
Black Crown Piton 14 2026
A calm round racket with crisp rebound and a clean, predictable response, giving you control without feeling overly muted.
Our Take
Shape
Round
Weight
355 - 370 gr
Touch
Medium
Core
SC Black EVA
Faces
3K Carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Clean response off face
- Generous, centered sweet spot
- Solid *bandeja* and *víbora*
What we don't
- Limited free power on smashes
- Aggressive first volleys lack punch
- Defense needs proper preparation

The Black Crown Piton 14 2026 is a control-first racket with enough bite to keep the attack honest. It sits in that comfortable middle lane: not soft, not a brick, and far more precise than flashy.
What I notice most is the clean response off the face and the easy handling through the air. It feels like a racket built for players who want to construct points, block well at the baseline, and still have enough touch to work the net without forcing the issue.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The round shape is doing a lot of the work here. It keeps the sweet spot generous and central, which makes the Piton 14 feel dependable when contact isn’t perfect. The balance stays sensible, so the racket never feels top-heavy or awkward on quick exchanges.
That balance also explains why it moves so well on reaction volleys and defensive blocks. I wouldn’t call it explosive, though. If you want a racket that loads up the smash with very little effort, this is not that profile. It rewards timing and placement more than raw swing speed.
Materials & construction
Black Crown uses a 3K carbon face, a fiberglass frame, and a SC Black EVA core. In practice, that combination gives me a medium feel with a fairly crisp response. There’s enough firmness to keep the ball from sinking too much, but not so much dryness that it turns harsh.
The construction leans toward touch and control, and I could feel that in how predictable the rebound was. Ball exit is clean rather than lively, which helps when I’m blocking low, taking pace off a fast ball, or rolling a defensive chiquita. It does not have the extra pop of a more elastic core, so you have to supply a bit more of your own acceleration if you want depth.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the baseline, this racket is steady and organized. Defensive lobs come off with good height control, and off-the-wall play feels secure because the response is so linear. I never felt like the racket was fighting me or launching the ball unexpectedly.
It does ask for proper preparation on fuller swings. The ball exit is controlled, not lazy, but it won’t do the job for you. That is good news if you value placement. It is less appealing if you rely on easy free power to escape pressure.
At the net
Up by the net, the Piton 14 feels sharp in the hands. Volleys are easy to place, and the round format helps when I’m adjusting late or dealing with quick body balls. The sweet spot is forgiving enough that I can block and redirect without the racket twisting around much.
What I like less is the lack of extra punch on aggressive first volleys. You can speed the ball up, but it’s more about timing and angle than brute force. That keeps the racket controlled, though sometimes it also means your attack needs one more shot to finish the point.
Bandeja and víbora
This is probably the most natural zone for the racket. The medium feel and predictable response make the bandeja easy to repeat, especially when I want depth and placement instead of a heavy slap. The racket holds the line well and lets me work angles without overhitting.
The víbora is solid too, though not especially violent. The bite is there, but it’s controlled bite. I get good direction and decent skid, yet the racket doesn’t add a huge amount of extra aggression on its own.
Conclusion
The Black Crown Piton 14 2026 makes sense for players who live off control, court position, and clean timing. I’d trust it most in the hands of someone who likes to build the point, defend with order, and use the net to pressure rather than to blast through people.
Its main trade-off is clear: you get precision and comfort in exchange for limited free power. If you want a racket that helps you swing harder without thinking, look elsewhere. If you want something predictable, tidy, and easy to keep in play under pressure, this one has a very believable case.
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