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July 12, 2026

Federico Chingotto: The Precision Machine at World #3 You Cannot Afford to Leave on the Bench

With a 113.4 AvgFP, four titles in 2026, and a ceiling of 193.7 fantasy points, 'El Ratón' is OutOfTheCourt's most reliable premium asset

Federico Chingotto is not the flashiest name in padel, but on OutOfTheCourt, he may be the most consistently rewarding premium pick of the modern era. The 29-year-old Argentinian right-side specialist has built a fantasy profile that marries elite floor value with genuine ceiling-busting potential — a combination that is rarer than you think at the very top of the rankings. Across 55 recorded tournament entries in his OutOfTheCourt history, Chingotto has delivered an average of 113.4 fantasy points per tournament, a number that reflects not occasional brilliance but systemic, week-in-week-out excellence. With world ranking #3 confirmed as of late June 2026, five titles on the season, and a partnership with Alejandro Galán that is arguably the hottest pairing on the 2026 Premier Padel circuit, this is a player whose fantasy stock deserves every column inch we can give it.

Federico Chingotto
#3 · FP 113.4 · C:193.7 · AR · drive

👤 Profile

Federico Chingotto was born on April 13, 1997, in Buenos Aires, Argentina — though his roots are more specifically in Olavarría, a city that padel fans now name in the same breath as the biggest stages in the world. His journey to the elite has been anything but straightforward. Before reaching the professional circuit in Europe, Chingotto scraped together funds through raffles and friends' contributions just to afford travel, and famously slept in his car before tournaments to save on hotel costs. That grit is not merely biographical colour — it is the psychological foundation of a player who, in the words of those who have covered him closely, approaches titles, finals, and media exposure from 'a different perspective' because he has been through things far harder than losing a padel match. He made his European debut from the pre-qualifiers and, after advancing deep into the draw, was beaten 6-0 and 6-1 by the then-world number two pairing — an experience he has described as unforgettable and formative. That humility, fused with relentless ambition, is the Chingotto blueprint.

On court, Chingotto operates as a right-side drive specialist — a role that in padel's tactical hierarchy demands extraordinary patience, defensive intelligence, and the ability to construct points from the deepest defensive positions. He plays the forehand side, specialising in control shots, lobs, and neutralising opponent attacks, executing deep lobs, controlled chiquitas, and precise block volleys to transition rallies into offensive phases. His nickname 'El Ratón' — the mouse — is a nod to his speed, anticipation, and ground coverage, and anyone who has watched him work a glass wall for thirty seconds understands it immediately. Patience and consistency characterise his style, combined with fast reactions and stunning anticipation that make him one of the hardest players on the circuit to force into an unforced error. His Bullpadel Neuron 02 racket is purpose-built for his game: a control-first instrument that supports every technical decision he makes, from a defensive lob to a strategically placed shot at the net.

In 2026, Chingotto has reached new heights alongside his partner Alejandro Galán — the Spaniard from Madrid who brings left-side power to complement Chingotto's right-side stability. As of the end of June 2026, the FIP ranks Chingotto at world number three with 17,763 points and a 2026 season win-loss record of 40-6 — a staggering winning percentage that underlines the pair's dominance. He holds five titles in the current season and sits third in the Race standings. Across his career, his record stands at 232 wins and 50 losses, with 17 titles, numbers that confirm what his OutOfTheCourt data has always suggested: this is one of the most reliable competitive performers that world padel has ever produced.

The 2026 season has also been a showcase of Chingotto's mental resilience. After a semifinal exit in Brussels, the Galán–Chingotto pairing returned in Asunción to win a final against Agustín Tapia and Arturo Coello by 6-3, 7-5 — a title decided by two extraordinary out-of-the-glass-box points from Chingotto himself, the kind of moments that send stadiums into delirium and fantasy managers reaching for the captain's armband. Before that run, the pair had already claimed titles in Gijón, Miami, and Newgiza in 2026, confirming themselves as the most prolific winners on the circuit this year. Chingotto himself, after lifting his fourth 2026 title in Asunción, was measured and characteristically ambitious: he acknowledged the achievement while noting that twenty more tournaments remained. That mentality — eyes always on the next event — is exactly the mindset that makes him so sustainable as a fantasy asset.

📊 Analysis

Let us start with the number that matters most: 113.4 average fantasy points per tournament. That is Chingotto's AvgFP on OutOfTheCourt across the current season, and it is the single most important anchor for any analysis of his fantasy value. This is not a fluky average built on one or two monster outings — the tournament history shows a player who scores in meaningful bands consistently, with a clear correlation between tournament tier, depth of run, and points return. His ceiling in the current data is 193.7 fantasy points, which puts him in the elite bracket of OutOfTheCourt assets; his 12-tournament sample size this season gives us statistical confidence that the 113.4 AvgFP is a genuine reflection of his sustainable output, not an artefact of small sample variance.

Looking at the 2026 season data specifically, the pattern is compelling. Chingotto opened the year with 118.7 FP at Riyadh Season P1, signalling he was firing from the first week of the year. He then exploded for 125.0 FP at Gijón P2 and a massive 154.0 FP at Miami P1 — consistent with a final or semifinal run at a P1 event, which aligns with the on-court record of the Galán–Chingotto pair winning Miami this year. Newgiza P2 returned 117.7 FP, and then came Brussels P2 with just 59.8 FP — the outlier in his 2026 season, and one that maps precisely to the semifinal exit that prompted his return to form in Asunción (179.1 FP, his second-best score of the year). The Buenos Aires P1 then delivered 179.1 FP — another enormous haul, fully consistent with a deep run in a P1 at home. More recent tournaments show 123.9 FP in Asunción P2, 106.0 FP at Italy Major, 92.6 FP at Valencia P1, 76.3 FP at Valladolid P2, and 89.4 FP at Bordeaux P2. That slight dip in the last three tournaments is worth monitoring, but in the context of an AvgFP of 113.4, these are floor scores — not alarming drops. The 76.3 and 89.4 may reflect early-round byes or tight draws, but neither represents a capitulation.

Historically, Chingotto's greatest OutOfTheCourt performances have consistently come at European P2 events and home South American P1s. His all-time tournament history shows scores of 179.1 FP (Cupra Germany P2), 178.0 FP (Mar Del Plata P1), 179.1 FP (Buenos Aires P1 2026), 169.0 FP (Genova P2), 168.0 FP (Sevilla P2), and 167.0 FP (Brussels P2 in a prior season). These are ceiling-event performances — and critically, they are not unicorns in his data set. They recur. The European summer swing, with its P2 and Major calendar, has historically been Chingotto's richest fantasy hunting ground. Managers building their OutOfTheCourt lineups through July, August, and September have strong historical evidence to keep him in their starting XIs. The Italy Major 2026 score of 106.0 FP, while slightly below his average, was delivered at a Major — the hardest draws on the circuit — and still represents productive fantasy output.

The consistency metric is perhaps the most underrated dimension of Chingotto's fantasy profile. Across all 55 recorded tournament entries, he has scored 85 FP or above in the overwhelming majority, with the sub-60 FP scores — his 'bad' tournament results — being extremely rare (Riyadh 2024 at 27.9 FP, Cancún P2 2026 at 24.6 FP, and the early Paris Major exit at 51.0 FP stand out). What causes those floor events? Early upsets — exits in the first two rounds that curtail the point accumulation before momentum builds. These are genuine risk events for fantasy managers, particularly in the opening rounds of Major tournaments where the draw can be unkind. But across the full data set, those sub-60 scores represent fewer than 10% of his tournament entries — a failure rate that most premium assets on the OutOfTheCourt platform would envy.

💰 Value

At a cost rating of 193.7 on OutOfTheCourt — the ceiling of what this player has demonstrated he can return in a single tournament — Chingotto sits in the highest price bracket on the platform. The key question for every OutOfTheCourt manager is whether that price tag is justified by the returns. The answer, when you run the numbers honestly, is yes — with a modest caveat. His 113.4 AvgFP means that over a full season of 12 tournaments (his current sample), Chingotto has returned value comfortably above the 100 FP benchmark that typically defines elite-tier pricing on OutOfTheCourt. For context, his worst stretch in the current season — the Brussels P2 dip to 59.8 FP followed by the more moderate Valladolid (76.3) and Bordeaux (89.4) scores — still averages 75.2 FP across three events, which for his price point demands attention but not panic. The season-long average absorbs these valleys convincingly.

The more granular value argument hinges on tournament type. At P1 and Major events, Chingotto's price is most justified when the Galán–Chingotto pair enters deep runs, which in 2026 they have done at a rate few other pairings can match. His 40-6 win-loss record this season is the competitive bedrock of that thesis. At P2 events, historically his best fantasy hunting ground, the value proposition is even stronger — his European P2 ceiling scores (167–179 FP range) suggest that when conditions are right and the draw opens up, he can single-handedly win an OutOfTheCourt gameweek for whoever has him captained. For managers chasing the top of the OutOfTheCourt season leaderboard — where FJorgensenTeam currently leads at 8,561.1 points, ahead of GusTeam (7,970.5), sebsx4 (7,964.8), DavidCereCat (7,955.4), and Pode Team (7,413.7) — the gap between first and fifth place is approximately 1,147 points. Chingotto alone, in a fully optimised season of captaincies, could generate a differential of that magnitude across the remaining schedule. He is not just a consistent pick — at the right price, in the right tournaments, he is a season-defining asset.

🤝 Partnership

The Galán–Chingotto partnership is, as of mid-2026, the most decorated pairing on the Premier Padel circuit in the current season, and its dynamics have enormous implications for how OutOfTheCourt managers should think about both players. Galán provides the left-side power and aggression; Chingotto provides the right-side stability, the defensive reset, and the clinical execution under pressure that complementary partnerships require. Their chemistry extends well beyond the court — both players have spoken openly about working with sports psychologists together, sharing genuine friendship off the court, and finding in each other the trust that converts good partnerships into great ones. It is the kind of bond that, in fantasy terms, translates to co-dependency of output: when Galán is firing, Chingotto benefits from easier attacking positions; when Chingotto is absorbing pressure impeccably, Galán is freed to take risks at the net. Their 2026 title haul — Gijón, Miami, Newgiza, Asunción — was won as a unified system, not as two individuals playing in proximity.

For OutOfTheCourt managers, the partnership dynamic creates a strategic consideration that goes beyond simply picking one or both players. The risk of owning the Galán–Chingotto pair is correlated — when they exit early together, both players deliver low-end scores simultaneously, as seen in the Brussels P2 2026 (Chingotto: 59.8 FP). The reward of owning both is equally correlated: when they run deep to finals, both deliver premium returns in the same gameweek, amplifying the points bonanza. Managers who hold both must be comfortable with this volatility profile. For those who want the upside without the concentration risk, Chingotto offers a marginally more stable floor than Galán given his defensive role — the right-side specialist can contribute meaningful fantasy points even in tighter matches because his defensive work rate and consistency accumulate points across a longer match, whereas an attacker's fantasy contribution is more binary. Chingotto is, in essence, the safer half of padel's most exciting partnership.

🎯 Verdict

Federico Chingotto is, on the weight of all available evidence, an OutOfTheCourt essential for any manager operating in the upper tiers of the season leaderboard. His 113.4 AvgFP is elite-bracket output. His 193.7 ceiling proves he can be a monster gameweek contributor. His 40-6 on-court record in 2026 is the competitive foundation that fantasy points are built on. His recent slight dip — Valladolid 76.3, Bordeaux 89.4 — is the only meaningful near-term caution flag, but given his historical capacity to bounce from modest scores into 150+ FP hauls, it reads more as a buying opportunity than a sell signal. The upcoming European summer schedule — with its rich calendar of P2 events and Majors — is historically his richest fantasy terrain, and the Galán partnership gives him a structural advantage in every draw he enters. If you are currently without Chingotto in your OutOfTheCourt squad, the data makes a compelling case that you are leaving points on the table.

The broader narrative of Chingotto's career is one that should resonate with every OutOfTheCourt manager who values long-term strategic thinking: a player who started from nothing, who built his game on precision and intelligence rather than raw power, and who has compounded those qualities into one of the most reliable fantasy profiles on the entire platform. From sleeping in his car before early tournaments in Argentina, to winning finals in packed stadiums in Buenos Aires and Asunción with spectacular out-of-the-glass finishers, the arc is complete. 'El Ratón' is not chasing history — he is making it. And in OutOfTheCourt, he is making your season.

💥 Key Storylines

The 2026 title machine: Galán–Chingotto have won four Premier Padel titles this season (Gijón, Miami, Newgiza, Asunción), with a 40-6 win-loss record underpinning Chingotto's 113.4 AvgFP and validating him as OutOfTheCourt's most consistent premium right-side asset.

The Bordeaux-Valladolid dip — genuine concern or buy opportunity?: Chingotto's last three recorded 2026 scores (76.3, 89.4, plus Italy Major 106.0) sit below his 113.4 AvgFP, but his historical pattern shows he consistently rebounds from mid-tier scores into 150–179 FP ceiling events, particularly during the European summer P2 and Major swing.

Season leaderboard implications: With FJorgensenTeam leading the OutOfTheCourt season at 8,561.1 points and a near 600-point gap to the chasing pack, strategic captaincy of Chingotto at the right P1 or Major events — where his ceiling sits at 193.7 FP — could be the single most decisive differential-maker remaining in the 2026 season.

🏆 Season Leaderboard

#TeamScore
1FJorgensenTeam8561.1
2GusTeam7970.5
3sebsx47964.8
4DavidCereCat7955.4
5Pode Team7413.7

Lock in El Ratón before the European Major swing — head to outofthecourt.com now to add Federico Chingotto to your squad and capitalise on the hottest partnership in world padel.

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