobs, forehand/backhand ground strokes, overheads, net volleys, and sustained dinking
- Some use of drop shots to get to the net
- Specifically places shots rather than just hitting shots anywhere
- Selective mixing up soft shots with power shots to create an advantage
- Hits fewer balls out of bounds or in the net
- Has a moderate # of unforced errors per game
- Demonstrates ability to intentionally play in offensive mode
- Self-correcting after play is over
- Demonstrates extended periods of multi-dimensional play
4.0 Pickleball Skill Level
- Beginning to play more consistently in all phases of the game
- Anticipates opponents shots resulting in good court position
- Primarily plays offensively
- Controls and places serves and return of serves to best advantage
- Puts strategy into play in the game
- Consistently varies shots to create a competitive advantage
- Works and moves well with partner – easily switches court positions when required
- Very comfortable playing at the non-volley zone
- Works with partner to control the line, keeping opponents back and driving them off line
- Can block volleys directed at them
- Has good footwork and moves laterally, backward and forward with ease
- Uses strategy in dinking to get a put-away shot
- Consistently executes effective drop shots
- Demonstrates 3rd shot strategies: drop shot, lobs and fast paced ground strokes
- Hits a low number of unforced errors per game
4.5 – 5.0 Pickleball Skill Level
- Can regularly convert a hard shot to a soft shot
- Exhibits patience in play at a superior level
- Shows noticeably increased skills, a higher level of strategy, quickness of hands and movement, judicious use of power, superior placement of shots, superb anticipation of play, sustained volleying skills, superior put-aways — all with consistency
- Makes very few unforced errors