How to keep your tournament running on schedule
Because nothing frustrates players more than standing around waiting.
Every tournament organizer has lived this moment: it’s 2 PM, you’re 45 minutes behind schedule, players are getting restless, and you’re not sure how you lost control of the timeline. The answer is almost always the same—small delays that stacked up. A late start here, a long changeover there, one disputed call that took ten minutes to sort out. None of them seemed like a big deal at the time, but by mid-afternoon you’re in trouble.
Running on time isn’t about being strict for the sake of it. Players who’ve blocked out their Saturday for your event want to know when they’re playing and when they’re done. Venues have closing times. Helpers have limits. A tournament that runs an hour late wears everyone out, no matter how well the rest of it was organised.
The good news: most delays are predictable and preventable.
Plan your time before the event
Time problems almost always start with the schedule. If your plan is too tight from the beginning, you’ll be playing catch-up all day.
Estimate match times honestly. Don’t use best-case numbers. If your badminton matches usually take 20 minutes, plan for 25. If your table tennis matches are 12 minutes on average, plan for 15. Include warmup time and changeover—players don’t just teleport between courts. If you’re unsure how many courts you need for the time you have, our court calculator guide walks through the maths.
Add buffer between rounds. A 10–15% time buffer across the day absorbs the small delays that always happen. For a 4-hour event, that’s roughly 25–35 minutes of slack spread across the schedule. Don’t treat this as wasted time—it’s what keeps you on track.
Build in breaks. Any event longer than 3 hours needs at least one proper break. Hungry, tired players take longer to get to their matches and play slower. A 15-minute break after round 3 actually speeds up the rest of the day.
Avoid back-to-back matches for the same player. If someone finishes a tough match and immediately gets called for the next one, they’ll either take longer to start or play badly. Formats like Swiss naturally produce some back-to-back situations, so check your schedule in advance and swap match order where you can.
Communicate the schedule clearly
Half of all “where am I supposed to be?” delays come down to poor communication.
Post a visible schedule with times. A whiteboard near the entrance works. A screen with a live schedule is even better. Include round times, court assignments, and when breaks happen. Update it as the day goes on.
Call matches before they’re due. Announce the next round 5 minutes before it starts. This gives players time to finish their drink, find their racket, and get to the right court. If you only call matches when they’re supposed to start, you’ve already lost those 5 minutes.
Use a “now playing” and “on deck” system. Players knowing they’re up next keeps them nearby and ready. It also cuts down on the constant “when’s my next match?” questions that slow you down.
The usual time killers (and how to fix them)
Most delays come from the same handful of problems. Here’s what to watch for and what to do about it.
| Delay | Typical time lost | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Late start (waiting for everyone) | 15–30 min | Hard start time — begin on schedule, latecomers join when they arrive |
| Long changeovers | 3–5 min per match | Set a 2-minute changeover limit and enforce it |
| Score disputes | 5–15 min | Share house rules at check-in, designate one person to make calls |
| Equipment problems | 10–20 min | Have backup gear ready — nets, balls, cables |
| Players not at their court | 5–10 min per round | Call matches 5 min early, use the “on deck” system |
| No-shows | 10–15 min while you figure it out | Have a no-show policy decided in advance |
Notice the pattern: most delays happen because decisions aren’t made ahead of time. Set your rules before the event, share them at check-in, and stick to them.
Format-specific timing
Different formats have different timing quirks, so plan around them.
Swiss system has natural pauses between rounds while you calculate standings and generate new pairings. These gaps are unavoidable with paper scoring but much shorter with digital tools. The upside is that every player in a round plays at roughly the same time, so you get a clean break between rounds for announcements and updates.
Round robin in groups lets you run courts continuously—there’s no need to wait for one group to finish before another starts. This makes round robin easier to keep on time, but harder to track because so much is happening at once. Assign someone to each group to keep scores flowing.
Elimination gets tricky in later rounds because each match depends on the previous one finishing. If a quarterfinal goes long, the semifinal waits. Build extra buffer into the knockout stages and consider running consolation matches or lower-bracket games during the gaps.
When you’re already behind: real-time fixes
It’s 2 PM. You’re 45 minutes behind. What do you do?
Shorten breaks. If you had a 15-minute break planned, cut it to 10. If you had two breaks left, drop one. Players will understand if you explain why.
Tighten changeovers. Announce that changeovers are now 1 minute. Stand at the courts and keep things moving. When players see the organiser hustling, they pick up the pace too.
Shorten the match format. If you were running best-of-3, switch remaining rounds to best-of-1. This roughly halves the time per match. Announce the change clearly so there’s no confusion. It’s not ideal, but a finished tournament beats one that runs out of time.
Add a court. If there’s a free table or court space, set it up. Even one extra court running in parallel can recover 15–20 minutes over a few rounds.
Don’t cut rounds. This should be a last resort. Players came to play, and dropping a round from a Swiss event changes the final standings. Shorten matches before you shorten the tournament.
Use the right people
Two roles make the biggest difference for keeping time:
A dedicated announcer or timekeeper. One person whose only job is watching the clock, calling matches, and keeping the schedule moving. If this person is also running registration and resolving disputes, they can’t do any of those things well. Even at a small event, give one person the job of watching the clock.
Court monitors. For events with 4+ courts, have someone walk between them making sure matches start on time and results get reported quickly. They don’t need to referee—just nudge things along and relay scores to whoever is managing standings.
Both roles are part of a wider staffing setup. Our tournament planning checklist covers how to put your team together.
Do’s and don’ts
Related guides
- Tournament planning checklist – Complete planning guide
- How many courts do you need? – Venue planning
- Managing no-shows – Reducing delays from absent players
- Real-time scoring: digital vs paper – Faster results
Turnio calculates pairings the moment results come in—no waiting between rounds for manual spreadsheet work. Live standings, automatic notifications, and real-time scheduling keep your event moving. Try it free at turnio.net.
