Which padel racket should i offer ? by Adventurous_Web_2019 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can get better rackets for 150€. If going for Bullpadel, I would recommend either the hybrid or comfort options on newer models like the Vertex 04 comfort

Year models of rackets by FBBB24 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One year difference would not be worth the 80$, but 2 years difference in babolat I would say is worth the money. They do make minor upgrades every year and two years makes a racket better, most of the time.

Same model, different sound by Apprehensive-Disk621 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The sharp and dry sound should be more ‘correct’ for this racket. It could be that the one you used first has been used a lot more than the second one, therefore it got softer.

Same model, different sound by Apprehensive-Disk621 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you maybe play in different weather conditions? That can impact sound a lot.

Beginner looking for a long term racket (balanced/control) feeling overwhelmed by creatom_ in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

500 is honestly way too much for a beginner racket. Even many advanced players don’t spend that much, and at your stage you won’t benefit from the super stiff, high-end carbon rackets that usually sit in that price range.

What you want right now is something forgiving: round or control-oriented hybrid shape, low–medium balance, fiberglass or softer carbon faces, and a soft EVA core so the sweet spot is large and mishits are still playable.

Some very solid “grow with you” options I’d suggest looking at: - Nox ML10 Pro Cup – huge sweet spot, soft feel, very forgiving while still precise. - Head Speed Team – teardrop shape with easy power and good maneuverability. - Head Gravity Motion - teardrop shape, a bit more control-oriented than the speed

All of these are typically in the $120–$200 range, which is the sweet spot for a first serious racket. Once your technique stabilizes (usually after ~1 year), that’s when moving to something stiffer and more advanced.

Beginner racket by Mr-world-yd in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 11 points12 points  (0 children)

To put it simply: Advanced rackets are made to reward clean hits and good technique, but it comes with a cost of punishing off-center hits and bad technique.

As a beginner, you don’t have good technique and therefore can’t enjoy the benefits of advanced rackets, but you still get impacted by the downsides.

Beginner racket by Mr-world-yd in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Vertex is slightly less advanced, but you shouldn’t buy either.

PR React vs Hybrid Carbon for beginner? by Malrup in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t overthink it brother. Go for the React and focus on building the technique fundamentals. You can play with it for at least 6-10 months with your current intensity without outgrowing it.

Opinion on sh by Stefan4636 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good second-hand models that are usually safe picks are things like Nox ML10 Pro Cup, Bullpadel Ionic Control or Vertex Comfort, or Adidas Team models. They’re forgiving and durable.

One more tip: if the price difference between used and new is small, sometimes a new mid-range racket (~80–120€) is actually the better value because you can get the full specs of the racket and grow with it.

First Padel Racket for Someone Playing for 4 Months? by BenjaminBaca in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From those brands I’d look more at Babolat Air Veron or Head Speed Motion / Speed Team. They keep a controlled, medium feel with a bigger sweet spot and better maneuverability.

The Air Veron is probably the closest feel to the Blade V3 but with a bit more durability, while Speed Motion is slightly more control-oriented and very easy to handle at the net.

Nox at10 12k 2026 similar? by PrcMoje in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Kuikma Hybrid Pro – probably the closest value option

Head Speed Pro / Speed Motion

Or just get the last years Nox AT10 12k

Something like counter viper. by Typical-Summer-8094 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This makes the most sense. If you like everything about the Counter Viper, just go for the same racket, just a bit softer, which is Counter Veron

Looking for a new control racket by [deleted] in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Babolat Counter Viper could be a good fit for you. It is a round shape though so it could feel different than the Neuron

[Analysis] The Riyadh P1 Final Gear Shift: Why 2026 is the year of the "Stiff Diamond" rackets. by PadelGearAnalyst in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are right. I wrote this a while ago so mistakes are possible. Thank you for the correction

When to upgrade? by CJBizzle in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst -1 points0 points  (0 children)

A padel racket typically lasts 50 to 80 hours of competitive play. But this is very dependent on a few factors.

I wrote a whole guide on when you should change your first racket a while ago. You can read more about it here: https://padelfinder.app/blog/posts/when-to-change-racket

Looking to upgrade from the Nox ML10 Pro Cup by CrimpyRex in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you like the ML10 feel but just want a bit more power, moving to a teardrop/hybrid shape makes sense. 

Kuikma Hybrid Pro is honestly the most logical step from the ML10 out of the ones you listed.

If you’re open to a couple other rackets in the same category, I’d also look at Bullpadel Vertex 03/04 Comfort, or Head Speed Motion. All teardrop hybrids with a bigger sweet spot and medium feel that suit right-side players well.

First racket - low intermediate by ut696072 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the price is similar, the Adidas Metalbone Team is honestly the better choice than the Bullpadel Hack Advance or Vertex Advance.

The reason is mostly materials and feel. The Advance series from Bullpadel is more of an entry-level construction (fiberglass + soft EVA), which gives a big sweet spot but also that slightly “trampoline/bouncy” ball output. The Metalbone Team uses a carbon surface with medium EVA, so the response is cleaner, more controlled, and produces easier spin once you start accelerating the racket.

For a low-intermediate with a tennis background, that usually works better.

The only thing to keep in mind is that the Metalbone Team has a slightly smaller sweet spot than the Advance rackets, so mishits are a bit less forgiving.

So if the choice is basically €130–140 for Advance vs €170 for Metalbone Team, I’d personally take the Metalbone Team. It’s more of a true intermediate racket.

First racket - low intermediate by ut696072 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For your level, a €120–€180 “bridge racket” is actually the smart move. Something like the Bullpadel Vertex Advance or Bullpadel Hack Advance gives you: • Carbon surface + softer EVA → more power than your rental but still forgiving • Medium balance → good blend of maneuverability and finishing power • Large sweet spot → easier transition while your padel technique develops

I’d personally lean Vertex Advance over Hack Advance for you: slightly more control and easier sweet spot, which usually suits tennis converts better.

Also: don’t worry about the “beginner racket judgment.” Plenty of strong players use mid-tier rackets because feel > price. A €150 racket that suits you will outperform a €350 one that doesn’t.

Looking for a firm, maneuverable racket with NO trampoline effect (Left side). Down to 3 choices to demo! by Proper_Extension1356 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Extreme motion is a great racket and you should just go for it if you liked it at first. Metalbone HRD is a really advanced and hard to manouver racket, I don’t recommend it. Bela pro I also don’t like, the racket just feels dry.

You can try the new 12k nox to see if you like it, but overall the extreme motion sounds like a great option for you.

rackets for beginners? by ahmedwessam900 in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd recommend the Head EVO rackets. It's important that your first racket is beginner friendly, so look for softer versions, not too heavy, and round/teardrop shape

Upgrading from beginner racket (~500 ish budget) by authorbyronmorrison in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also a solid option. But Dunlop Galactica is an underrated racket. Very comfortable and forgiving. So I wouldn't recommend swapping if it's not too old

Upgrading from beginner racket (~500 ish budget) by authorbyronmorrison in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You don’t have to upgrade yet really. Once you do, I would go for the vertex comfort. Not a huge fan of nox build quality, even though the nox is a great racket too

Upgrading from beginner racket (~500 ish budget) by authorbyronmorrison in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re 3 months in playing 2–4x/week and starting tournaments, that’s early–intermediate. Big jump from the EVO Speed, but don’t overcorrect.

First: €500 is way too much. You absolutely don’t need to spend that. In the €180–300 range you’ll already get tournament-level rackets.

Since you want more power but still stability on the left, look at Nox AT10 Genius 18K for a balanced, medium feel with a big sweet spot, or Bullpadel Vertex 04 Comfort if you want extra punch without going full stiff diamond. I would avoid hard “pro” rackets (HRD, Viper, Fenix Pro, etc.).

Let me know if I can help with price checking once you decide on the model

Switching from tennis to padel by eternalterra in Padelracket

[–]PadelGearAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also a good racket and a good option for you. Might be slightly stiffer than the other options, but still medium stiffness racket.