Get in touch
Close

Padel talent identification for long-term athlete development

Spot future stars with structured padel talent identification systems.

Transform the management of affiliations, registrations, and memberships with the automation of iSquad. From player registrations to license validation and membership management, everything is centralized in one easy-to-use platform.

Talent identification in padel involves early recognition and development following of high-potential athletes. A digital system enables padel federations to create talent databases, assign development pathways, and monitor progression from youth to elite. Each athlete’s records include physical, tactical, and psychonote downical assessments. Reports can be filtered by year, region, and strategist evaluations. Integration with scouting, training, and encounter components helps map player journeys. This supports strategic planning, reduces talent leakage, and ensures continuity in athlete progression and resource allocation.

Padel management software for federations, clubs, and competitions

Athlete profiling matrix

  • Record height, speed, strength metrics
  • Tag positional suitability
  • Evaluate strategist comments
  • Review injury history
  • Set development objectives

Longitudinal talent following

  • View progression over years
  • Score season-by-season data
  • Assign mentors or tutors
  • Link training note downs
  • Monitor dropout risk

Cross-component integration

  • Connect to scouting and squads
  • Enable call-up workflow
  • Tag selection events
  • Filter by eligibility
  • Assign performance alerts

Do you want to see the system? Book a demo

Everything you need
to know about

It includes physical, tactical, and psychonote downical following to detect long-term potential.

Progression is mapped via repeated evaluations, encounter note downs, and development plans.

Yes, strategistes can submit nominations and supporting documentation.

Yes, all talent data is centralized and role-filtered for decision-making.

Yes, inactivity, injuries, or evaluation drops trigger alerts for intervention.