Our Story
Padel for everyone who takes it seriously
Smash Labs was founded by competitive padel players who were tired of poorly organized tournaments, unclear prize pools, and registration processes that felt like an afterthought. We built what we wanted to play in.
Our Mission
Competitive padel, accessible at every level
We believe that the thrill of competitive padel, including real stakes and real prize money, should not be exclusive to elite players. A beginner in their third month deserves the same quality tournament experience as a pro.
Every Smash Labs event features multiple skill divisions with proportional prize pools. Whether you are playing your first competitive match or your hundredth, you are competing for something real.
Why Smash Labs
What makes us different
Real prize pools
Published prize breakdowns before registration. No moving the goalposts. What you see when you register is what you compete for.
All skill levels
Four divisions in every event: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced, and Pro. Proportional prizes and appropriate opponents at every tier.
Professional operations
Certified referees, published draws 48 hours early, on-site medical staff, and payment payout within 5 business days.
Live results
Brackets, scores, and standings updated in real time. Track every match from your phone.
Season rankings
Points accumulate across all events. The season leaderboard crowns the best players in every division citywide.
Seamless registration
Register, pay, and get confirmed online. No calls, no forms, no guessing your registration status.
The Team
Run by players who know what matters
Our organizing committee combines decades of competitive padel experience with operational expertise. We have played at every level and organized over 24 events in the past two years.
We partner with the best clubs in Cairo and Giza, work with certified padel referees, and obsess over every detail of the experience — from registration to payout.
Partner with us“We started Smash Labs after finishing third in a poorly run tournament that paid out the wrong amounts. We wanted to build something we could be proud of — and something players could trust.”