Teardrop padel rackets explained - why they suit all-round players, how they compare to round and diamond, and who should choose one.
Teardrop is not a compromise - it is a deliberate choice for all-court players who want meaningful performance in every area of the court without committing to the extreme demands of diamond or the power ceiling of round. Fede Chingotto plays teardrop at world number one level for exactly this reason.
The widest point of a teardrop sits roughly where the bottom third of the head meets the middle third. The overall head profile is rounder than a diamond but not perfectly circular like a round racket. This creates a face where the sweet spot sits slightly above centre - you still make frequent central contact in normal play, but the racket also rewards slightly elevated contact with good power output on overheads.
Balance points on teardrop rackets typically fall in the 265-275mm range. This is meaningfully higher than a low-balance round (255-265mm) and meaningfully lower than a high-balance diamond (275-290mm). The sweet spot is in the middle of the available spectrum for swing weight and arm load.
The teardrop shape is often described as "all-round" but this undervalues what it actually delivers. It is not all-round in the sense of being adequate at everything. It is all-round in the sense that it genuinely excels when a player needs to perform well across all areas of the court within the same match. This is a different and more demanding design requirement.
The overhead power advantage over round is real and meaningful at the club level. Players developing their smash game find that a teardrop converts their overhead swings into more decisive shots than a round racket does. The elevated sweet spot and slightly higher balance point both contribute to more authority on downward smash motions.
At the net, teardrop is still fast enough for effective reflex play. The balance point is higher than round which reduces net play speed marginally, but not enough to make net play difficult. Players who use teardrop at net compensate through slightly more deliberate positioning and slightly earlier racket preparation compared to round users.
The arm load advantage over diamond is significant for sustained play. Teardrop players can maintain their game across a full season of frequent play without the same accumulation of arm stress that diamond users experience. For players who play 2-3 times per week, the teardrop often represents the optimal balance between performance output and physical sustainability.
Developing intermediate players who have outgrown the pure forgiveness of round. Once a player is making reliable central contact and wants to develop their overhead game, teardrop is the natural progression. It gives the overhead authority needed to develop that part of the game without the harsh feedback of a diamond on the inevitable inconsistent contacts during the development period.
Advanced all-court players who genuinely play equal amounts at net and baseline. Fede Chingotto is the clearest professional example. His game requires him to be effective from both positions within the same rally. Teardrop allows him to attack from the back when he needs to and play effective net exchanges when the point demands it. A round would limit his baseline game; a diamond would compromise his net play.
Players who have tried diamond and found the sweet spot too demanding. Transitioning from diamond back to teardrop is common and often productive. Teardrop allows players to retain 80-85% of the diamond power advantage with meaningfully more forgiveness and lower arm load. Many players who have struggled with diamond for a season find their overall game improves when they step back to teardrop.
Teardrop vs round: more overhead power and slightly more authority on baseline drives. Less forgiving on off-centre hits - particularly those toward the frame. Slightly higher arm load due to elevated balance point. Faster swing weight than diamond but slower than round. If your game is primarily net-based, round is better. If you need meaningful baseline options, teardrop is better.
Teardrop vs diamond: more forgiving across the face, particularly in the lower-middle zone. Lower arm load over a season of frequent play. Slightly less overhead power at peak smash velocity. More accessible for players who do not yet have consistently precise contact. If your game ends points with overhead power and your technique is solid, diamond gives you more. If you need to perform across the whole court with manageable physical cost, teardrop serves you better.
The Bullpadel Neuron 02 Buy → - Chingotto's racket - uses teardrop shape with HR3 Multiglass face, medium balance and a refined EVA core. All-court performance at professional level. The HR3 Multiglass gives excellent touch and feel while the teardrop shape provides meaningful overhead power. This is the clearest example of teardrop design at its best.
The Nox ML10 Bahia Pro Cup uses teardrop geometry with a hybrid construction that adds carbon to the upper zones. This gives slightly more exit speed on overhead smashes while retaining teardrop forgiveness in the mid-face. Suited to advanced all-court players who want power close to diamond without full diamond demands.
The Head Delta Pro uses teardrop geometry with Head's Delta construction - a fibre composite that sits between Multiglass and carbon in stiffness. Good all-court performance with reasonable arm-friendliness. Suited to intermediate players developing from round toward more power-oriented play.
When you are consistently making central contact across a full session and want more power from your overhead game. If you are still making frequent off-centre contacts, stay with round - teardrop will punish those contacts more than round does and your game will not improve faster.
Yes. Teardrop is slower to redirect than round but not dramatically so. Most players find the net play adjustment takes 2-4 weeks of adaptation. The key change is preparing the racket slightly earlier for reflex exchanges. Once adapted, teardrop net play is fully functional - just not quite as instinctive as round net play.
Some brands use "oval" to describe what is functionally a teardrop shape. The terminology varies across manufacturers. Look at the actual balance point measurement and sweet spot position rather than the shape name - a 268mm balance point with a slightly elevated sweet spot is teardrop regardless of what the manufacturer calls it.
A beginner is generally better served by round. But if a beginner specifically wants teardrop, the Bullpadel Hack 04 Teardrop or similar entry-level teardrop variants give the shape with softer construction that is more appropriate for developing players.