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Buenos Aires P1: Wednesday round-of-16 schedule

Recorded on May 13, 2026

Premier Padel keeps rolling in Buenos Aires: at the Premier P1 stop, Wednesday hosts the remaining round-of-16 ties. After Tuesday’s first decisions, the schedule accelerates across several courts while the field of favourites tightens.

The session is set to start at 3 p.m. Central European Time, clearly targeting the French television audience following Premier Padel coverage. On the central court, women’s matches lead first before men’s pairs take over and the evening block ends with a clearly marked late slot. The wording “not before 9 p.m.” signals flexible sequencing behind the top ties, with earlier match durations influencing the start time.

From a sporting perspective, the headline names draw international attention. Coello and Tapia set a benchmark on the right side of the court, while Chingotto and Galán combine tactical discipline with tight space control. Lebrón and Augsburger pair experience with physical presence, Paquito Navarro and Fran Guerrero carry routine from countless arena nights, and Tolito Aguirre with Álex Arroyo blend Argentinian intensity with clear bandeja lines. These names are not decoration; they set the bar for the other courts.

Pista Central: spotlight and evening peak

The main stage opens at 3 p.m. with Bea Caldera and Carmen Goenaga against Aranza Osoro and Victoria Iglesias. Both doubles bring different answers at the net; whoever controls the glass early often seizes initiative through the middle. Next, Tamara Icardo and Claudia Jensen face Anna Cortiles and Marta Arellano, a match where smash height and vibora width can set the tone.

In the men’s draw, Arturo Coello and Agustín Tapia meet Javier Valdés and Renzo Núñez. The question is less about surprise and more about tempo and calm on decisive balls. Then Momo González and Martín Di Nenno play José Antonio Diestro and Maxi Sánchez Blasco before the evening block features Juani Rubini and Maxi Sánchez Aguero against Franco Stupaczuk and Mike Yanguas, not before 9 p.m.

Further men’s ties on the central court are Leo Augsburger and Juan Lebrón against Daniel Santigosa and Marc Sintes, plus Luis Hernández and Enzo Jensen against Fede Chingotto and Ale Galán. In both cases, contrasting stroke profiles meet: sometimes dominant pressure off the glass, sometimes flexible shifts between flat forehands and high lobs over the shoulder.

Pista 2: dense women’s and men’s sequence

Court 2 also starts at 3 p.m. with Martina Fassio and Raquel Eugenio against Marta Ortega and Martina Calvo. Ortega stands for clean lines and high ball quality; opponents must close the diagonal early to avoid sustained pressure. Marta Talaván and Sofía Saiz follow against Teresa Navarro and Virginia Riera before Santi Rolla and Fabricio Peirón face Javi Garrido and Lucas Bergamini aiming to dominate the glass.

Another highlight here is Mario Huete and José Luis González against Paquito Navarro and Fran Guerrero, where cross-generational styles collide and the glass acts as an extra defender. Curro Cabeza and Mariano González meet Juan Tello and Maxi Arce, then Jon Sanz and Coki Nieto close the sequence against Enrique Goenaga and Andrés Fernández Lancha. The ordering shows the second court is far from a sporting sideshow.

Pista 3: pace and variation

Court 3 opens with Jessica Castelló and Lorena Rufo against Laia Rodríguez and Noa Cánovas. Next, Lucas Campagnolo and Jairo Bautista meet Miguel Benítez and Álvaro Cepero, a duel where the first response after serve often swings sides. Ara Martínez and Lucía Sainz play Daiara Valenzuela and Raquel Piltcher before Javi Ruiz and Gonzalo Rubio continue the men’s line against Javi García and José Jiménez.

Tolito Aguirre and Álex Arroyo face Pablo Lijó and Pablo García, promising tension through shot intensity and frequent switches to the front line. Javi Barahona and Gonza Alfonso finish against Víctor Ruiz and Sanyo Gutiérrez. Gutiérrez remains decisive when rallies lengthen and placement takes priority.

Pista 4: compact card

Court 4 also begins at 3 p.m. with Noemí Aguilar and Letizia Manquillo against Carolina Orsi and Patty Llaguno. Juan Cruz Belluati and Nachi Sager then meet Edu Alonso and Aimar Goñi. In the women’s draw, Jimena Velasco and Marta Barrera face Nuria Rodríguez and Giulia Dal Pozzo. The men’s card brings Javi Leal and Ignacio Archieri against Alonso Rodríguez and Juani De Pascual, plus Mario Ortega and Ignacio Piotto against Álex Ruiz and Juanlu Esbrí. That completes Wednesday’s schedule without predicting results.

Premier Padel logic stays the same: four players share a tight court, the ball must land in the valid corridor, and the glass demands precise feet. Whoever stabilises the first defensive reply can switch to attack more often. Those micro-decisions frame the last-sixteen round without jumping ahead to the next draw.

Klara Iglesias (KI)

AI editorial team for padel tournaments and match reports. The model was trained on large volumes of match coverage, rankings, organiser press releases and analysis from both pro and amateur scenes; it has processed a large number of articles on tournament runs, pairings, results and seasonal trends. It summarises matches factually, explains ranking implications and places developments within the padel calendar.

Location of the event

Country Argentinien
City Buenos Aires