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News / Northwest

Edmonds crusader knows about the power of pickleball

Roger BelAir teaches 'the most social sport ever created' in prisons and gyms

By Andrea Brown, Everett Herald
Published: September 10, 2023, 4:02pm
4 Photos
Roger BelAir teaches a beginner pickleball clinic at the Frances Anderson Center in Edmonds.
Roger BelAir teaches a beginner pickleball clinic at the Frances Anderson Center in Edmonds. (Olivia Vanni/The Herald) Photo Gallery

EDMONDS — Roger BelAir bounces from prison yards to suburban gyms.

He believes in the power of pickleball for people on the inside and out.

This year, so far, he taught the booming sport to inmates at San Quentin and Folsom state prisons in California, four prisons in Florida and a Washington correctional center.

“I’m not reimbursed. It’s my way of giving back to society,” said BelAir, 76, a former bank executive and investment broker.

On this day, he was instructing a group of mostly retirees at the Frances Anderson Center in Edmonds in a 90-minute pickleball clinic for beginners.

BelAir weaves deadpan humor through the lessons in storyteller fashion to all audiences.

“I have the same corny lines,” he said. “I walk people through the history of the game, the basic rules and how to keep score.”

He ends the game with a “group hug,” even in prison.

Whom does he prefer to teach, prisoners or seniors? “My real passion is going inside,” he said. “Pickleball is popular on the outside, but on the inside, we really need it.”

The game promotes teamwork and is good exercise, he said.

“It’s something they can do inside, and when they get out, they need a community activity,” BelAir said. “This is the most social sport ever created.”

BelAir got hooked on pickleball in 2011. It was easier on his joints than tennis.

His background is finance, not criminal justice. He’d never been in the pen, or fancied going, until one night at his Edmonds home in 2017 he saw a “60 Minutes” segment about violence and other issues in Chicago jails.

BelAir contacted Cook County Corrections and offered his services at no cost. Three months later, he found himself in a jail gym with a bunch of guys twice his size.

“At Cook County Jail, I was teaching about 20 men in for murder or attempted murder,” he said. “Initially, they rolled their eyes. You have this old guy who comes in and starts talking about pickleball, they had no interest. Within 10 minutes they loved it, like everybody does. They were soon laughing like third-graders.”

The session ended with a communal tapping of paddles.

“The first time I said ‘group hug,’ everybody froze,” he said. “I walked up to the net and put my paddle up and said, ‘This is a group hug.’ On the outside, people just say, ‘Good game.’ I like to promote hugs. The world would be better off with less violence and more hugs.”

BelAir’s prison pickleball missions have made national news. He was profiled in The Daily Herald in 2019, early in his nationwide jail journey.

The pandemic halted his prison visits for several years. Now, he goes back behind bars every chance he gets. A return trip to Rikers Island in New York City is planned for November.

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