JUNIOR RACKET REVIEW
★★★★★
Head Speed MP L 2024 Review:
Is the Lighter Speed Worth It for Club Parents?
QUICK VERDICT
The Head Speed MP L is the Speed MP with the weight taken out — and for a club parent who plays twice a week and doesn’t need to fight a heavy frame, that’s genuinely a good thing. It feels lively, it’s easy on the arm, and it gets out of your way. The trade-off is that it rewards a compact, consistent swing rather than big loopy groundstrokes. If your game’s still developing, that matters.
THE SIDELINE STORY
How this one ended up in my bag
I’ve been playing with a borrowed racket for about two years. I know. Before you judge — it was a friend’s old Wilson that I grabbed before a social hit one afternoon and somehow never gave back. It played fine. I didn’t think too hard about it.
Then my son’s coach — who I’ve spoken to roughly four hundred times about Patrick’s technique — looked at me hitting in the warmup and said, almost as an aside, “You know you’re fighting that racket every time you go to serve.” He was right. It was stiff, heavy, and absolutely not designed for someone who plays twice a week after the kids go to bed.
A few parents at the club had been talking about the Head Speed series. Sinner uses it, which meant nothing to me practically but gave me something to say when I told my wife I was buying a new racket. I ordered the MP L — the lighter version — from Tennis Warehouse Australia. Eight weeks and a fair few Saturday morning hits later, here’s what I found.
WHAT WE GOT
The basics
The Head Speed MP L is the lighter sibling of the Speed MP — same 100in² head, same 16×19 string pattern, but at 280g unstrung it’s notably lighter and easier to swing than the standard MP (300g). Stiffness is 60 RA, which makes it one of the more arm-friendly frames at this level. It comes with Auxetic 2.0 tech in the yoke and handle, which Head says improves feel and response across the stringbed. Retail in Australia sits around $229–$249 depending on where you buy.
I bought it from Tennis Warehouse Australia, had it strung at my club, and played my first proper hit with it about four days later.
FISRT IMPRESSIONS
Out of the bag
It’s a striking-looking racket. The black and white colourway is clean and genuinely premium — it doesn’t look like a racket you’d grab off a supermarket shelf. My son picked it up and immediately said it was lighter than his (which it is — his Wilson Blade 26 is actually close to the same weight for its size, so that says something).
My first hit with it was a Sunday morning social hit against a mate who plays at 4.0 level. The first thing I noticed: my arm didn’t hurt when I served. That sounds like a low bar. But with the old Wilson, I’d been getting a twinge in my elbow after about twenty minutes. Gone.
WORTH KNOWING BEFORE YOU BUY
The racket arrives pre-strung but the factory tension is on the looser side. Get it checked before your first competitive hit — our club pro found it at least 4lbs under spec. Same thing happened with Patrick’s Wilson Blade, so maybe this is just a thing.
AFTER 8 WEEKS OF USE
The Real Review
Durability so far:
No complaints. I play twice a week — Saturday morning social and a midweek hit if I can manage it — and the frame looks essentially new. There’s a small scuff near the top of the head from a mis-hit I’d rather forget, but nothing structural. The matte lacquer finish is holding up better than I expected.
How is going:
The first two sessions I actually felt like I was hitting the ball too easily, if that makes sense. The lighter swingweight means you can generate racket head speed without working as hard. It took a few sessions to recalibrate — I was overhitting everything crosscourt. By week three, it clicked. My serve got better almost immediately. My forehand is more consistent. The backhand is still a work in progress but that’s not the racket’s fault.
Performance on court:
This is where the MP L earns its money for a recreational adult player. It’s not a power frame — you don’t get free pace. What you do get is real feel at contact, especially on volleys and slice. The 60 RA stiffness means it absorbs pace without sending shocks up your arm. On serve it’s transformed mine — I can actually swing through the ball rather than poking at it. The 16×19 pattern gives decent spin without being overly demanding.
The honest frustration:
If you’re a big hitter — or if you’ve been playing with a heavier frame and rely on that mass for stability on pace — you might find the MP L a touch underpowered at first. It rewards compact, clean swings rather than big windups. I’ve spoken to two other dads at the club who tried it and one sent his back because he felt he was muscling through the ball too much. Know your own game before committing.
Value for money:
It’s mid-range for an adult performance frame. The Speed series is Head’s bestseller for a reason — the build quality is there, the Sinner association keeps resale value reasonable, and I’ve seen no sign of it wearing out. For a club player who’ll use it 80–100 times a year, the cost per use is pretty easy to justify.
WHAT I WISH ID KNOWN
Tips For Other Parents
Get the string tension checked first. Don’t trust factory stringing for anything beyond casual hits. A quick tension check at your club will save you a few weeks of wondering why it’s not quite right.
The MP L is not the MP. It’s lighter and more manoeuvrable, but if you want the extra mass of the standard Speed MP, buy that instead. The L is specifically for players who want easier handling — not just a cheaper version.
Grip size matters more than you think. I play with a 4 3/8 and the feel was immediately right. Try before you commit if you can. Tennis Warehouse Australia has a demo program — worth using.
Recommended Rackets
Reviewed
Head Speed MP L 2024
Intermediate club adults, 2–3x/week
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Alternative
Head Speed MP 2024
Stronger/more advanced club players
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PARENT VERDICT
Would I Buy It Again?
Yes, without hesitation. The Head Speed MP L fixed the one thing that was actually stopping me from enjoying my tennis — a frame that was working against me rather than with me. My arm is fine, my serve is better, and I’m not dreading Saturdays anymore.
Is it perfect? No. If you’re a strong player who generates pace and relies on a heavy frame to stabilise those shots, you might find it slightly underpowered. And yes, the factory stringing is a minor annoyance. But for a recreational club parent playing twice a week, this is exactly the right racket — and the price is fair for what you get.
If you’re in the same boat I was — playing on borrowed gear, not sure where to start, arm occasionally complaining — start here. See the product card above for current pricing.
FAQ
Parent Questions
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: Head
SERIRES: Speed
MODEL: MP L 2024
HEAD SIZE: 100 in²
WEIGTH: 280 unstrung
LEVEL: Intermediate