Organizer guide

Weekend Tournament Planning

From first email to final standings — a practical checklist for running a round robin event in one or two days.

Weekend tournaments fail for boring reasons: not enough courts, unclear tie-breakers, or a schedule that cannot physically finish. Round robin helps because the math is predictable — if you plan backwards from final whistle, you can fit a fair event into a single Saturday or a Saturday–Sunday block.

Four weeks before

  • Confirm venue booking and number of playable courts or fields
  • Set team cap (6–8 teams is ideal for one day)
  • Choose single or double round robin
  • Publish entry deadline and fee
  • Draft tie-breaker rules and code of conduct

One week before

Generate the full schedule with confirmed team names. Send each captain a PDF or link with kickoff times, pitch assignments, and contact number for the organizer.

Recruit referees or scorekeepers — one per active pitch plus a floater. Share the score-entry link if you use live standings.

Backwards time math

Example: 6 teams, 15 games, 3 per round = 5 rounds. If each match including changeover is 50 minutes, one pitch needs 4+ hours minimum. Two pitches finish in roughly 2.5 hours of play. Add 30 minutes buffer for delays before promising an awards time.

Day-of kit list

  • Printed schedules and pool charts on clipboard
  • Bibs, balls, whistles, first-aid kit
  • Tape for pitch boundaries and signage
  • Charged phone or tablet for score entry
  • Water and shade for players between rounds
  • Trophies or medals and a simple awards script

Running the desk

Start on time even if a team is late — publish forfeit rules in advance. Announce next round pairings loudly or post them on a board immediately after results.

Enter scores within 5 minutes of each final whistle so standings stay trustworthy. If two teams tie for a trophy spot, you already published how that resolves — no debates.

Two-day format

Saturday: pool play or first half of a double round robin. Sunday: remaining fixtures plus knockout finals if used.

Eight teams single round robin (28 games) is tight for one day on a single pitch — split across two days or use two pitches Saturday.

After the event

  • Publish final standings link for participants
  • Thank venues and referees
  • Note what to fix next year (time slots, team cap, format)
  • Archive CSV results for league records

FAQ

What is the best team count for one Saturday?

6 teams on 1–2 pitches is reliable. 8 teams needs two pitches or a long day. 10+ teams should use pool play.

Should we charge entry fees before showing the schedule?

Share a sample format and estimated times first, then collect fees. Teams commit when they understand the workload.

Rain or indoor backup?

Book indoor space or define refund/reschedule policy in writing before payments.

Do we need an app?

No. A share link with live standings works in any browser — players check phones, you avoid app-store friction.