Premier Padel storms into 2026 with serious momentum. Last season delivered statement runs, record-setting feats, and breakthrough names proving they can live with the elite. Now, with new partnerships shifting the balance of power, the next chapter feels primed for a full-throttle season. Here are the teams set to shake the tour.
01 Men’s pairs
1. Arturo Coello and Agustín Tapia The kings aren’t budging. After bulldozing the 2024 and 2025 seasons with 14 and 13 Premier Padel tournament titles, Agustín Tapia and Arturo Coello remain the sport’s gold standard—cold-blooded, consistent, and devastatingly efficient. And looming over the rest of the field is the number that still turns heads: 47 straight victories, the longest winning streak padel has ever seen. Their mission for 2026 is as brutal as it is simple: keep evolving, keep winning, and guard the world number one throne like it’s match point every weekend.
2. Alejandro Galán and Federico Chingotto “Chingalán” are still together—and that should make everyone else nervous. Since joining forces in early 2024, they’ve looked sharper with every tournament, every pressure moment, every chess move at the net. Five wins in 2024 laid the foundation, but 2025 was the true leap: seven titles and a relentless presence at the business end of draws, pushing the top seeds again and again. With Alejandro Galán dictating the rhythm and Federico Chingotto seemingly everywhere at once, their chemistry and adaptability remain their biggest weapons heading into 2026.
3. Mike Yanguas and Franco Stupaczuk One of the tour’s most electric athletes is linking back up with a right-side enforcer—and it’s a reunion that already comes with receipts. Franco Stupaczuk, all speed, instincts, and explosive transitions, reunites with Mike Yanguas for 2026, and they know exactly what their ceiling looks like. In 2024 they lifted the Newgiza P2, then kept the heat on late in the year with deep runs—highlighted by massive semi-final wins over Chingotto and Galán—before reaching finals at the Kuwait City P1 and the Mexico Major. Stupa’s lightning movement and finishing touch, paired with Yanguas’ heavy, controlled pressure, is a nightmare matchup for anyone trying to survive long rallies.
4. Juan Lebrón and Leo Augsburger Few new pairings carry more raw explosion than Juan Lebrón alongside Leo Augsburger. It’s a team built on power—two players capable of turning a rally into chaos in a single swing—and it instantly feels like a partnership no one will want to draw early.


