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Inside the PPA Tour Asia Hong Kong Open 2025

Inside the PPA Tour Asia Hong Kong Open 2025 Blog - Featured Image

The Kai Tak Arena pulsed from first ball to last between August 21–24, 2025, as the PPA Tour Asia Hong Kong Open delivered a compact, high-energy showcase of pro pickleball alongside bustling amateur draws. The second stop of the tour brought a deep international field and a finals day that moved briskly semis to bronze to gold without losing the theater the sport thrives on.

As players and fans packed the stands, Ramsports stood proud in support of the athletes whose drive and discipline mirror the same values that define great performance both in gear and in game.

A Weekend Built for Television

The women’s program belonged to Roos van Reek. She controlled the Women’s Singles final from the opening exchanges, closing out Yu-chieh Hsieh 11–2, 11–3 with first-strike clarity and tidy finishing at the kitchen. Moments later she and Ting-chieh Wei completed the sweep in Women’s Doubles, a straight-games win 11–4, 11–3 over Xiao Yi Wang-Beckvall / Yufei Long.

The Men’s Final, Decided at the Line

In Men’s Doubles, the arena’s volume spiked for a deciding game that wouldn’t end. Thomas Yu / Len Yang finally tipped the balance over Eunggwon Kim / Wong Hong-kit, 11–6, 9–11, 12–10, sealing a gold that felt earned point by point.

Mixed Doubles, Clean and Clinical

Aiko Yoshitomi / Robert Stirling offered a neat counterpoint to the late-night drama, beating Connie Lee / Giang Trinh 11–1, 11–7 with crisp patterns and ruthless side-out efficiency.

Threads That Tied the Event Together

  • Precision travels. Van Reek’s balance of pace and margin scaled across formats - first in singles, then again with Wei for the double.

  • Staying power matters. Hsieh’s singles run to silver demanded patience through a crowded draw, while her pairing with Nicola Schoeman delivered meaningful Sunday minutes and a place in the Women’s Doubles medal picture.

  • Hands decide titles. Yu and Yang’s win hinged on handspeed at the line and a well-timed poach at 10–10 in the third—small margins that separate a memorable final from an ordinary one.

The City’s Own Script

Hong Kong had its headline, too. Wong Hong-kit lifted Men’s Singles gold and added Men’s Doubles silver, giving the host crowd a home narrative that amplified every late rally.

When the lights dimmed at Kai Tak, the outline was unmistakable: execution beat noise. From Roos van Reek’s sweep to Yu-chieh Hsieh’s fight to Sunday, from Nicola Schoeman’s place in the medals to Thomas Yu’s 12–10 nerve check, it was a clean reminder that composure travels. It was also a nod to the athletes’ craft hours made visible in the biggest points—and to the way they carried themselves on and off court. 

We’re proud to stand alongside them as we keep the promise simple put winners on the court and in Hong Kong, the court answered back.