JUNIOR RACKET REVIEW
★★★★★
Wilson Blade 26 Junior Review:
Is It Worth It for Growing Junior Players?
QUICK VERDICT
The Wilson Blade 26 Junior punches well above its price tag. For a kid aged 10–12 who’s genuinely committed to the sport, this racket gives them a real taste of pro-level feel without the intimidating weight or price of an adult frame.
The Sideline Story
It was a Saturday morning at our club’s under-12 comp when I first noticed another kid warming up with what looked like a proper Blade. I asked his mum — turns out it was the Wilson Blade 26 Junior, and he’d had it for a few months. “Best thing we’ve bought,” she said. “He went up a level within six weeks.”
A month later, my son Patrick (11, playing three times a week, starting to take club tournaments seriously) had outgrown his 25-inch starter racket. The coach mentioned he needed something that matched his improving technique — better control, a bit more weight, but still junior-sized. I remembered that conversation in the car park.
I did the usual Google spiral, ended up going in circles between this and a Clash Junior, and eventually just ordered the Blade 26. Eight weeks later, here’s what we found.
What We Got
The Wilson Blade 26 Junior is a 26-inch junior tennis racket from Wilson’s flagship Blade series — scaled down for players aged roughly 10–12. It comes strung and ready to play, which matters when you’re not sure yet if your kid will need a string change anytime soon.
I’d expected the Blade name to cost more. It arrived in two days, unstrung. Wait — it did come strung, but the tension felt a bit inconsistent when Patrick’s coach inspected it. More on that below.
First Impressions
Out of the box, it looks the part. That deep green-and-black Blade colourway is striking — Patrick picked it up and immediately said “Dad, this looks like a proper racket.” High praise from an 11-year-old. The weight felt right in my hand — not too light, not adult-heavy. The grip size was spot on for his hand.
His coach’s first comment was about the clean throat design and the balanced weight distribution. Mine was: “Why didn’t we get this six months ago?”
One thing I didn’t expect: the grip came with a base grip that felt a touch thin for Patrick’s hand size. We added a Wilson Pro Overgrip on top (about $6 for a 3-pack) and it was perfect. Worth knowing before your first session.
After 8 Weeks of Use — The Real Review
Durability so far:
Honestly holding up better than I expected. Patrick plays three times a week including one match most weekends, and there’s only a small scuff near the throat from a court scrape. No cracking, no frame flex issues. The paint is tougher than her previous racket.
How Patrick gets on with it:
It took about two sessions to properly “click.” The first session he was a bit tentative — the extra 26-inch length felt different from his old 25. By week two he’d adjusted and his groundstrokes tightened up noticeably. His coach commented unprompted that him backhand had improved, which I’m putting partly on the racket and partly on him growing into it.
Performance on court:
This is where it earns its money. The Blade series is known for feel and control rather than raw power, and you get that in the junior version too. Patrick can now feel when she’s caught the ball well — something she couldn’t articulate with her old racket. Serves have improved in direction if not pace yet.
The stringing issue:
Here’s my honest frustration: when the coach tested the tension, it was looser than the listed spec. It played fine for a few weeks but we ended up getting it restrung around week five. That’s an extra $25–35 at your local club. Not a dealbreaker, but factor it in. I’d suggest getting it checked before the first session if your kid is playing competitive matches.
Value for money:
This is genuinely good value for a Blade series racket. The adult versions start at $200+. You’re getting the same design philosophy scaled down. If your kid is serious and staying in tennis, this is a worthy investment.
What I Wish I’d Known
1. Get the stringing checked: Don’t assume factory stringing is tournament-ready. A quick tension check at your club before matches is worth it.
2. Size really matters: The 26-inch is for ages 10–12, but it’s about arm length and physical development more than age. If your kid is on the smaller side for their age, try the 25-inch Blade first.
3. The overgrip add-on: Budget an extra $10 for a Wilson Pro Overgrip. The base grip is fine, but most competitive junior players add one anyway — and it makes the racket feel custom to their hand size.
Recommended Rackets
Reviewed
Wilson Blade 26 Junior
Competitive juniors, age 10–12
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Alternative
Wilson Blade 25 Junior
Juniors age 9–10, or smaller 10-year-olds
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Parent Verdict
Eight weeks in, I’d absolutely buy this again. The Wilson Blade 26 Junior is the real deal — it’s not a toy racket with a famous name slapped on it. It plays with genuine feel, holds up to three sessions a week, and most importantly, it helped Patrick level up. His coach noticed. His results noticed. He noticed.
If your child is 10–12, playing at least twice a week, and starting to take competition seriously, this is the racket I’d recommend without hesitation. If they’re still working out whether they even like tennis, maybe start with something cheaper. But if they’re in — this is worth every dollar of the $89.
Just remember the overgrip, and get that stringing checked. You’ll thank me later.
Parent FAQs
ABOUT THIS REVIEW
Written by a tennis parent after 8 weeks of real use. No brand deals. No free product. Just honest notes from the sideline.
QUICK SPECS
BRAND: Wilson
SERIRES: Blade Junior
LENGTH: 26 inch
AGE RANGE: 10 – 12 yrs
LEVEL: Junior / Competitive
COMES STRUNG: Yes