Brussels P2 semifinals: schedule and live stream
The Premier Padel event in Brussels has reached its decisive stage: the semifinals are set, and the order of play promises a long, intense day with elite matchups. After tightly contested quarterfinals, the tension across the draw has clearly increased. In particular, top duo Tapia and Coello were already pushed to their limits in the previous round, adding extra weight to the upcoming clashes. For fans, the picture is clear: this is no longer about building rhythm, but about reaching a final where every rally carries real consequence.
Brussels becomes the main stage of the weekend
All semifinal matches will be played on the center court and scheduled throughout the day. The format puts both the women’s and men’s draws in full spotlight. The Belgian tournament once again highlights how tight the level has become on tour: there are no easy pairings, and even favored teams must serve cleanly, return with precision, and stay tactically flexible under pressure.
Matches begin at midday and continue in three additional time windows. For viewers, this structure is ideal because it keeps the day predictable while building momentum from one contest to the next. The competitive setup also ensures each pair arrives with a specific game plan: some will prioritize quick net finishes, others will rely on patient, longer baseline rallies. That contrast is exactly what makes the Brussels semifinal slate so compelling.
Saturday semifinal schedule
- From 12:00: Fernández / Araújo vs González / Josemaría (women)
- Not before 14:00: Lebrón / Augsburger vs Galán / Chingotto (men)
- Not before 17:00: Brea / Triay vs Icardo / Jensen (women)
- Not before 19:00: Coello / Tapia vs Stupaczuk / Yanguas (men)
The opening women’s semifinal could immediately set the tone. Fernández and Araújo face González and Josemaría in a matchup likely to be decided by small margins: first-serve quality, first-volley execution, and who keeps the lower unforced-error rate in extended exchanges. Both teams have deep experience on big courts, so composure in tight moments will be central.
Rivalry and momentum in the men’s draw
Early afternoon brings Lebrón and Augsburger against Galán and Chingotto, a pairing that attracts attention beyond pure tactics. The renewed Galán-Lebrón confrontation adds clear narrative intensity. Matches like this are often decided by positional dominance: who controls the middle, who forces weaker lobs, and which team transitions from defense to attack with better depth and timing. For both pairs, an early break can reshape the entire match flow.
In the evening slot, Coello and Tapia meet Stupaczuk and Yanguas. Coello and Tapia remain the benchmark duo, yet their quarterfinal showed they can be exposed when opponents vary pace and attack angles with discipline. Stupaczuk and Yanguas enter with confidence and can apply immediate pressure through aggressive returns. A key variable will be first-volley consistency from the favorites and whether they can protect serve in high-pressure games.
Women’s semifinals with tactical depth
The second women’s semifinal, Brea and Triay versus Icardo and Jensen, also projects high-level strategic tennis. Brea and Triay rely on clear point-construction patterns, while Icardo and Jensen can disrupt rhythm through brave tempo shifts. In this type of match, the winner is often the pair making better choices at 30-all and staying disciplined through long rally sequences.
From a tournament perspective, this balance between structure and risk is a strong signal for the competition. In Brussels, the women’s draw is not a side story but a core part of the sporting value. Anyone watching the semifinals will see contrasting elite styles: controlled ball circulation, heavy bandeja variations, precise counters against fast net pressure, and long phases with extremely small error margins.
How to watch every match live
Broadcast coverage is available for free on the official Premier Padel YouTube channel. That gives fans direct access to the full semifinal program without additional barriers, including all consecutive center-court matches. For audiences, this means a continuous competition day with clear start windows and easy availability on all common devices.
From a sporting standpoint, Saturday marks the transition from an open field to a final title decision. The pairings are high-profile, current form is tightly matched, and each contest includes potential mini-duels that can swing momentum. Whether through long tactical rallies or short explosive net points, Brussels will reveal which teams make the final step into the championship match.