Juan Lebrón Chincoa
Spanish padel player (born 1995)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juan Lebrón Chincoa (born 30 January 1995), widely known by his nickname 'El Lobo' (The Wolf), is a Spanish professional padel player. As of January 2026, he occupies the 6th position in the FIP ranking.[1]
Lebrón became the first Spanish player in history to become World Number 1, doing so in 2019 alongside Paquito Navarro,[2] a position he would maintain for three more years with Alejandro Galán.
During his career, he won 41 titles and appeared in 70 finals.
Padel career
Juan Lebrón was introduced to padel through his father, who played it with his friends. Lebrón became Spain’s junior padel champion several times and competed in the Junior World Cup.[3] He was the youngest Absolute Champion in Spain and won every match in the minor’s division. At the age of 17, he left El Puerto de Santa Maria and moved to Madrid to play padel professionally.[3]
Professional career
Lebrón’s professional career began in 2015, when he paired up with Paquito Navarro, but his adult career only started to kick off in December 2016, when he and his new partner, Gabriel Reca, reached top 30 in the world.[3]
In March 2017, he started the season with Marcello Jardim and finished it with Adrián Allemandi, finishing in 19th place. The same year he signed a contract with Bablot to pursue his career as a professional.[3]
In 2018, Lebrón started his season with Juan Cruz Belluati. In the first tournament of the season, the Catalunya Masters, they reached their first final as a couple after beating the number 1 ranked couple, Fernando Belasteguín and Pablo Lima, in the semifinals. In the final, Sanyo Gutiérrez and Maxi Sánchez fell 6-4 and 6-2. Juan Martín Díaz became his partner until the end of the year.[3]
In 2019, Paquito Navarro became his new partner.[4] In their first tournament of the season, the Marbella Master, the Andalusians reached the final, where they fell against the world number 1 in 2018, Maxi Sánchez and Sanyo Gutiérrez, 6-1 and 7-6.[5] Andalusia is the southernmost autonomous region in Spain. Following their loss in the Marbella Master, Lebrón and his Navarro won five tournaments in Alicante, Jaén, Valladolid, Bastad, and São Paulo.[3] After qualifying for the final, Juan Lebrón became the first Spanish native World Number 1 in the history of the World Padel Tour.[3] Paquito and Lebron secured the number 1 spot at the end of the season after reaching the final of the Mexican Open. In the final, they lost to Sánchez and Gutiérrez 7-6 and 6-2.
Despite all of their wins, Lebrón and Paquito decided to separate. He changed partners at the end of the tournament to join Alejandro Galán. Together they remained the World's Number 1 pairing for three consecutive years (2020, 2021, 2022).[4] After four years together, Lebron and Galán announced their separation.[6] He now plays on the backhand side with Martín Di Nenno and as of 2024, they are the third-best pairing in the world.
For the 2025 season, Lebrón returned to the drive position to partner with Franco Stupaczuk.[7] The pair reached several finals early in the season and claimed the Cancún P2 title in March. [8] However, they announced their separation with two tournaments remaining in the calendar. Lebrón finished the 2025 season playing alongside the young Argentine talent Leandro Augsburger, confirming their partnership would continue for the 2026 season. [9]
Influence
Lebrón's success has significantly contributed to the growing popularity of padel.[3] His presence as the only Spanish player to reach World Number 1 has made him a role model for aspiring players and racquet sports enthusiasts worldwide.[10] Lebrón is “credited with bringing innovative strategies and a higher level of athleticism to the sport, which will undoubtedly influence padel’s development for years to come.”[10]
Lebrón engages with fans and promotes the sport through platforms such as Instagram.[11]
Results
World Padel Tour
Win Loss
Finals
| No. | Year | Tournament | Category | Partner | Opponents in the final | Result | Career Title No. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 25 March 2018 | Master | 4–6 / 2–6[12] | ||||
| 2. | 12 August 2018 | Open | 2–6 / 6–3 / 3–6 [13] | ||||
| 3. | 24 March 2019 | Master | 1–6 / 6–7 [14] | ||||
| 4. | 14 April 2019 | Open | 6–7 / 6–7 [15] | ||||
| 5. | 28 April 2019 | Open | 3–6 / 7–6 / 6–2 | 1st | |||
| 6. | 12 May 2019 | Open | 3–6 / 4–6 [16] | ||||
| 7. | 26 May 2019 | Open | 7–5 / 6–4 [17] | 2nd | |||
| 8. | 23 June 2019 | Master | 6–7 / 6–4 / 6–4 [18] | 3rd | |||
| 9. | 30 June 2019 | Open | 6–3 / 7–6 [19] | 4th | |||
| 10. | 17 November 2019 | Open | 3–6 / 3–6 [20] | ||||
| 11. | 24 November 2019 | Open | 2–6 / 6–3 / 6–2 [21] | 5th | |||
| 12. | 1 December 2019 | Open | 7–6 / 6–7 / 2–6[22] | ||||
| 13. | 8 March 2020 | Master | 6–7 / 6–2 / 3–6[23] | ||||
| 14. | 5 July 2020 | Open | 7–5 / 6–3[24] | 6th | |||
| 15. | 19 July 2020 | Open | 4–6 / 6–1 / 6–4[25] | 7th | |||
| 16. | 9 August 2020 | Open | 6–7(6) / 6–1 / 6–4[26] | 8th | |||
| 17. | 6 September 2020 | Open | 6–3 / 7–6(6) [27] | 9th | |||
| 18. | 18 October 2020 | Master | 6–4 / 6–1[28] | 10th | |||
| 19. | 8 November 2020 | Open | 4–6 / 6–3 / 6–4[29] | 11th | |||
| 20. | 13 December 2020 | Master Final | 3–6 / 6–7[30] | ||||
| 21. | 25 April 2021 | Open | 6–0 / 6–4[31] | 12th | |||
| 22. | 30 May 2021 | Open | 6–3 / 6–2[32] | 13th | |||
| 23. | 13 June 2021 | Master | 7–6(5) / 6–2[33] | 14th | |||
| 24. | 11 July 2021 | Open | 5–7 / 6–3 / 4–6[34] | ||||
| 24. | 5 September 2021 | Master | 4–6 / 7–5 / 6–3[35] | 15th | |||
| 25. | 26 September 2021 | Open | 6–4 / 4–6 / 6–3[36] | 16th | |||
| 26. | 10 October 2021 | Open | 6–3 / 6–4[37] | 17th | |||
| 27. | 19 December 2021 | Master Final | 6–4 / 6–4[38] | 18th | |||
| 28. | 13 March 2022 | Open | 2–6 / 2–6[39] | ||||
| 29. | 27 March 2022 | Open | 6–2 / 3–6 / 4–6[40] | ||||
| 30. | 10 April 2022 | Open | 6–2 / 6–3[41] | 19th | |||
| 31. | 8 May 2022 | Open | 6–3 / 6–3[42] | 20th | |||
| 32. | 5 June 2022 | Master | 6–2 / 6–4[43] | 21st | |||
| 33. | 12 June 2022 | Open | 1–6 / 6–0 / 6–7(4) [44] | ||||
| 34. | 19 June 2022 | Open | 6–7 / 4–6[45] | ||||
| 35. | 26 June 2022 | Master | 6–4 / 7–6[46] | 22nd | |||
| 36. | 10 July 2022 | Open | 6–4 / 7–6[47] | ||||
| 37. | 11 September 2022 | Open | 6–2 / 6–7 / 6–1[48] | 23rd | |||
| 38. | 18 September 2022 | Open | 6–7 / 6–2 / 6–1[49] | 24th | |||
| 39. | 23 October 2022 | Open | 6–4 / 4–6 / 6–2[50] | 25th | |||
| 40. | 13 October 2022 | Open | 4–6 / 6–1 / 6–2[51] | 26th | |||
| 41. | 20 November 2022 | Master | 7–6(4) / 6–2[52] | 27th | |||
| 42. | 18 December 2022 | Master Final | 6–4 / 6–7(5) / 6–2[53] | 28th | |||
| 43. | 26 February 2023 | Master | 6–7 / 3–6[54] | ||||
| 44. | 19 March 2023 | Open | 4–6 / 7–6(3) / 5–7[55] | ||||
| 45. | 26 March 2023 | Open | 2–6 / 1–6[56] | ||||
| 46. | 14 May 2023 | Open | 3–6 / 7–6(4) / 6–7(5)[57] | ||||
| 47. | 3 September 2023 | Open | 6–0 / 7–6(5)[58] | 29th | |||
| 48. | 1 October 2023 | Open | 6–2 / 6–2[59] | 30th | |||
| 49. | 29 October 2023 | Open | 6–3 / 6–2[60] | 31st | |||
| 50. | 12 November 2023 | Open | 6–3 / 6–4[61] | 32nd |
The WPT (World Padel Tour) is divided into 4 categories of tournaments including Open, Major, Challenger, and Finals.
Total WPT:
- Master Final Tournaments: 2
- Master Tournaments: 7
- Open Tournaments: 23
- Challenger Tournaments: 0
Premier Padel
Win Loss
Finals
| No. | Date | Tournament | Category | Partner | Opponents in the final | Result | Career title No. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 2 April 2022 | Major | Alejandro Galan | 3–6 / 6–7[62] | |||
| 2. | 29 May 2022 | Major | Alejandro Galan | 4–6 / 7–5 / 6–4[63] | 33rd | ||
| 3. | 17 July 2022 | Major | Alejandro Galan | 6–3 / 4–6 / 6–4[64] | 34th | ||
| 4. | 7 August 2022 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 5–7 / 6–2 / 6–3[65] | 35th | ||
| 5. | 30 October 2022 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 6–2 / 6–7 / 6–7[66] | |||
| 6. | 11 December 2022 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 6–2 / 6–2[67] | 36th | ||
| 7. | 10 December 2023 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 7–6 / 6–7 / 7–6[68] | 37th | ||
| 8. | 2 March 2024 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 6–7 / 6–4 / 6–4[69] | 38th | ||
| 9. | 2 March 2024 | P1 | Alejandro Galan | 0–6 / 4–6[70] | |||
| 10. | 4 August 2024 | P2 | Martin Di Nenno | 7–5 / 6–3[71] | 39th | ||
| 12. | 23 March 2025 | P1 | Franco Stupaczuk | 3–6 / 7–5 / 3–6 [72] | |||
| 13. | 17 March 2025 | P2 | Franco Stupaczuk | 6–2 / 6–3 [73] | 40th | ||
| 14. | 23 March 2025 | P1 | Franco Stupaczuk | Alejandro Galan |
1–6 / 6–7[74] | ||
| 15. | 30 March 2025 | P1 | Franco Stupaczuk | Alejandro Galan |
0–0 (W.O.) [75] | ||
| 16. | 30 March 2025 | P2 | Franco Stupaczuk | 5–7 / 4–6[76] | |||
| 17. | 22 March 2026 | P2 | Leandro Augsburger | 7–6 / 3–6 / 5–7 [77] |
Premier Padel is considered the most important circuit in the world of professional padel since the beginning of 2024. It is governed by the International Padel Federation and is owned by Qatar Sports Investments,[78] after it merged with World Padel Tour into a single global padel circuit.
Premier Padel tournaments are split into three categories: the four Majors, the P1 and the P2 tournaments. The best couples will qualify for the Finals, the season-finale. The 4 majors, just like Grand Slams in tennis, are the most prestigious events on the tour.These events are hosted in Qatar, Italy, France and Mexico.[79]
World Championship
Teammates

Juan Lebrón has played with 12 different teammates and has won titles with most of them.
- Gaby Reca (01/2016 – 12/2016)[80]
- Marcello Jardim (01/2017 – 7/2017)[81]
- Matias Marina Artuso (04/2017 – 4/2017)
- Jordi Muñoz (07/2017 – 07/2017)
- Adrian Allemandi (07/2017 – 12/2017)
- Juan Cruz Belluati (01/2018 – 10/2018)[82]
- Juan Martin Díaz (10/2018 – 12/2018)[83]
- Paquito Navarro (01/2019 – 12/2019, 03/2024 – 08/2024)[84]
- Alejandro Galán (01/2020 – 03/2024)[85]
- Martin Di Nenno (08/2024 – 12/2024)[86]
- Franco Stupaczuk (01/2025 – 11/2025)[87]
- Leandro Augsburger (11/2025 – current)[88]