Racket Guide

Best Strings for Wilson Blade

The Blade already leans toward control, feel, and a more connected response. The best string choice usually gives you enough pop and liveliness to finish points without turning the frame into a dead board.

Blade Fit

What Usually Works Best

Know the Frame Character

Control and feel are already there

The Blade already gives many players a more direct, connected feel. Because of that, it often works better with slightly livelier strings than people expect, especially if they do not have tour-level racquet-head speed.

Default Direction

Round or smoother co-poly is a strong fit

A round co-poly often gives the Blade a balanced mix of control, feel, and enough pace. This is one of the safest starting points for players who want the Blade to stay honest without feeling underpowered.

If You Want More Pop

Softer poly or hybrid can wake the frame up

If the Blade feels too muted or demanding, a softer co-poly, hybrid, or more lively construction can make the frame feel easier to use while still preserving its control identity.

If You Value Feel

Hybrids and premium multis make sense here

The Blade is one of the frames where softer strings, multis, and gut-based hybrids can really shine. If touch, pocketing, and all-court play matter to you, the Blade usually rewards that direction.

If You Hit Big

Firm control strings still have a place

A stronger advanced player can still pair the Blade with a firmer tour-style poly. The key is that the player must actually need that level of control, not just assume a Blade automatically wants the deadest possible setup.

What to Be Careful With

Avoid stacking too much dead feel

A control frame plus a very firm low-power string plus high tension can make the Blade feel overly muted unless the player swings extremely fast. For many club players, that combination just makes the racquet harder to use.

Starting Paths

Four Good Blade Directions

Aggressive Baseliner

Round co-poly with enough life

This is often the Blade sweet spot. You keep the control the racquet is known for, but the string still gives you enough pace and response to avoid a dull launch.

All-Court Attacker

Hybrid or softer poly

If you move forward, slice, and change direction often, a softer or more responsive setup can make the Blade feel more versatile and more rewarding on touch shots.

Touch-Oriented Player

Multi or gut-based direction

The Blade is one of the better frames for players who still value softer strings. If your game depends on feel, that route is often more logical than forcing yourself into harsh full poly.

Comfort-Focused Blade User

Do not be afraid to go softer

If you like the Blade but want a more forgiving setup, you usually do not need to abandon the racquet. A softer string family often solves the problem more directly than changing frames.

Tension Notes

How to Keep the Blade Playable

With Poly

Many Blade players stay around low 50s

That range often keeps the frame controlled without making it feel too stiff. If the setup feels dead, the answer is not always more tension. It may be a string choice issue instead.

With Softer Strings

You can usually string a little higher

If you move from poly to multi or gut, the Blade often handles a slightly higher starting tension well because the frame itself is not excessively powerful.

Use the Lab

Look for balance, not maximum control

On the home page, start with round or softer co-poly options first. Then compare them against one softer hybrid or comfort path so you can feel what the Blade really does best for your game.