The ML10 Pro Cup is the antidote to the power-heavy AT10 range. Miguel Lamperti's 2025 signature racket is built for tactical players who win matches through placement, consistency, and intelligent ball control — not smash power. At £97, it is one of the best control-focused rackets available for intermediate players and represents genuine pro-specification construction at an accessible price.
Miguel Lamperti spent years at the top of world padel by playing a game defined by precision and intelligence rather than brute force. His signature racket reflects exactly that philosophy: a round-headed control-focused frame that prioritises soft hands and accurate placement over power generation. The ML10 Pro Cup 2025 is built for players who think their way through points rather than blasting them away.
The round shape is fundamental to the racket's character. Round-headed padel rackets position the sweet spot lower and more centrally than teardrops or diamonds, reducing the performance penalty for off-centre contacts. This makes them dramatically more consistent — every ball comes back with predictable pace and direction. For a tactically-minded player, that consistency is far more valuable than occasional power spikes from a more aggressive frame.
The control and touch scores of 86 and 84 are among the highest in our database for a racket at this price. The carbon-fibre and fibreglass face combination produces a softer feel at contact than pure carbon frames — a deliberate choice to increase dwell time and ball feedback. Players who enjoy delicate drop shots, tight lobs, and precise cross-court drives will find the ML10 well-suited to their game.
At £97, the ML10 Pro Cup sits at the upper end of the intermediate price range but well below advanced territory. This is legitimate pro-specification construction — Lamperti played versions of this racket in elite competition — made accessible to intermediate players. The value proposition is strong, particularly given how many brands charge more for demonstrably worse construction at this level.
The power score of 75 will concern smash-focused players, and rightly so — the ML10 Pro Cup is not a racket for aggressive back-court attackers. This limitation is intentional: it is a direct reflection of Lamperti's playing philosophy. But for intermediate players whose game is built on touch, consistency and court intelligence, the ML10 Pro Cup 2025 is an outstanding choice.
Intermediate players who win points through placement, rallying consistency, and net craft rather than smash power — Lamperti's tactical approach in racket form.