University sports club
Racquetball Club at London School of Economics
London School of Economics has an active student community across nine sports — and racquetball is one of the easier ones to organise yourself if there isn't already a thriving club. Whether you're starting one from scratch or joining an existing group, this guide is for racquetball players at LSE: how to find players, where to play, how to run weekly sessions, and how to set up internal competition that keeps people coming back.
Joining or starting a racquetball club at LSE
Most universities already have at least one racquetball-related student group, even if it's informal. The first step is to ask around: search the student union's club directory, post in the campus Facebook or Reddit group, and check the campus sports notice board. If a club exists, you can save yourself months of work by joining and helping out.
If no racquetball club exists at London School of Economics, starting one is a known process. In the UK, university sports clubs affiliate with the Students' Union (SU) or the athletic union (in Oxbridge and similar). Affiliation usually requires a constitution, an executive committee, and registration via the SU's online portal. Most SUs run an annual freshers' fair where new clubs recruit — get yours on the list.
Recruiting your first 20 members
Word of mouth is your best recruiting channel. Ask each existing member to bring one friend — even informally. The friends-of-friends effect is how every successful student club doubles in its first year.
Recruit during orientation week. New students are looking for clubs to join and a sports club is one of the first things they search for. Get your club listed in the orientation handbook if you can, and have a stall at the freshers fair.
Running weekly sessions
Build a Discord, WhatsApp, or Telegram group for the club. Use it for week-to-week reminders, last-minute changes, and social planning. The group chat becomes the club's social fabric.
Pick a regular time slot and never move it. Tuesday 6pm. Thursday 7pm. Same time every week, every semester. Members plan around it and the club becomes part of their schedule. Move it around and attendance dies.
Internal competition and inter-university tournaments
Inter-university competitions (where they exist) are the best recruiting tool you have. Win one and you'll have new members banging the door. Organise carpools, accommodation if needed, and a post-event social.
Inter-club friendlies with other universities are easier to organise than full inter-uni championships. Start with a single match against another local university. If it goes well, make it annual.
Managing the club with Volley
Scoring matches in Volley feeds straight into a personal ELO rating that updates over the term. Members watch their rating climb (or stall) and that's genuinely motivating — it's the closest thing student sport has to Strava's segment leaderboards. Free on iOS and Android.
Volley is the right app for student sports clubs. Free on iOS and Android. Built-in member rosters, recurring weekly sessions, paid memberships (handle term fees in one tap), group chat, internal ELO ladders, and full tournament running. The recurring stuff (RSVPs, payments, ladder updates) belongs in an app, not a spreadsheet — and Volley is purpose-built for it.
Frequently asked questions
Does London School of Economics have a racquetball club?
Many universities have at least one racquetball-related student group, but not all of them are easy to find. The fastest way to check is to search the student union or sports association directory and post in the relevant campus social media groups. If no club exists, the affiliation process for starting one is straightforward — most universities make it easy if you have 5-10 founding members.
How do I start a racquetball club at LSE?
Recruit 5-10 founding members through orientation events and campus social media, register with the student union or sports association (the process is usually a constitution template and a registered committee), book a regular facility slot, and start running weekly sessions. The momentum from the first few sessions matters far more than the paperwork.
What app do university racquetball clubs use?
Volley is purpose-built for clubs that run weekly sessions, internal ladders, and inter-college tournaments. It handles rosters, paid memberships, ELO ratings, and tournament running — all free on iOS and Android. Most student clubs use a mix of group chat and a spreadsheet, but Volley replaces both.
How much does running a racquetball club at LSE cost?
The biggest cost is facility hire — most clubs charge a small term membership (the equivalent of 30-80 dollars/pounds/euros) to cover it. Beyond that, most expenses (equipment, prizes, socials) can be covered by a small per-session fee. Use built-in payments in an app like Volley to make collection painless.