Racket Review

Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray Review

Version and lineup identification

Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray is a power padel racket for advanced players. It scores 72/100 in the padel.how review model, with the rating based on its specification profile and playing characteristics.

In the Joma range, Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray should be read primarily as a power racket rather than as a neutral all-round frame. The review score is built from the listed construction, weight and balance profile, then cross-checked against the ten padel.how performance categories.

Technical specifications

Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray Review — key specs
SpecValueWhat it means
ShapehybridDefines sweet-spot position, handling and power bias.
Weight360-370 gAffects swing speed, stability and arm fatigue.
BalanceHigh / mid-high in descriptionShows whether the racket feels quick, neutral or head-heavy.
Face12K carbon fibreControls first impact feel, stiffness and rebound response.
CoreBLACK EVA / BlackEVA HRD high densityShapes comfort, vibration filtering and easy depth.
SurfaceJOMA 3D SPIN embossed reliefInfluences spin grip on viboras, bandejas and shaped volleys.
FrameTubular 100% carbon; flat 66.67% fiberglass + 33.33% 12K carbon; filled 100% EVAAdds structure and resistance to twisting.
TechnologiesCarbon 12K, Flexo BlackEVA, Dualtech Frame, Aerobump Tech, Attack Touch, Joma 3D SpinBrand systems that tune feel, spin, stability or comfort.

Construction and materials

The specification profile centers on face: 12K carbon fibre; core: BLACK EVA / BlackEVA HRD high density; frame: Tubular 100% carbon; flat 66.67% fiberglass + 33.33% 12K carbon; filled 100% EVA. Its shape, balance and weight place it in the power category, with the listed construction supporting the playing profile described below.

The face is listed as 12K carbon fibre, while the core is BLACK EVA / BlackEVA HRD high density. That pairing matters because the face controls first impact response and the core controls rebound depth, vibration filtering and how much help the racket gives when the swing is not perfectly loaded.

Shape and mould behavior

The hybrid shape and High / mid-high in description balance define how Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray behaves before the ball even reaches the strings. A lower or centered balance normally helps hand speed and recovery; a higher balance increases leverage but asks for cleaner preparation.

With a listed weight of 360-370 g, the practical question is not only total mass but swing inertia. Players should test whether the head arrives on time during glass recovery, second volleys and late defensive blocks.

Stiffness, feel, and comfort

The comfort and vibration score is 6.5/10. That places Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray as a racket that must be judged by impact quality over a full session, not only by the first few clean hits.

Players who like clear feedback should appreciate the directness of the 12K carbon fibre / BLACK EVA / BlackEVA HRD high density package. Players who want a very soft, muted impact should demo it carefully, especially on cold days or with hard balls.

Sweet spot and forgiveness

The sweet spot and forgiveness score is 7/10. That means the racket has enough usable hitting area for its category, but the exact tolerance depends on how well the player's contact point matches the hybrid mould.

In match play, the key test is low-face and outside-edge contact. A forgiving racket keeps defensive lobs and block volleys playable there; a demanding one loses depth quickly and turns small timing errors into free points for the opponent.

Power and smash behavior

Power ceiling scores 9/10. The racket is strongest when the player can accelerate through the ball and use the listed balance and construction instead of asking the core to create easy rebound by itself.

For smashes, viboras and hard bandejas, Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray rewards clean mechanics more than passive contact. If the swing is late, the power profile will feel narrower than the headline score suggests.

Net performance under pace

Net play scores 7.5/10 and maneuverability scores 7/10. Together, those numbers describe how quickly the racket can be set for blocks, controlled volleys and sudden second contacts.

At the net, the best use case is deliberate pressure: firm blocks, early volleys and controlled redirection. Players who rely on very fast wrist reactions should compare the racket against a lighter or more centered alternative before choosing it.

Off-center stability and torsional resistance

Off-center stability scores 7/10. This is the category that shows whether the frame keeps the face square when contact drifts toward the edge or when the incoming ball is heavy.

The listed construction should be judged under pressure, not only during free hitting. Test Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray on hard returns, backhand blocks and emergency volleys where the racket has to resist twisting without a perfect swing path.

Practical on-court takeaways

Choose it if you want power performance and the listed specification profile matches your preferred weight, balance and feel.

Avoid it if you prefer a very different balance, softer impact or a more specialized racket profile than this model offers.

During a demo, run three checks: defensive depth from the glass, volley control under pace, and one sequence of overheads when the arm is already tired. Those moments reveal more than a few clean warm-up shots.

Comparison within the Joma lineup

Inside the Joma lineup, Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray belongs closest to the power branch. Compare it first with nearby Joma models that change only one major variable: balance, face stiffness or core response.

If another Joma racket feels easier but scores lower, the easier racket can still be the better match. The score measures technical potential; the lineup comparison is about how much of that potential a player can use repeatedly.

For a same-brand choice, compare Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray Review with Joma Hyper 3.0 Vero Virseda Review, Joma St-Blast Juanlu Esbri silver black Review and Joma TOURNAMENT PRO black red Review. The useful test is not the badge or score alone: check whether the alternative changes balance, face response, easy depth or comfort in a way that matches your normal rallies.

Comparison with other brands

Against other brands, compare Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray with rackets that share the same hybrid geometry and similar balance rather than with every model at the same price. Shape and inertia drive more on-court behavior than branding.

The most useful cross-brand comparison is a three-racket test: one softer control option, one more powerful alternative and Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray. That makes the trade-off between control (7/10), power (9/10), comfort (6.5/10) and stability (7/10) visible.

Choose Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray if you want power performance, can work with the High / mid-high in description balance, and value the score profile led by power ceiling and smash potential, spin generation and surface effectiveness, net play and fast exchanges.

Avoid it if your priority is a much softer impact, maximum free depth on passive defense, or the easiest possible handling in long rallies.

Compare it with one more forgiving racket and one more aggressive racket before buying. That shows whether the total 72/100 score fits your real match pattern or only your preferred shot.

Choose Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray Review if you want a hybrid racket around 360-370 g, with High / mid-high in description and a 72/100 score profile.

Avoid it if your priority is the opposite feel: a much easier low-balance frame, a softer impact, or maximum free power from passive swings.

For side-by-side specs, open Compare Rackets. Use that page for the buying shortlist; use this review for the on-court trade-offs.

Choose Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray Review if you want a hybrid racket around 360-370 g, with High / mid-high in description and a 72/100 score profile.

Avoid it if your priority is the opposite feel: a much easier low-balance frame, a softer impact, or maximum free power from passive swings.

For side-by-side specs, open Compare Rackets. Use that page for the buying shortlist; use this review for the on-court trade-offs.

Technical positioning

Technically, Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray sits as a power racket with 8/10 spin generation, 6.5/10 defensive output and 7/10 off-center stability.

The final score of 72/100 is therefore not a simple recommendation for every player. It marks a specific performance envelope: useful when the player profile matches the racket, less useful when comfort, easy lift or hand speed are the real priorities.

Technical performance score

Ten categories, each 0-10. Methodology →

72
/100
  • Maneuverability and handling7
  • Net performance under pace7.5
  • Control and placement precision7
  • Defensive output and depth access6.5
  • Off-center stability and torsional resistance7
  • Sweet spot usability7
  • Spin generation potential8
  • Power ceiling9
  • Power accessibility7
  • Comfort and impact feedback6.5
72/100

Final verdict — Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray scores 72/100. Treat it as a specific fit decision: strongest when the player profile matches the racket balance, materials and score pattern, weaker when comfort or easy handling matter more than its headline strengths.

Common questions

Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray is best for advanced players looking for power performance.

Key listed specs include shape: hybrid; weight: 360-370 g; balance: High / mid-high in description; face: 12K carbon fibre; core: BLACK EVA / BlackEVA HRD high density.

Joma Blast Pro HRD black gray scores 72/100 in the padel.how review model.