Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026

ATTACKER ▲▲▲ ADVANCED ▲▲ INTERMEDIATE DIAMOND
7.9
Verdict Score
ATT 7.92
HYB 7.44
DEF 7.25
Weight
360g
Balance
high · 268mm
Year
2026
Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026
Performance Radar
8 Parameters
Power 8.1/10
Control 7.4/10
Maneuverability 7/10
Spin 7.2/10
Comfort 7/10
Sweetspot Size 7.3/10
Playability 7.2/10
Stability 7.8/10
Soft
Hard Medium
Full Verdict

Review

Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 Review: Power Racket or Precision Tool?

The classic attacker’s dilemma is choosing between raw power and enough control to keep that power on the court. Most diamond-shaped rackets force you to pick a side. The Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 enters that argument with a specific proposition: a medium-soft EVA core inside a stiff carbon shell, designed to give advanced offensive players the depth they want without sacrificing the touch required to finish points cleanly.

Built around a diamond shape with an EVA FLEX core — a responsive, medium-soft compound — the Champion Strike II pairs that forgiving foam with a 12K Japanese carbon fiber surface carrying a roughened grit finish for spin. The frame is 100% carbon construction at 38mm thick, declared weight in the 355–365g range. No proprietary named system, but the dual-hole pattern referenced in sourcing is intended to optimize contact across the face and reduce dead spots outside the sweetspot. Browse the full Tretorn lineup to see where this model sits in their 2026 range.

Stability at 7.8 is the highest score in this profile — unusual for a racket that also claims high maneuverability. Attacker 7.92 / Hybrid 7.44 / Defender 7.25. A gap of nearly 0.5 points between attacker and defender tells the whole story: this racket rewards aggression, not patience.

Performance Breakdown

How the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 Plays

POWER 8.1
STABILITY 7.8

The Carbon Does the Aggressive Work

Diamond shape and 12K Japanese carbon surface create a high-balance, stiff feel on contact that translates directly into deep, energetic ball response at higher swing speeds. Power at 8.1 reflects that — this is a frame built to transfer force efficiently. Stability at 7.8 is the top score in the profile, which matters for attackers dealing with fast incoming balls at the net: the racket holds its line through contact rather than twisting. That combination of top-of-head weight and frame rigidity is exactly what a left-wall smash demands.

CONTROL 7.4
SWEETSPOT SIZE 7.3

The EVA Core Buys Back the Touch

A diamond frame with 12K carbon would normally register a harder, more punishing feel — the EVA FLEX core’s medium-soft response is what keeps Control at 7.4 rather than sliding lower. The sweetspot at 7.3 is serviceable but honest: this is not a forgiving racket for mishits, and advanced players will need consistent mechanics to access the precision the frame is capable of. The dual-hole pattern helps marginally with off-center contact, but the core material is doing the real work here in making the frame feel playable rather than clinical.

SPIN 7.2
MANEUVERABILITY 7.0

Grit Delivers Spin, Weight Costs Speed

The roughened grit finish on the 12K carbon surface generates genuine spin contribution — 7.2 reflects real grip on the ball during topspin and slice shots, adding variation on the offensive baseline game. Maneuverability at 7.0 is the lowest score in the profile, and that’s the expected trade-off for a 355–365g diamond racket at high balance: you earn power and stability, you pay in arm speed. For an attacking player with aggressive shot mechanics already in place, that’s an acceptable cost — but players still developing their swing tempo will feel it.

COMFORT 7.0
PLAYABILITY 7.2

EVA Absorbs What Carbon Would Otherwise Send Back

Comfort at 7.0 shares the lowest position in the profile with Maneuverability — not alarming for an advanced offensive racket, but worth flagging for players with any arm sensitivity. The EVA FLEX core’s “supple feel” claim is functional: it does dampen vibration compared to what a harder foam or carbon-only core would produce at this stiffness rating. Playability at 7.2 positions the Champion Strike II as a racket that rewards technical players who can generate their own rhythm — it won’t manufacture easy points, but it executes well when the technique is there.

Technology

12K Japanese Carbon + EVA FLEX: Does the Material Stack Actually Deliver?

The 12K designation refers to the weave density of the carbon fiber used across the surface and frame — 12,000 filaments per bundle, producing a tighter, stiffer, and more responsive structure than the 3K weaves common at lower price points. The practical effect on court is a crisper contact sensation and more efficient energy return, which connects directly to the Power score of 8.1. The roughened grit finish on that same surface creates micro-friction during ball contact — the mechanism behind the Spin score of 7.2 — adding topspin and slice variation without requiring a dedicated spin-oriented construction. For diamond-shaped rackets at this weight class, that combination of stiffness and surface texture is what separates clean attackers from ones that just hit hard.

The EVA FLEX core works as a deliberate counterbalance to the frame’s stiffness. A RA of 58 on a full carbon diamond construction would, without core intervention, produce a harsh, arm-fatiguing response — the medium-soft EVA compound absorbs a portion of that impact energy and converts it into the “supple feel” the manufacturer describes. This is what allows Comfort to hold at 7.0 rather than falling below it, and it’s also what gives Control a 7.4 — the core adds dwell time on the string bed, giving advanced players a brief moment to redirect the ball rather than just reacting to it.

The dual-hole pattern referenced in sourcing is positioned as an off-sweetspot insurance policy — optimizing contact points across the face to reduce dead response on mishits. Its contribution is reflected in Sweetspot Size at 7.3: not exceptional, but noticeably above the penalty threshold for a pure power frame of this shape. The full technology package suits advanced attacking players who generate their own swing speed and need a frame that amplifies that energy precisely, not one that compensates for technical inconsistency.

Player Fit

Who Should Buy the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026?

✓ MADE FOR

The Advanced Attacker Who Already Has the Mechanics

If you’re the type who plays at the net with intention — bandejas with purpose, smashes you’re committing to — the Champion Strike II is built around your game. Power at 8.1 and Stability at 7.8 mean the frame executes when you swing correctly, and the EVA FLEX core gives you just enough feel to place winners rather than just launching them. Control at 7.4 is functional for advanced mechanics; the racket won’t carry average technique, but it rewards yours. You’re an advanced player who wants a frame that amplifies your existing skill, not one that compensates for inconsistency. This is exactly that racket.

✗ NOT FOR

Intermediate Players and Defensive Specialists

The Defender score of 7.25 is the lowest in the profile — nearly 0.7 points below the Attacker score — and that gap is the honest verdict for backcourt-first players. Maneuverability at 7.0 means quick defensive exchanges will feel labored at 355–365g with high balance. Sweetspot Size at 7.3 provides little margin for the inconsistent contact that characterizes developing technique. If you’re building your game or prefer a controlled, baseline-driven style, the Hybrid profile at 7.44 still doesn’t justify this choice. You’d be better served by a round or teardrop frame with a larger sweetspot and lower balance.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the PadelVerdict score for the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026?

The overall Verdict Score is 7.8, with a Consensus Modifier of 0. Specs appear consistently across multiple sources (Data Quality: neutral), declared figures show no implausible outliers (Field Validation: neutral), but no independent measurements exist to confirm them (Market Correction: neutral). Profile breakdown: Attacker 7.92 / Hybrid 7.44 / Defender 7.25. That 0.67-point gap between attacker and defender confirms this is a specialist frame — buying it for anything other than an offensive role means leaving points on the table.

Is the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 good for advanced players?

Yes — specifically for advanced players with established offensive mechanics. Playability at 7.2 signals a racket that demands consistent technique to perform; it won’t manufacture results for developing players. If you’re still working on shot construction, look at a round or teardrop frame with a higher sweetspot score before moving up to this profile.

Is the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 good for attacking players?

Yes. The Attacker score of 7.92 is the highest profile score by a significant margin, backed by Power 8.1 and Stability 7.8 — precisely the combination that net attackers need. The grit finish adds spin variation on overhead shots. If attacking from the net is your primary game, this belongs in consideration. Explore all attacker-profile rackets to compare options at this level.

What is the actual weight of the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026?

The manufacturer declares a range of 355–365g, with a midpoint of 360g used in our scoring. No independent on-camera or lab measurements exist to verify this. A 10g declared range is standard for production tolerance, but without physical verification the real-world weight could fall anywhere in that window — perceptible on court if you’re near either end of the range.

How does the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 compare to other models in the Tretorn 2026 lineup?

The Champion Strike II sits at the attacking end of the Tretorn 2026 range — diamond shape, high balance, EVA FLEX core tuned for power transfer. Other models in the lineup are positioned with a more balanced, all-court brief, offering more forgiving characteristics at the cost of some offensive ceiling. The choice comes down to player type: if you play predominantly from the net and generate your own pace, the Strike II. If you need reliability from both court positions, other options in the Tretorn range offer a better trade-off.

Why does the Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026 have a Consensus Modifier of 0?

The specs are consistent — shape, core, surface material, and weight range appear uniformly across every source consulted. That earns a neutral baseline, not a positive adjustment. What’s entirely absent is any independent validation: no community feedback, no player reviews, no physical measurements from anyone outside the manufacturer and authorized retailers. Consistent data without independent confirmation earns neutral, and that is the accurate position here.

Verdict Score
PadelVerdict
7.9
Tretorn
Tretorn Champion Strike II 2026
ATT
7.92
HYB
7.44
DEF
7.25