Wilson Endure Pro V1 2026 review – Does the sandpaper surface really add spin?
Co-designed with Momo González, the Wilson Endure Pro V1 2026 is one of the most unique padel rackets of the year. Its sandpaper finish is its unique selling point, but does it really improve the spin and effect on the ball?
6 min read
When it comes to Wilson padel rackets, you know what you're going to get. Engineering precision borrowed from their tennis heritage, cores tuned for feel over raw pop, and frames built to reward players who've actually put in the technical work.
The Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue breaks from that reputation in one specific way — this is Wilson's first round-shaped offering co-designed with Momo González, and it signals a deliberate pivot toward control-first padel that goes beyond anything the brand has produced before.
What are the biggest strengths of the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue?
This racket has a clear identity — premium control architecture for advanced players who want precision tools, not power shortcuts.
- Buy it if: you play a control-dominant game and need elite touch on net exchanges and delicate lobs under pressure
- Buy it if: you rely on spin from the racket face, and you're looking for an extremely rough surface
- Buy it if: you're an advanced player who prioritises sweet spot consistency over a racket that tries to generate power for you
- Buy it if: you've outgrown mid-range frames and want pro-partnership engineering at a price that's justified by genuine material density
- Walk away if: your game depends on generating pace from the back — this frame rewards technique, not brute swing speed
- Walk away if: €287.95 is a stretch and you're not yet playing at the level where Control Foam+ and ExactTouch will make a measurable difference to your game
- Walk away if: you want an aggressive diamond profile built for flat bandejas and smash-first net play — that's not what this frame is designed to do
Power: what does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue deliver at the net and from deep?
The round shape and medium-high balance give this frame enough swing weight to produce genuine smash depth without having to add all the power yourself.
The Control Foam+ core absorbs a calculated amount of energy on contact, which means this is not a power weapon by design.
What it delivers instead is consistent smash placement with aggressive spin, rather than pace— the ball goes where you intend, even on off-centre strikes (especially on the upper frame).
Bandejas feel measured and have effect coming from the rough sandpaper surface. For players who want their bandeja to have a bit of bite in terms of spin and rotation on the ball, the sandpaper surface technology really adds to the effectiveness of overheads.

Vibora and bandeja: how does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue handle spin and cut shots?
The ExactTouch texture surface creates genuine dwell time on vibora attempts — the ball stays in contact long enough for wrist rotation to translate into spin RPM without fighting the frame.
Spin generation is above average for a round-shaped racket, which typically sacrifices some rotation potential compared to diamond profiles. The ceiling here is honest: this will not out-spin a dedicated diamond built for aggressive net play, but it earns its 89 spin score by performing consistently rather than peaking occasionally.

Volleys: how does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue perform under net pressure?
The sweet spot placement on this frame is built for net exchanges — a high 84 score that translates into real forgiveness when you're reacting rather than setting up.
Block volleys feel planted and controlled, with the dual-density Control Foam+ absorbing the pace from hard-hit drives without deadening your touch on redirected angles. That is a difficult balance to engineer and Wilson have nailed it here.
Under real pressure — fast exchanges, tight angles, opponents attacking your body — this racket communicates through the handle rather than going silent, which matters enormously for players who read the game through feel.

Transition play: how does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue handle movement and pressure moments?
At 80 agility, this is not a featherweight frame, but the round profile keeps the swing arc manageable when you're caught mid-court and forced to improvise.
Chiquita execution is clean — the short backswing suits the frame's weight distribution and the ExactTouch surface gives enough grip on low-trajectory chip balls to keep them aggressive rather than passive.
Globo control under pressure is where this racket genuinely earns its 86 control score. Defensive lobs from deep feel composed, not panicked — the medium-high balance stops the head from dragging on late swings.
Defence: how does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue perform on bajadas and back glass play?
The Control Foam+ core handles rebound work better than most round frames at this price point — the dual-density construction absorbs the sharp impact of a bajada without transmitting that vibration up the arm.
Salida de pared timing benefits directly from the 82 comfort score. When a ball kicks awkwardly off the back glass and demands a last-moment redirection, the core dampening keeps the arm calm and the response predictable.
This is not a punishing frame to defend with over a long session. Players with previous arm sensitivity will notice the difference — the engineering here is genuinely considerate of that demand.
Full specifications for the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue
How does the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue compare to the Wilson Pro Staff Padel CV 2025?
The Pro Staff was reliable and consistent, but it never defined a category — it sat comfortably in Wilson's mid-range without pushing any boundary.
The Endure Pro V1 Blue is a different conversation entirely: the ExactTouch surface, Control Foam+ dual-density core, and extended handle are genuine innovations, not incremental polish.
Final verdict: should you buy the Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue?
Advanced players who want a technically precise control frame — one that rewards consistent positioning, clean mechanics, and intelligent net play — should put this at the top of their shortlist.
At €287.95, the ExactTouch surface and Control Foam+ dual-density core justify the price for anyone playing at a level where those details convert into actual points.
The Wilson Endure Pro V1 Blue will not compensate for technical gaps in your padel game, but it will give you a brand new sense of potency in your volleys and bandejas.
