Nox ML10 Pro cup Coorp 25

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The Nox ML10 Pro Cup Coorp 25 is built for intermediate players who want a reliable, control-focused racket without fighting the equipment to get results. If you are moving past the beginner stage and starting to think more about placement,...

Full details below

// Spec sheet

The numbers.

Shape
Round
Weight
360-375 g
Balance
265 mm (Low / Head-light)
Profile
38 mm
Core
HR3 High Density EVA Rubber
Face
Fiberglass Silver (3K Silver Fiber Glass with metallized finish)
Surface
Smooth
Level
Intermediate
// Playability
Weight
Light Medium Heavy
Balance
Low Medium High
Feel
Soft Medium Firm
Style
Control All-round Power

Product details

The Nox ML10 Pro Cup Coorp 25 is built for intermediate players who want a reliable, control-focused racket without fighting the equipment to get results. If you are moving past the beginner stage and starting to think more about placement, consistency, and touch rather than raw power, this racket is worth a serious look. It carries the ML10 lineage associated with Miguel Lamperti, a name well known in padel for a precise, measured style of play.

The round shape puts the sweet spot in the centre of the face, which means off-centre hits are more forgiving and your shots stay predictable under pressure. At around 400g with a low balance point, the weight sits towards the handle, making it easier to swing quickly and maintain control on fast exchanges at the net. The soft core absorbs impact well, giving you better feel on volleys and touch shots, though it does mean you will not get the same pop from the back of the court that a harder, diamond-shaped racket would offer. If you are someone who plays a lot of attacking padel from the net and relies on power smashes, this is probably not the right fit.

For players who are building their game around consistency, working the ball into corners, and staying composed in long rallies, the Coorp 25 gives you a solid, honest tool to do that with.

Frequently asked questions

Is this racket suitable for beginners?

It is designed for intermediate players, so a complete beginner might find it fine to use, but they would not get the most from its control-oriented characteristics until their technique develops a bit further.

Does the soft core mean it lacks power?

Soft cores trade some power for feel and comfort. You can still generate pace, but this racket rewards technique and placement rather than brute force.

What does the low balance point mean in practice?

A low balance means the racket feels lighter in the head, which helps with quick reactions and wrist-driven shots, particularly at the net.

How heavy is 400g for a padel racket?

400g sits in the medium range for padel rackets. It is not unusually heavy or light, and most intermediate players adapt to it without any issues.