PadelTestLab

Adidas Radogar Woman

Cross-checked with official data from Adidashow we score

Adidas Radogar Woman

PADELTESTLAB SCORE

0-100 scale

80/100

69POWER65HARDNESS81CONTROL90AGILITY89BALL EXIT91SWEET SPOT76ROUGHNESS

Description

Weight345–360 g
ShapeRound
BalanceMedium
Frame38mm
Facefibra-de-vidrio
Surface76/100
Core — rubberSoft Performance EVA
Core — firmnessSoft · 65/100
FeelSoft
LevelIntermediate
StyleControl
VerifiedCross-checked with official data from Adidashow we score

Who this racket is for

Pros

  • The Soft Performance EVA core soaks up impact on defensive shots and counters, cutting fatigue over long sets without losing the ability to build a fluid, well-placed ball from the back of the court. The round shape spreads the sweet spot across the whole centre of the face, so off-centre volleys still come out on a stable line instead of clipping the frame or drifting wide. The sandy-finish glass fibre lets you bite into the ball for spin on a defensive lob or a tight bandeja once you find the right face angle. At 345-360 g with a centred balance, the racket reacts well to quick net exchanges without demanding a big swing.

Cons

  • Glass fibre simply doesn't have the crisp response of carbon: on a smash for the point or a flat vibora the lack of stiffness turns a potential winner into just an acceptable ball. The soft core is sensitive to temperature: on cold courts the touch goes duller and ball exit loses the liveliness you'd get in a summer session. For players who already have a dialled-in impact point, that generous sweet spot can feel like a lack of feedback — it's hard to tell whether you struck dead centre or caught the edge of the usable zone.

PADELTESTLAB SCORE

0-100 scale

80/100

Power
69
Hardness
65
Control
81
Agility
90
Ball exit
89
Sweet spot
91
Roughness
76

The Adidas Radogar Woman suits intermediate players who already have a technical base and want to progress without jumping to a too-demanding paddle. Its round shape concentrates the sweet spot in the center of the face, increasing tolerance and favouring control. The medium balance keeps a balanced behaviour between baseline shots and volleys. The soft hardness provides feel and helps ball exit for players with slower swing speed. With a weight of 345-360g, it sits among the lighter rackets on the market: easier to swing and less stressful on the elbow.

Adidas Radogar Woman review: glass fibre, a soft core and control you can rely on

The Adidas Radogar Woman (345-360 g, 38 mm profile) builds its whole game plan around a glass-fibre face, a soft-density Soft Performance EVA core and a round shape. The sandy finish adds bite to the ball and the centred balance keeps handling even throughout. Every element points the same way: steady control and an arm-friendly ride for intermediate players who value consistency over the outright winner.

This isn't a racket that promises the knockout smash. It promises that the ball keeps coming back, that your forearm survives the match, and that defending off the glass doesn't feel like a gamble.

Why glass fibre is the key to the Radogar Woman's character

Plenty of mid-range rackets go with carbon because carbon sells the idea of stiffness. The Radogar Woman goes with glass fibre on its face instead, and that single choice explains everything about how it plays.

Glass fibre flexes a touch more on contact than carbon. That extra give damps the vibration that would otherwise run up your forearm and keeps the ball on the face a fraction longer. The payoff is a soft touch and predictable ball exit: the pace you put in is the pace that comes out, with no mechanical amplification.

On a body shot in defence, a first-touch volley, or a scramble back off the glass, that elastic, predictable behaviour works like an insurance policy. It doesn't punish you for arriving with imperfect timing. It rarely sends the ball long when your swing isn't fully committed.

Where it comes up short is on anything hit with real intent. Without carbon's stiffness, a smash for the point or a vibora meant to end the rally doesn't have the crisp pop you need to close it out. The ball goes over, sure, but your opponent still has time to get there.

Soft Performance EVA: a soft-density core built for control and joint protection

The Soft Performance EVA core sits at the softest end of the density scale in Adidas's range. It swallows most of the impact energy, which means less vibration in your hand and a stronger sense of control over where the ball goes.

Paired with the glass-fibre face, the whole racket plays uniformly soft. There's no residual stiffness lurking to amplify your hardest swings, but there's no nasty surprise either — every ball goes roughly where you point it.

The trade-off is straightforward. Firmer cores act like an active trampoline and multiply the energy of the shot; Soft Performance EVA doesn't. Players with a fully developed swing looking for offensive pop may find this core comes up short exactly when they need more.

One temperature note worth flagging: on cold courts (below 12°C/54°F), the soft core loses its liveliness. Ball exit goes flatter and the touch gives you less information than it would on a warm summer night.

Round shape and 38 mm: the geometry behind the bigger sweet spot

The round shape puts the geometric centre in the middle plane of the racket, which widens the effective hitting zone compared with a diamond shape. On a diamond racket the sweet spot sits high and demands precise positioning; on the Radogar Woman, making contact anywhere in the upper half of the face is enough to send the ball out on a controlled line.

Defending off the back glass, hitting a counter-lob, or blocking a volley — that wider sweet spot is a genuine asset in all three. Miss your timing or your positioning slightly and there's still room to recover before the shot goes wrong.

The 38 mm thickness is the mid-range standard. It doesn't bring the extra stiffness of a 40 mm power racket, nor the feel of the 36 mm profiles found on some premium control rackets. It's a no-surprises build that suits the soft character of the rest of the materials.

The face's sandy finish, meanwhile, adds grip on the ball. It's not a proprietary 3D spin system or a geometric texture, but on a tight bandeja or a lobbed shot with cut, it lets you generate more rotation than a fully smooth face would.

Who it suits — and who should look elsewhere

The Adidas Radogar Woman is a good fit if you: - Play at club or recreational level and want consistency over power - Deal with elbow or shoulder niggles and need a racket that absorbs vibration - Build points from the back of the court and prioritise placement over the winner - Have six months to two years on court and want a racket that forgives technical errors over a long set

Look elsewhere if you: - Your main weapon is the smash and the vibora from the middle of the court - You play at a level where the first strike decides the point, not tactical patience - You want more feedback on impact (firmer cores give you more information) - Your home courts regularly drop below 10°C/50°F in winter

Control without sacrificing your arm

The Adidas Radogar Woman is a control-and-comfort racket that makes no attempt to hide what it is: a glass-fibre face over a Soft Performance EVA core, built for players who put reliable ball-striking and joint protection first. Its biggest strength is pairing a generous sweet spot with low perceived vibration on impact. Its biggest weakness is the lack of crisp response on aggressive shots. Recommended for intermediate players after a stable, manageable racket that won't punish technical errors over a long match.

What's the difference between the Adidas Radogar Woman and a carbon racket in the same range?

The main difference comes down to the face. Glass fibre is more flexible than carbon, which trims the power you get on the shot but adds more vibration absorption and a softer, more predictable touch. For developing players or anyone with joint sensitivity in the arm, that difference can be the deciding factor. Players after more bite on the smash and the vibora will find a sharper response in Adidas's carbon-faced models.

Is the Adidas Radogar Woman a lightweight racket?

At 345-360 g with a centred balance, the Radogar Woman sits toward the more manageable end of the women's spectrum. That mix of moderate weight and even balance makes net play and quick positional changes easier. For shots that need mass behind the impact, like an aggressive smash or a deep vibora, that light build can fall a bit short unless it's backed up by solid swing technique.

In the brand's lineup

Within Adidas's lineup, the Radogar Woman positions itself as a distinctive alternative. Its overall score of 8.4/10 places it among the best control rackets we've reviewed.

Frequently asked questions

Who is the Adidas Radogar Woman for?

The Adidas Radogar Woman fits the intermediate level. Suited to players with a technical base who want to progress without jumping to a competition racket.

How much does the Adidas Radogar Woman weigh?

The Adidas Radogar Woman weighs 345-360g according to the manufacturer's stated specs.

What's the Adidas Radogar Woman's PadelTestLab score?

The Adidas Radogar Woman scores 8.4/10 in our review, based on power, control, ball exit, maneuverability and sweet spot.

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