Head Speed Team 2025
✓Cross-checked with official data from Headhow we score

PADELTESTLAB SCORE
0-100 scale
79/100
Price range
Description
Who this racket is for
Pros
- ✓The Power Foam core and fiberglass faces soak up vibration on contact, so wall exits come out clean without hammering your wrist through long sessions. Auxetic 2.0 sharpens the feel on contact and adds a touch more pop on the smash without costing the control an advanced player is after. The 38mm frame and medium balance spread the weight evenly, making the switch between defense and volleys smooth without losing maneuverability. That same medium balance and 38mm frame keep the ball flatter and more predictable on bandejas and lobs — handy when you're after precision over spin.
Cons
- ✗At 365g and running a foam core instead of hard EVA, it falls short on raw power next to rackets built for hard-hitting smashers. Its all-round approach leaves it stuck in the middle — it doesn't have the extreme control of a pure control-oriented teardrop, nor the power of a high-end competition diamond.
PADELTESTLAB SCORE
0-100 scale
79/100
The Head Speed Team 2025 targets advanced players with consolidated technique who want more performance without yet moving to a pure competition racket. Its teardrop shape shifts the sweet spot slightly upwards, striking a balance between control and power. The medium balance keeps a balanced behaviour between baseline shots and volleys. Its 365g weight range places it in the medium-weight group, the most common among amateur players.
Head Speed Team 2025 Review: The All-Round Teardrop Racket Built for Soft Touch
The Head Speed Team 2025 sits as the all-round option within Head's Speed line, the Austrian brand's answer to balancing power and control. With a teardrop shape, 365g in weight, and fiberglass faces on both sides, it's built for advanced players who want to push the pace of the game without losing precision in the tight moments of a point.
Fiberglass and Power Foam: The Combo Behind This Racket's Feel
Going with fiberglass instead of carbon on both faces is the technical call that shapes this racket's whole personality. Compared with a heavy-gauge carbon face, fiberglass flexes more on impact, which translates into a softer strike feel and a less punchy ball exit. That caps the maximum power you can pull out of a flat smash, but in return it gives you more forgiveness when the hit isn't dead-center on the sweet spot.
The Power Foam core doubles down on that same philosophy. Unlike high-density EVA, the foam acts like a shock absorber — it soaks up part of the impact instead of firing it all straight back, and you feel that especially in the elbow and wrist through long matches or heavy training sessions. The payoff is a racket that's comfortable to hold for hours, though it asks the player to bring more of their own arm speed on finishing shots.
Then there's Auxetic 2.0, the tech Head has been refining across its last few generations — a structural pattern in the frame that expands sideways under compression, slightly widening the effective hitting zone and adding a bit more pop to the ball exit without having to stiffen up the materials. Graphene Inside in the frame and the Smart Bridge at the frame-to-face junction pick up the structural rigidity that the fiberglass and foam give away.
On-Court Performance: How the Speed Team 2025 Plays in Every Phase
On defense and wall exits, the medium balance keeps weight spread evenly between head and handle, letting you react quickly to fast balls without needing the extra lead time a head-heavy racket would demand. The foam-and-fiberglass combo means defensive shots come out favoring control over raw speed — a good match for a player who'd rather keep the point alive than force a winner from the back of the court.
At the net and on volleys, the 38mm frame and contained 365g weight make for standout maneuverability — quick changes of direction and blocks near the net don't take much of a toll on the arm. This is where the racket feels most at home, since it doesn't need much swing speed of its own to make a volley count.
On attack, smashes and bandejas, the power ceiling is where the Speed Team 2025 shows its limits. The softer foam core, compared with a hard EVA, doesn't give back the same energy when you're going all-out for a smash off the back glass — you'll notice you have to put in more of your own arm to get the result a stiffer core would deliver for free.
Who the Head Speed Team 2025 Is (and Isn't) For
A great fit if you're: - An advanced player who rates arm comfort above maximum power. - An all-round player who splits time between the back of the court and the net rather than living for the smash. - Looking for a racket with a wide margin for error, thanks to the fiberglass and Power Foam.
Probably not for you if you're: - A smasher who needs a sharp, punchy response and maximum power on the finishing shot. - Chasing aggressive spin on pinchadas and rulos. - A competition-level player already used to hard EVA cores, who would feel the drop in stiffness as a step back.
Verdict
The Head Speed Team 2025 is an all-round teardrop racket built around fiberglass and Power Foam, with Auxetic 2.0 as its headline tech. Its biggest strength is sustained comfort on court — it soaks up vibration and keeps net play manageable without demanding much physical effort. Its main weakness is a capped power ceiling on the smash, where a harder core would make a real difference. It's a strong pick for advanced players who value comfort and control over pure firepower.
What Level of Player Is the Head Speed Team 2025 Best Suited For?
It's built for advanced players chasing a balance between control and power without going all the way to a full competition racket. The foam core and fiberglass faces put arm comfort ahead of maximum smash power.
How Does the Speed Team 2025 Compare to a Hard EVA Core Racket?
The main difference comes down to feedback: Power Foam absorbs part of the impact rather than firing it back, giving you a softer, more comfortable feel but less power on exit than a high-density EVA core delivers on finishing shots.
In the brand's lineup
Within Head's lineup, the Speed Team 2025 occupies the mid-range starting at €119, offering highly competitive value for its segment. Its overall score of 8.2/10 places it among the best all-round rackets we've reviewed.
Frequently asked questions
Who is the Head Speed Team 2025 for?
The Head Speed Team 2025 targets advanced players. It needs consolidated technique and is not recommended for beginners.
How much does the Head Speed Team 2025 weigh?
The Head Speed Team 2025 weighs 365g according to the manufacturer's stated specs.
What's the Head Speed Team 2025's PadelTestLab score?
The Head Speed Team 2025 scores 8.2/10 in our review, based on power, control, ball exit, maneuverability and sweet spot.
How much does the Head Speed Team 2025 cost?
Current price of the Head Speed Team 2025 is 119€ – 200€, comparing 4 shops in our finder.
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