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  1. Home
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  3. The Head Radical Pro Explained in Depth | A Serious Paddle From a Tennis Heavyweight

The Head Radical Pro Explained in Depth | A Serious Paddle From a Tennis Heavyweight

2026 6/20
Gear Reviews Paddles Basics
March 30, 2026June 20, 2026
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Article Summary
A tennis-player's-eye review of "Radical Pro," the flagship pickleball model from tennis giant HEAD. With a carbon face, polymer core, and elongated shape, it's a competition-oriented paddle with an excellent balance of control and spin. We cover its feel, how each shot plays, comparisons with Selkirk, Franklin, and JOOLA, adjustments when switching from tennis, and price and where to buy.

Some people may be surprised to hear "HEAD, the tennis brand, doing pickleball?" But look at the specs and the reputation, and the seriousness comes through.

HEAD, trusted worldwide for its tennis equipment, has made a full-scale entry into the pickleball market. Its flagship model is "Radical Pro."

This article organizes the specs and design philosophy of the Head Radical Pro, along with user reviews, and covers how easily a tennis player switching over can adapt.

In This Article
– The detailed specs and design philosophy of the Head Radical Pro
– Feel and handling as seen from published specs and user reviews
– How easily a tennis player can adapt after switching
– SelkirkandFranklin· Comparison with other brands' paddles, such as JOOLA
– How recommended it is for beginners and intermediate players respectively

[PR] This article uses an affiliate program (Amazon Associates).

The model explained in this article

HEAD Radical Pro Textured Paddle

The Pro model of the Radical series from tennis giant HEAD. A serious paddle whose textured face makes it easy to put on spin.

See on Amazon
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What is the Head Radical Pro? A paddle a tennis giant built in earnest

The background of HEAD's entry into pickleball

HEAD is a brand long favored by top pros for its "Radical" tennis racket series. It's also famous for being used by Andre Agassi—any tennis player will react just to hearing the name.

That HEAD judged that "pickleball's growth is the real deal" and extended the Radical brand directly into pickleball paddles. A design that clicks by name alone is a clever strategy for winning over tennis players.

Where the Radical series sits

Even within HEAD's pickleball lineup, the Radical Pro is theflagship model. Its competition-oriented design emphasizes a balance of power and control, clearly differentiating it from entry models for lighter users. For the basics of choosing a paddle, you can also checkthe complete paddle-choosing guideas well.

Specs and appearance: the Radical Pro's ability in numbers

Key specs at a glance

Item Spec
Weight Approx. 220–235g (midweight)
Face length Approx. 40.6–41.9cm (varies by model)
Grip length Approx. 13.3cm
Core material Polymer honeycomb
Face material Carbon Fiber
Shape Elongated (long shape)

The weight isapproximately 220–235g, in the midweight zone. Compared with a tennis racket (around 280–300g), it's lighter, so it may feel a little off at first, but you'll get used to it after a few shots.

Note that the Radical Pro's face material and shape differ by model (standard/EX series). This article evaluates it assuming the carbon-face, elongated (long) spec. When buying, check the specs of the specific model.

How each spec affects playability

The numbers in a spec sheet translate directly into playability. Let's lay out the key points for reading them.

Spec item What this number means
Midweight (approx. 220–235g) A power-and-control balance type. Not too light, not too heavy—easy on you even over long sessions
Elongated (long) shape Extended reach gives an edge on smashes and attacks. On the flip side, the sweet spot runs lengthwise and takes getting used to
Carbon Fiber Face The ball leaves quickly and is easy to spin. The feel at contact is direct
Polymer Honeycomb Core Absorbs impact for a soft feel, keeping touch shots stable

In other words, the numbers show the Radical Pro is designed for players who "combine reach and maneuverability while building their game with spin and touch."

The feel produced by the carbon face

This paddle's biggest feature is the carbon fiber used for the face material. The ball leaves quickly and takes spin easily, and the many comments that "the feel at contact comes through directly" make perfect sense.

The elongated (long) shape offers wide reach and works in your favor on smashes and attacks. Honestly, though, since the sweet spot extends lengthwise, it does take a little practice to get used to.

From specs and reputation: compatibility with tennis players

First impression

The Radical Pro is said to be close to a tennis racket in grip shape and swing feel, so for tennis players ease of transition is an advantage.

Because it's easy to move into your swing without feeling off,tennis players tend to get used to the basic hitting motion quickly—that's the word on it. Compared with someone starting from zero, many say the adaptation is smooth.

Power type vs. control type—what's this paddle's personality?

To be honest, the Radical Pro is a "control-leaning balance type."

Rather than the power-type thrill of "hit it and it flies!", it's designed to prioritize the precision of "dropping it where you aim." In pickleball's characteristic exchanges, where rallies tend to run long, this trait becomes a weapon.

Compatibility with serves, volleys, and smashes

Let's look at how it suits each shot too. On serves, it's easy to apply underhand control and steadily target deep corners. On volleys, the quick ball release from the carbon face works well, keeping the face stable even in fast exchanges at the net. The reach of the elongated shape helps you take that one extra step for balls just out of range.

On smashes, the reach of the long shape and its moderate weight give it finishing power. But since it's not a power-only paddle, aiming to "pick your line" is more of a weapon than relying on brute force. All in all, each shot suits players who build their game with precision rather than pushing with hard hitting.

Spin performance rating

Thanks to the carbon face, it's designed so spin goes on readily. It's easy to put the topspin feel you built in tennis to use, and some users describe it as "close to the feel of a cross-court rally."

The feel of dinks and drop shots

This paddle's strength lies in soft shots. It's easy to get precision on dinks near the kitchen (non-volley zone), and because the polymer honeycomb core material absorbs impact moderately, it's designed so your hands stay stable even on delicate touch shots.

The third-shot drop is easy to hit too, making it a paddle that especially resonates with players who love the cat-and-mouse at the net. If you want to raise your dink precision, seedink mastery guideis also worth a look.

Comparison with other brands' paddles: how does it differ from Selkirk, Franklin, and JOOLA?

Main paddle comparison table

Paddles Weight Maneuverability Power For tennis players Price range
Head Radical Pro 220〜235g ★★★★☆ ★★★☆☆ ◎ High
Selkirk Vanguard 220〜230g ★★★★★ ★★★☆☆ ○ High
Franklin Signature 215〜225g ★★★☆☆ ★★★★☆ △ Moderate
JOOLA Ben Johns 218〜223g ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ ○ High

Comparison with Selkirk

Selkirk has a long track record as a pickleball-only brand, and its maneuverability is on par or better. That said, the Head Radical Pro has one clear strength: "ease of transition from tennis." Factoring in the brand's familiarity, tennis players have plenty of reason to choose Head.

Comparison with JOOLA

JOOLA, with a long track record as a table tennis equipment maker originally from Germany, has also made a full-scale entry into pickleball. On power, JOOLA seems to have a slight lead, but on the balance of control and spin I felt the Head Radical Pro has the edge. For the differences between the makers, seethe major maker comparison.

How recommended it is for beginners and intermediate players

Recommendation for beginners: ★★★☆☆

For a pure beginner, this may be a "slightly tricky to handle" paddle. That's because drawing out its control performance takes a certain amount of swing precision.

That said, it's a different story for a beginner with tennis experience.Because the grip feel is close, it's overwhelmingly easier to get used to than for someone with no tennis experience. For anyone who "has played tennis but is new to pickleball," it's more than recommendable as a first paddle.

Recommendation for intermediate players: ★★★★★

For intermediate players, we recommend it with confidence. This paddle's performance shines most in the phase where you keep rallies going while expanding your shot variety.

The Radical Pro's control performance fits perfectly during the period when your dink, third-shot drop, and attack are all starting to stabilize.

A special recommendation for tennis players

Personally,as a first paddle when a tennis player starts pickleball, the Radical Pro is one of the best choices.

You can start without feeling off, and keep using it for a long time even as you improve. Paddles that combine these two things are surprisingly rare.

The play styles it works best with

Even the same paddle suits different play styles differently. Let's look at the three types the Radical Pro works best for.

編集部メモ

Editor's Note

The Radical Pro suits "people who want to keep the tennis feel while rebuilding their game for pickleball" best. The more your style is about taking control with placement and spin rather than pushing through with power, the more you'll draw out its performance.

The rally type who builds points with control

It fits best with a style of steadily dropping the ball where you aim, moving your opponent around, and breaking them down. The soft feel of the polymer core and the honest spin of the carbon face keep dink and drop precision stable. It becomes a weapon for anyone who wants to take control in long rallies.

The intermediate player who wants to expand their range of shots

It also pairs well with intermediate players at the stage of using dinks, drops, and attacks depending on the situation. The reach of the elongated shape widens your coverage and makes switching between offense and defense smooth. It suits the period when you want to practice a wide range of shots with a single paddle.

The convert who wants to leverage their tennis feel

Because the grip feel and how spin goes on are close to tennis, the strength is how little feels off even right after switching. You can bring the placement reads and spin sense you built in tennis straight over.

Three adjustments to be mindful of first when switching from tennis

The Radical Pro is an easy paddle for tennis players to get used to, but there are also parts where the tennis feel doesn't carry over as-is. Here are three points to lock in first so your adaptation goes even faster.

Make your swing small and compact

If you swing with the same big tennis swing, you'll hit more overs and outs against the light paddle and fast ball. The Radical Pro is designed to reward a sense of carrying the ball on the face, so shortening your takeback and switching to a mindset of stopping at impact keeps you stable. For dinks especially, the correct image is "placing" rather than "swinging."

Rebuild your serve as an underhand serve

The fast overhead tennis serve can't be used. You need to rebuild your serve form from scratch into an underhand serve that makes contact below the waist. The Radical Pro's control works precisely during this rebuilding process. For the serve-practice steps, seePractice methods to stabilize your serveis a good reference.

Learn the spacing of the kitchen (non-volley zone)

There's a rule that you can't dash into the kitchen in front of the net. Charging in too far with the feel of a tennis net dash is a fault. To make the most of the Radical Pro's touch performance, first get into your body the spacing of stopping short of the kitchen line and waiting for one bounce.

Durability and maintenance for long-term use

On a carbon-face paddle, spin performance drops as the surface texture wears down. If you want to use the Radical Pro for a long time, the basics are to wipe dust off the surface with a dry cloth after play, and not to leave it in direct sunlight or a hot car interior. If you notice a loose edge guard or something off with the core, inspecting it early keeps its original feel.

If you use it frequently in competition, check the surface grit condition regularly. The more you use it on rough outdoor surfaces, the faster it wears, so how long it lasts feels different depending on whether you play mostly indoors or outdoors.

How to choose weight and grip size

Even with the same Radical Pro, choosing a grip size that suits your hand raises maneuverability a notch. As a guide for grip circumference, use the length from the crease in the center of your palm to the tip of your ring finger (roughly 10–11cm). Too thin and gripping strains your wrist; too thick and quick face adjustments lag.

The weight is close to fixed midweight, but you can change how it feels with the number of overgrip wraps or fine-tuning with lead tape. Using it as-is at first, then adjusting a few grams to your preference once you're used to it, is an approach that's also easy for tennis players to take to. For how to think about weight, seethe complete paddle-choosing guide.

Price and how to buy in Japan

As befits HEAD's flagship, the Radical Pro sits in the higher price band. Since authorized handling in Japan is limited, the main routes to get it are handling by tennis equipment shops or parallel imports via Amazon and specialty shops. Parallel-import items can keep the price down but may make warranty and support harder to get, so checking reviews and the return policy before buying is reassuring.

Overseas reference prices don't apply directly; domestically they fluctuate with shipping and exchange rates. For how to think about total initial costs, also checkthe beginner's cost guideas well.

Differences from other HEAD models

Besides the Radical Pro, HEAD offers models for entry to intermediate players. Entry models have more affordable face and core material specs and keep the price down, but yield to the flagship on the upside of spin and control. The Radical Pro has a competition-oriented finish and the performance to keep using for a long time even as you improve—that's the difference in positioning.

"An entry model if you want to try it casually first," "the Radical Pro if you want to build your game in earnest leveraging your tennis feel"—that's an easy-to-grasp guide for choosing between them.

Pre-purchase checklist

Precisely because it's an expensive paddle, check the following points before buying so you don't regret it afterward.

Item to check What to look at
Your own level Pure beginners get more from an entry model; tennis players and intermediate players make the Radical Pro shine
Play style For people who want to build their game with control and spin rather than power alone
Grip size Whether it fits your hand size. If possible, check by actually holding it
Where to buy and warranty Parallel import or authorized handling. Check the return policy and support
Budget High price band. Judge its investment value on the premise of long-term use

If it meets these, the Radical Pro will be a highly satisfying paddle. Especially for tennis players who want to develop a control-focused style, it's more than recommendable as a first serious paddle.

Summary: These are the people we'd want to buy the Head Radical Pro

To pull the discussion together, the Head Radical Pro clearly has people it "suits" and people it "doesn't."

Who It's Suited To Who it doesn't suit
A tennis player trying pickleball for the first time Those who want a pure power type
A control-focused play style Those who prefer a lightweight paddle
Those who want to choose a trusted brand Those looking for a low price band
Players who use a lot of spin Beginners who prioritize ease of handling above all

The price is by no means cheap, but from the standpoint of "a paddle you can use for a long time" it offers plenty of cost performance. Including the reassurance of the HEAD brand, it's well worth considering.

If you want to convert the skills you built in tennis to pickleball, definitely pick one up. You'll surely feel "ah, this is easy to hit."

FAQ

Can even a tennis beginner use the Head Radical Pro?

If you have tennis experience, you can use it without any problem even as a pickleball beginner. Its feature is that the grip feel is close to a tennis racket, making the transition easy. For a pure pickleball beginner, a somewhat easier-to-handle entry model may be a better fit in some cases.

How heavy is the Head Radical Pro?

The weight is in the midweight band of about 220–235g. Compared with a tennis racket (around 280–300g) it's lighter, but among pickleball paddles it falls in the standard weight band.

Is it easy to put spin on?

Because it uses a carbon fiber face, spin performance is high. Since you can put the topspin technique you built in tennis to use largely as-is, it's an especially easy-to-use paddle for tennis players.

How does it differ from HEAD's other paddles?

The Radical Pro is a flagship model that emphasizes control and balance. Compared with HEAD's entry models, both its face and core materials have competition-oriented specs, and the price is set higher too.

What's the biggest difference between a tennis racket and a pickleball paddle?

The biggest differences are size and material. A paddle is smaller than a racket, has no strings, and has a solid-material face. The sweet spot is also different, so it takes getting used to at first, but tennis players can adapt relatively quickly.

This site is a participant in the Amazon Associates Program, an affiliate program designed to provide a means for sites to earn referral fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.jp.

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Author of this article

小島 怜's avatar Rei Kojima

I'm a pickleball enthusiast in my third year living in Vietnam. In high school I was on the badminton team, spending every day chasing the shuttle. Now, amid the buzz of Ho Chi Minh City, I'm fully immersed in the speedy volleys my badminton background enables and the strategic mind games unique to pickleball. I'll casually share the real playing scene in Vietnam—local court info and improvement tips that only a former badminton player would know!

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