Volo x OTT Cup-in-Hand Kickball brings coed tournament to Mission Bay

Kickball · By Sarah Mitchell · July 17, 2026
Volo x OTT Cup-in-Hand Kickball brings coed tournament to Mission Bay

The Volo x OTT Cup-in-Hand Kickball - Saturday - Mission Bay Fields (SFF) listing built its value around pace and participation: a coed 12v12 format, 20-minute games, and a guarantee of two games for every team. That is the kind of setup Mission Bay players often prefer when they want summer competition without the weekly grind of a traditional league.

The tournament was set to begin July 11 and run for two weeks plus one playoff week, with games scheduled from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm PDT. Registration opened May 29 and closed July 10, and the price was listed at $30. Champions got more than bragging rights, too: the event offered a free prepaid team for next season as the prize.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The format mattered as much as the location. Volo Sports lists 12v12 as an official kickball configuration, alongside 9v9, 10v10 and 11v11, so the Mission Bay event fit a real league structure rather than a made-up one-off. In coed programs, gender-specific roster requirements also apply, while open programs do not, which made the tournament's coed label a meaningful roster constraint rather than a loose branding choice.

With 12 players on each side and only 20 minutes on the clock, the game state tilted toward urgency. There was little room for a slow start, and the two-game guarantee meant roster depth and quick adjustments mattered more than marathon endurance. For adult teams that want enough action to justify organizing a full roster, that combination of short games and a minimum floor of play is exactly what makes cup-in-hand events attractive.

Related stock photo
Photo by Ludovic Delot

Mission Bay also fit neatly into Volo Sports' broader San Diego footprint. The company says it offers kickball across six neighborhoods, including Mission Valley, Normal Heights, North Park, Pacific Beach, Point Loma and UTC, and hosts games at multiple venues around the city. That reach helps explain why a Mission Bay tournament can sell itself as both competitive and easygoing, with a social-sports vibe built into the format from the first pitch.

Sources

  1. [1]volosports.com