Pickleball coaching
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Camp · Temecula, CA

TEMECULA
SAT · AUGUST 8, 2026

A beginner pickleball camp on indoor, climate-controlled courts, paced to where your game actually is, whether this is the first paddle you've held or your tenth time on a court still trying to put the pieces together.

Most beginner clinics assume you already know what the kitchen line does and what a third shot is supposed to do. This one starts at the part of the game you actually have questions about, then takes you a clear step beyond it. Coach Todd Rainey watches every player and fixes one thing at a time until the day starts to feel less like guessing. And because the courts at SoCal Pickleball Club are indoor and air-conditioned, the August heat stays outside where it belongs.

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Venue
SoCal Pickleball Club
41735 Winchester Rd, Temecula, CA · indoor, air-conditioned
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Date
Sat · August 8, 2026
11:00 AM – 3:00 PM
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Group size
8 players
2 courts, firm cap
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Skill
Beginner · no rating required
Never heard of a rating? You're in the right place
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Coach
Todd Rainey
IPTPA Level I + IPTPA Level II certified
Take-home
Written improvement plan
In your inbox the week after camp
Todd Rainey, RallyUp Pickleball coach
Meet your coach

TODD RAINEY

Palm Desert, CA · IPTPA dual-certified coach

Todd coaches in the Coachella Valley, where he's the most-booked pickleball coach on TeachMe.to: 217 lessons taught, a 4.9-star average across 86 written reviews, and a calendar that stays full for a reason.

He's certified at Level I and Level II by the IPTPA, the International Pickleball Teaching Professional Association. Level II is the one most teaching pros never finish, because it means proving you can watch a player, diagnose what's costing them points, and fix it live in front of an examiner. Todd holds both.

He's also one of two official club pros at Sun City Palm Desert, a 55+ community with 12 pickleball courts. Which means the players he coaches every single week are exactly the players this camp is built for: adults picking the game up later and wanting to learn it right the first time.

His students keep coming back. The reviewers on his profile have taken 10, 16, 18, even 32 lessons with him. Over a decade on court himself, and his lessons are patient, specific, and paced to the player in front of him.

“He has helped my game more than anyone I have ever worked with.” That's a student review, word for word.

On Saturday, August 8, that’s the coaching you’re showing up to.

01

Diagnosis first

Students say it over and over: he spots what's actually wrong fast, names it, and breaks the fix into simple steps.

02

Patient and positive

He teaches adults who are new to this, every week, at a 55+ club. No drill-sergeant routine. You'll laugh, and you'll improve.

03

Fixes that stick

Specific corrections you can use the same day, not a firehose of technique. His students report results within a lesson or two.

IPTPA Level I certifiedIPTPA Level II certified217 lessons coached4.9 stars · 86 reviewsMost-booked coach on TeachMe.to in the Coachella ValleyClub pro at a 55+ community
How camp day actually feels

What happens between 11:00 AM and 3:00 PM.

The other players in the room range from first-time paddles to a few months in, which is the part nobody warns you about beforehand: the day moves a lot faster when no one is pretending to know more than they do. The first half hour is built to settle the nerves. Your coach walks the room, watches your warm-up rally, and starts naming the small things your body is already doing that will become the bigger things you fix later. By the end of that half hour, you've stopped wondering whether you belong here.

Then the drilling starts, paced in small blocks so the group can rest, watch, and try a thing five different times before the next thing. Your coach moves between the courts, watching every player's reps, calling out one specific adjustment, walking away, watching again. The drills change to match what the room is actually doing, not a printed script.

The last hour is live games with corrections in real time. Four players per court, small games, scoring not really the point. The patterns from the drills start showing up under pressure, sometimes well and sometimes not, and your coach is courtside calling out what to try next. By the time you walk off, the swing feels like yours. By the time the plan lands in your inbox a week later, you know exactly what to keep working on at the courts near your house.

Pickleball players mid-rally
What you’ll work on

Six blocks, four hours, one coach watching.

Your coach adapts the timing and drills based on what the room needs. The curriculum is the structure, not a script.

I

The warm-up that's already coaching

30 min

Looks like a casual rally. Isn't. Your coach is watching grip, where your feet end up, and the way your body twists when the ball goes wider than you expected. The notes start before drill one is even announced.

II

The soft shot that runs the whole game (the 'dink')

60 min

The shot you've seen on TikTok where the ball barely clears the net. It's also the single most important shot in pickleball at every level. Cross-court, straight-on, forehand, backhand. Where the ball goes when you do it right, and where it goes when you reach. By the end of this block, the soft game starts to make sense.

III

The shot that gets you to the net (the 'third shot drop')

45 min

After you serve and the return comes back, one shot decides whether you get to walk up to the net or stay stuck at the baseline trading hard hits. This is that shot. Drop mechanics, when to drive it instead, and how to know which the moment calls for.

IV

The hands work at the front (volleys and resets)

30 min

Once you're at the net, the rallies get fast. A volley is hitting the ball before it bounces. A reset is the soft-hands move that calms a fast ball back into a slow rally. This is the block that makes you look composed when the pace picks up.

V

Serve and return, made repeatable

30 min

Both serves you'll actually use, both returns you'll actually need. Deep, placed, the same every time. Drilled in pairs with a target on the court so you can see whether you're hitting it or just guessing.

VI

Live games where the drills become the game

35 min

Real points, real partners, real pressure. Four players per court, small games, fast rotations. The patterns from earlier start showing up in your live play, and your coach is courtside calling out what to try next.

Be honest for a minute

Remember the last time someone invited you to play?

You smiled and said maybe next time, because you weren't sure your serve would actually land in the box. You've watched four pickleball tutorials on YouTube this month, and you can hold the paddle right, and you know what the kitchen line is now, but when you walk onto a real court the whole thing falls apart and you start reaching for balls you shouldn't be reaching for.

Most beginner clinics don't fix that. They stuff sixteen players onto two courts, hand out generic drills designed for everyone and built for no one, and the coach spends half the morning explaining the rules to people who already know them while you stand on the back court hitting forehands into the net.

Saturday, August 8 is built to fix exactly that. By the time you walk off the court at 3:00 PM, the swing that's been fighting you for months will have started to settle, and you'll know what the next thing to work on actually is.

Pickleball court at golden hour
Imagine this

It's Monday, August 10. Two days after camp.

You walk onto your local court a little before sunset. Three of the friends who invited you to play a month ago are already there warming up. The first ball comes back to you on a return, and instead of reaching for it the way you used to, your feet move first, your paddle stays low, and the ball lands deep in the corner where you actually wanted it to go.

Your friend pauses for half a second before saying “when did THAT happen?”

You don't tell them yet. You keep playing. The third shot drop you spent forty-five minutes drilling on Saturday lands soft. The kitchen rally goes twelve balls and you end it with a cross-court dink you didn't know you could hit until two days ago. Later that night the group chat from camp lights up with photos and someone asking when the next one is.

That's the difference between who you are right now and who you'll be on Monday, August 10.

What you walk away with

The day after camp, then the week after, then the season after.

Outcome 01

The shot you came in chasing starts landing.

Your third shot drop, your kitchen volley, the one specific shot you came to camp wanting to fix. By the second hour the coach has named it. By the third hour you're hitting it under pressure and it's still landing where you wanted it. That's the shot that quietly wins you the next six matches you play.

Pickleball players ready on the court
Outcome 02

The game finally slows down.

Most newer players play one gear: every ball, full tilt. That's why every third shot ends up in the net or out the back. Your coach catches it in the first rally and starts naming it as you go. By the second hour, you're choosing which balls to attack and letting the bad ones go. By the third hour, the game has slowed down enough that you can see where to stand, where the open court is, where your partner is. It stops feeling like the game is happening to you.

Player composed at the kitchen line
Outcome 03

A written plan lands in your inbox a week later.

Three drills, your specific patterns, with reps and frequency. The kind of document you keep open on your phone at the court because you finally know what to work on next instead of guessing.

Pickleball courts the day after camp
Outcome 04

You drive home with a different crew.

Eight players, four hours, two courts. By the end of the day you've traded numbers with three people you actually want to play with. The group chat starts before you get home.

Camp group photo, pickleball
Outcome 05

Your regular game notices.

The next Saturday at your usual court, a rally where your partner stops mid-game and asks what changed. The pace doesn't break on you anymore. The third shot lands. That's the moment a RallyUp camp is built for.

Evening pickleball on outdoor courts
Included in your seat

Three things that keep paying off long after camp day.

None of these cost extra. All three are included the moment you reserve your seat.

01
Bonus

Personalized Written Plan & 3 Drills

$228 value

Your coach watches your game on camp day and sends you a written plan within 7 days. Three drills built around the patterns they saw in your specific play. The kind of plan you keep open on your phone at the court.

02
Bonus

Lifetime RallyUp Players Community

$180 value

Lifetime access to the RallyUp Players community. Players from every camp are in there. Find someone to hit with, drill videos, and the group chat from your camp day.

03
Bonus

Lifetime Credit Insurance

Included

If life happens and you can't make camp day, your seat credit travels to any future RallyUp camp anywhere in the US. No expiration. The seat is always yours, just on a different Saturday.

Total value, your cost

A private full day with a head coach runs $2,500. We took the same drilling progression, capped the court at 8 players so you still get eyes on your swing, and packaged it into one day.

$657+ in stated value, your seat $249.
What players say

From players who actually showed up.

Todd is probably the most helpful instructor I have ever worked with. He has the ability to identify mistakes and show me how to quickly remedy the problem. He has helped my game more than anyone I have ever worked with.

Shelby W.
Todd's student · Verified TeachMe.to review
SoCal Pickleball Club pickleball courts
SoCal Pickleball Club · Temecula, CA

4 championship indoor courts, air-conditioned, inside a 10,000 square foot building. No sun, no wind, no 100-degree August. Where Saturday, August 8 happens.

Visit the venue's website →
Before you reserve

Questions worth asking.

What if I've barely played? Will I be the slowest one in the room?
No. This camp is built for beginners and newcomers, which means everyone is either holding a paddle for one of the first times or has been playing for a few months and still feels like they're guessing. Coach Todd reads the room in the first half hour and groups the drills so people are moving at the speed that matches them. He coaches adults who are new to this every week. By the end of the day, you'll be playing real points with people you'll want to play with again.
Isn't it brutally hot in Temecula in August?
Outside, yes. Inside SoCal Pickleball Club, no. The camp runs entirely indoors on championship courts in an air-conditioned, 10,000 square foot building. No sun, no wind, no burning your hand on the paddle you left on the bench. There's seating with tables for the breaks, restrooms on site, water and cold drinks available, and a free parking lot at the door with no steps to climb.
I'm in my 50s, 60s, or beyond. Is this really for me?
Yes, and you'll be in good company. Most of our players are 50 and up, and coach Todd is the club pro at a 55+ community, so teaching this age group isn't a special accommodation for him. It's his everyday job. The pace is structured rather than punishing, there's a break between every drilling block, and the drills adapt to any injury or limitation you tell us about when you reserve.
Do I need a rating to come?
No. No rating, no tryout, no proof of anything. If you've heard people mention DUPR numbers at the court and felt out of the loop, this is exactly the camp for you. We'll ask a couple of self-rating questions when you reserve and slot you in. If your game is actually past the level this camp is set for, we'll tell you straight and point you to a future camp that fits.
Can I bring a friend?
Yes, and we'd recommend it. Most beginners learn faster when they show up with someone they already know, even just for the drive in. If you both reserve seats together, mention each other in the notes field and we'll keep you grouped during the drills.
Will I actually get individual attention?
Yes. 8 players, four hours, one coach who can actually watch every rep. That's why the cap is at 8 and not twenty, and it's the format Todd's 4.9-star lesson reviews are built on. A week after camp, he sends you a written plan based on what he saw from your game specifically, not a generic worksheet.
What do I bring?
Your paddle, court shoes (no street shoes on indoor courts), a water bottle, and athletic clothes. We provide the balls, and loaner paddles are available if you don't have your own yet. Just tell us in the notes when you reserve. The venue also has a pro shop with demo paddles if you want to try before you buy one.
What if I can't make the camp date?
More than 15 days out, full transfer to a future camp or a 90 percent refund. Between 8 and 14 days, half refund or full transfer. Under 7 days, transfer only, and the credit doesn't expire. If we cancel for any reason, you get a full refund or full credit, your call.
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