Which One Did We Actually Keep?
My son had been playing with a cheap supermarket racket for about six months when his coach finally pulled me aside after a session. “He’s ready for a proper junior frame,” he said. “Go try a Wilson or a Babolat.”
That was it. No further instructions. I went home, opened my laptop, and three hours later I had seventeen tabs open and a mild headache. Both brands are everywhere. Both have players I vaguely recognise on the marketing. I had absolutely no idea what I was actually supposed to buy.
So we bought both. Borrowed a Babolat Pure Drive Junior 26 from another family at the club for a month, then ordered the Wilson Blade 26 Junior. My son hit with each for four to six weeks. Here’s what actually happened.
How we tested them
My son was eleven at the time, playing twice a week at club level plus one lesson with his coach. his coach describes his game as “developing topspin with a solid but still-forming backhand.” I watched from the sideline with my coffee and tried to notice things beyond “that went in.”
Parent Tip
We tracked feel, control, power, how much my son complained, and what his coach said. The last two were probably the most useful data points.
The Babolat Pure Drive Junior 26
The Babolat was the first one he played with, borrowed from a club friend. Babolat has this reputation for power — and after watching it for a few weeks, I’d say that’s fair. The ball flies off the strings. My son loved it immediately, which in hindsight should have made me more cautious, not less.
The issue that emerged was consistency. He’d hit a gorgeous crosscourt winner, then overhit the exact same ball into the back fence. His coach said the frame was “doing a lot of the work” — which apparently isn’t always a compliment for a developing player.
Did you know?
Babolat’s junior Pure Drive line uses the same design philosophy as Rafa Nadal’s adult racket — built for heavy topspin and power. Great if your junior already generates their own spin. A handful if they’re still building their swing.
The Wilson Blade 26 Junior
The Wilson Blade 26 arrived and my son’s initial reaction was “it feels heavy.” It isn’t — they’re similar in weight — but the Blade is more head-light, which changes the feel through the swing. After about a week of grumbling, something shifted.
His coach noticed it first. “He’s working harder through the shot, and his contact point is improving.” The Blade doesn’t give you free power — you have to earn it. For a developing player still building technique, that turned out to be exactly what he needed. The errors dropped.
The two rackets we actually tested

Wilson Blade 26 Junior
★★★★★ 4.9/5
Best for: juniors aged 10–12 building technique
- Head-light balance rewards good contact point
- Same Blade DNA as Wilson’s adult tour frame
- Solid build — used it hard for months with no issues
- Coach-approved for players learning proper mechanics

Babolat Pure Drive Junior 26
★★★★★ 4.9/5
Best for: natural power hitters, ages 11–13
- Immediately satisfying — ball travels fast, kids feel results
- Babolat’s most popular junior line — high coach familiarity
- Built on Rafa’s adult frame DNA — great story for kids who care
- Better fit for physically stronger or more aggressive players
Frequently Asked Question
Ready to Pick the Right Racket?
Look — you probably can’t go badly wrong with either. Both Wilson and Babolat make solid junior frames at fair prices. The real decision is whether your kid needs a racket that does more of the work, or one that makes them do the work themselves.
For my son, the Wilson Blade was the right call. Your kid might be completely different. That’s the frustrating and kind of beautiful thing about junior tennis — there’s no universal answer.
See you on the sideline.