Miami, three days to set the stage for a new series
Some tournaments help players get back into the tempo. And then there are those that aim to change the conversation. The Reserve Cup Miami 2026 clearly belongs to the latter category: a short format, a stage designed for spectacle, and a stated ambition to transform the event into an international fixture via the Reserve Cup Series.
- Miami, three days to set the stage for a new series
- Coello/Chingotto vs Galán/Tapia: the big match-up you won’t see anywhere else
- A lineup that guarantees tempo with every rotation
- Reserve Cup Series: Miami kicks off, Marbella already in focus
- What it changes for fans (and what to watch out for)
- Practical Information: Reserve Cup Miami 2026
- Key takeaways
- Useful links
The setting is already a selling point: Reserve Miami Seaplane (1000 MacArthur Causeway), a site that embraces its ‘premium’ DNA by the water. But the sporting interest is not limited to the setting. The announced player list immediately gets everyone’s approval: Agustín Tapia, Arturo Coello, Alejandro Galán, Federico Chingotto, Franco Stupaczuk, Mike Yanguas, Jon Sanz, Lucas Bergamini, Fran Guerrero, Javi Leal, Javi Garrido and Gonza Alfonso.
Coello/Chingotto vs Galán/Tapia: the big match-up you won’t see anywhere else
The beating heart of this edition is a duel scheduled as the “moment” of the week: Arturo Coello paired with Federico Chingotto against Alejandro Galán and Agustín Tapia. On tour, fans are used to a simple logic: established pairs, synergy, hierarchy, and a fairly stable match understanding.
Here, the mold is deliberately broken: the four best (or, at the very least, four absolute top players) find themselves on the same court… but with partners who shift the natural balance of power. The result: the match is not just exciting, it becomes unpredictable.
The tactical twist: when sides are no longer certainties
What makes the big match-up even more intriguing is the announced idea of playing with positions. In modern padel, the side is not a minor detail: it dictates diagonals, impact zones, the type of volleys, lob management, and how to “lock down” the net.
Putting Tapia on the right side (drive) and shifting Chingotto to the other side is like opening an open-air laboratory. The rallies should change in texture:
- More construction on the right side: more low balls, variations, and patience before the decisive shot.
- Less ‘automatic’ diagonals: coverage reflexes and zone priorities need to be rewritten.
- Different pressure at the net: who takes priority on high volleys? Who is willing to let a ball go that is ‘usually theirs’?
Why it’s so interesting… even in preseason
Because this type of match often reveals what the ranking doesn’t show: adaptability. The ability to defend out of rhythm, to choose between bandeja and vibora depending on the wind and ball speed, to alternate chiquita and acceleration to disorganize the opponent. In short: we don’t just watch who wins the point, we observe how the point is made.
A lineup that guarantees tempo with every rotation
Beyond the main big match-up, the interest also lies in the depth of the field. Stupaczuk and Yanguas bring a very “tournament” intensity, Jon Sanz and Bergamini can turn a match with the quality of their first volley, while Leal, Garrido, Guerrero, or Alfonso bring explosive profiles, capable of stringing together smash, bajada, and returns off the back wall. For the public, it’s the promise of a succession of matches without a drop in tension.
Reserve Cup Series: Miami kicks off, Marbella already in focus
The novelty for 2026 is this deliberate shift towards a multi-destination series. The organization speaks of an evolved format, with the best players committed to several stages to aim for one of the largest prize pools announced in event padel.
In this nascent calendar, a date is already circulating persistently: a return to Marbella from June 18 to 20, 2026, proof that the project is seeking a European foothold in addition to its American base. In other words: Miami is no longer an ‘interlude,’ but a starting point.
What it changes for fans (and what to watch out for)
This Reserve Cup Miami 2026 can be interpreted on two levels. On one hand, a deliberate show, designed to attract beyond the inner circle. On the other, a true proving ground: when pairs are mixed, it exposes tactical choices, communication, and pressure zone management.
If you’re looking for clues from the first games, here are the most telling signs:
- The battle at the net: who imposes their presence in the volley and locks down the diagonal?
- Lob management against Coello: quality of high balls, height and depth, otherwise immediate punishment.
- Defense-attack transitions: ability to convert a return into a net position.
- Routines between points: for ‘new’ duos, mental adjustment is as important as physical skill.
Practical Information: Reserve Cup Miami 2026
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Dates | January 22-24, 2026 |
| Venue | Reserve Miami Seaplane, 1000 MacArthur Causeway, Miami (FL) |
| Headline Match | Coello / Chingotto vs Galán / Tapia (unique configuration) |
| Lineup | 12 players announced: Tapia, Coello, Galán, Chingotto, Stupaczuk, Yanguas, Sanz, Bergamini, Guerrero, Leal, Garrido, Alfonso |
| Series Continuation | Multi-stage expansion announced, with an anticipated European stage (Marbella in June) |
Key takeaways
- Miami kicks off the Reserve Cup Series 2026 over three days, from January 22 to 24.
- The Coello/Chingotto vs Galán/Tapia big match-up promises a true clash of styles, amplified by playing with positions.
- The field is dense: no “filler matches”, just tempo from the first to the last rally.
- The series is going international: Miami launches the season, Marbella is already announced as a major stage.

