paddle tennis, small-scale form of tennis similar to a British shipboard game of the 1890s. Frank P. Beal, a New York City official, introduced paddle tennis on New York playgrounds in the early 1920s. He had invented it as a child in Albion, Mich. It became popular, and national championship tournaments are still held in the United States. Platform tennis, a later development, is sometimes called paddle tennis.
Instead of rackets, short-handled, rectangular wooden bats, or paddles, are used with a slow-bouncing ball of sponge rubber. Courts, about half the size of regulation lawn-tennis courts, at first were 39 by 18 ft (11.9 by 5.5 m), about one-fourth the size of a regulation tennis court. Adults used a court measuring 44 by 20 ft. In 1959 the United States Paddle Tennis Association (founded 1923; until 1926 the American Paddle Tennis Association) enlarged the court to 50 by 20 ft and revised the ball and the rules to speed up the game.
Rules and scoring are similar to tennis, except that adults are allowed only one serve. If it is a fault, the server loses the point. Children may take two serves overhand and play on a smaller court.