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Juan Lebron"El Lobo" and His Path Back

The first Spanish world number one. Four years at the top. A nickname - "El Lobo", The Wolf - earned through pure aggression. Now partnering young Argentine Leo Augsburger on a rebuild.

Updated2026 Read6 min LevelAll levels EditorialNo sponsored content
Quick answer

Juan Lebron is a Spanish professional padel player, born 31 January 1995 in El Puerto de Santa Maria, Cadiz. Nicknamed "El Lobo" (The Wolf), he was world No. 1 from 2019 to 2022 (four consecutive years). He currently partners Leo Augsburger, ranked No. 6 in the FIP. His racket is the Babolat Technical Viper 3.0 Juan Lebron 2026 signature model.

Who is Juan Lebron

Juan Lebron Chincoa is one of the most significant figures in the history of Spanish padel. He was the first Spanish player to reach world number one - a milestone for a sport born in Mexico and dominated by Argentines for most of its history. From 2019 to 2022, Lebron held that number one spot, making him the dominant figure of his generation alongside Alejandro Galan.

Born in Puerto de Santa Maria (Cadiz) in 1995, Lebron was introduced to padel by his father. He won multiple Spanish junior titles before moving to Madrid at 17 to pursue the sport professionally. His career has not been smooth - injuries and partnership changes have marked the past two years - but his influence on padel in Spain is hard to overstate.

Partnerships: the peak and after

The Galan era (2020-2023)

Lebron reached his peak partnered with Alejandro Galan. Together they dominated the tour for three years, winning over 30 titles. Lebron played the right (drive) side and Galan the left. The partnership ended at the start of 2023.

The transition years (2023-2025)

Post-Galan, Lebron has cycled through several partners: Pablo Lima, Martin Di Nenno, Ale Ruiz, Momo Gonzalez, and Franco Stupaczuk. Results have been inconsistent. He dealt with injury setbacks and struggled to recapture the Galan-era dominance despite playing with strong partners.

The Augsburger partnership (2025-present)

Lebron finished 2025 playing with young Argentine Leo Augsburger and extended the partnership into 2026. The pair reached the Miami P1 semifinals in March 2026, where they lost to Coello-Tapia. Lebron's comments afterwards ("Leo and I are developing a great working relationship") suggest this is a project partnership: building chemistry over a season rather than chasing instant titles.

Playing style: pure aggression

"El Lobo" - The Wolf - is not an incidental nickname. Lebron's game is built on relentless attacking pressure, physical intensity and refusal to concede rallies.

The kick smash and vibora

Lebron's overhead game was among the most feared on tour during his peak. The kick smash - with steep topspin that makes the ball leap over the back fence - was his signature point-ender. Few players hit the vibora with more snap and spin.

Athleticism and pressure

At 1.84m Lebron is not the tallest pro, but his athleticism is exceptional. Jumping smashes, diving volleys and rapid recovery movements define his style. He plays every point with visible intensity.

Unpredictability

Lebron is harder to read than most pros. He mixes tactics aggressively, changes the game when needed, and takes risks most players would not. The unpredictability is part of what made him world number one - opponents could not settle into patterns against him.

Lebron's racket: Babolat Viper 3.0

Lebron has been sponsored by Babolat since 2017. His current signature racket is the Babolat Technical Viper 3.0 Juan Lebron 2026, the flagship of the Viper line.

SpecViper 3.0 Juan Lebron 2026
ShapeDiamond
Weight~370g
Balance270mm (head-heavy)
CoreBlack EVA
Surface3K Carbon
FeaturesDynamic Stability System, 3D Spin+, Vibrasorb
LevelAdvanced / pro only

The Viper is one of the most demanding rackets in padel - Tennis Warehouse describes it as "perhaps the most demanding racket experience out there". The 3K carbon surface gives a firm, responsive feel; the diamond shape with 270mm balance concentrates power at the head. It rewards clean attacking technique and punishes mishits.

The 2026 Viper line includes three variants: the Viper 3.0 (maximum power, most demanding), the Viper Soft 3.0 (same attacking shape but more forgiving materials) and the Veron 3.0 (dynamic power with carbon + fibreglass for more forgiveness). This tiered structure is now standard for pro signature lines.

Career record

  • World No. 1 from 2019-2022 (four consecutive years)
  • 41 career titles, 70 career final appearances
  • First Spanish player to reach world No. 1 (2019, with Navarro)
  • Career best ranking: No. 1
  • Current ranking: No. 6 FIP (April 2026)
  • Current partnership: Leo Augsburger (Argentina), 10-3 record in 2026

Lebron is 31 as of April 2026 - not old for padel but past his 22-25 peak age window. The move away from the top of the rankings reflects the sport's natural cycle rather than a decline in skill. The Augsburger partnership is a deliberate long-game bet on building something fresh rather than chasing his old glory.

What club players can learn from Lebron

Intensity is a choice

Lebron plays every point with visible commitment. Even in dead rubbers. Even at 30-30 in the first set. The habit of playing at full intensity regardless of score or importance is trainable and makes a bigger difference than most amateurs realise.

Learn the kick smash

Lebron's topspin smash is a technical masterpiece worth studying. At club level, you won't match the power or spin, but the principle - brushing aggressively up over the ball to create a steep kick - translates directly. See our smash guide.

Don't copy the racket

The Viper 3.0 is marketed for pros and makes few concessions to club players. The Viper Soft or Veron 3.0 variants are what most intermediate players should consider if they want the Lebron DNA. See our signature rackets guide.

Frequently asked questions

Is Juan Lebron still world number one?
No. Lebron held the top ranking from 2019 to 2022 (four consecutive years) but is currently ranked No. 6 as of April 2026. He is partnering Leo Augsburger in 2026 on a rebuilding partnership.
What racket does Lebron use?
The Babolat Technical Viper 3.0 Juan Lebron 2026, a diamond-shaped pro racket with 3K carbon surface, 270mm balance and approximately 370g weight. Lebron has been with Babolat since 2017.
Why is Lebron called "El Lobo"?
"El Lobo" means "The Wolf" in Spanish. The nickname refers to his aggressive, relentless attacking style of play. The wolf logo appears throughout his Babolat signature collection.
Did Lebron play drive or backhand side?
Traditionally right (drive) side throughout his peak with Galan. For the 2025 season with Stupaczuk he played backhand side briefly, but with Augsburger he is back to his natural right side.
How tall is Lebron?
1.84m (6ft 0in). He is not as tall as Coello but compensates with exceptional jumping ability and court coverage.
Can beginners use the Viper racket?
Absolutely not. The Viper 3.0 is marketed exclusively for advanced and pro-level players and is one of the most unforgiving rackets on the market. Beginners would struggle with control and likely develop arm issues. Consider the Babolat Veron 3.0 or see our beginner rackets guide.
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