
Siux Fenix Pro Glow Purple 2026 Leo Ausburger
A hard-edged diamond racket with ruthless finishing power, yet enough poise to keep the point from slipping away in defense.
Our Take
Shape
Diamond
Weight
355 - 375 gr
Touch
Hard
Core
EVA
Faces
12K carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Heavy, direct volley response
- Sharp *bandeja* and *víbora*
- Easy power on smashes
What we don't
- Defensive blocks need clean contact
- Head-heavy feel slows reactions
- Stiff touch lacks comfort
Updated on 7 Jun (shipping cost not calculated)
Updated on 7 Jun (shipping cost not calculated)
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Siux Fenix Pro Glow Purple 2026 Leo Ausburger is a hard-hitting racket with a very clear agenda: pressure the net, punish anything shoulder-high, and keep enough order to avoid becoming a pure sledgehammer. It feels like a racket built for players who already know how to finish points, not for anyone looking for easy power.
The diamond shape and the Hard feel set the tone immediately. There’s a serious attacking bias here, but I don’t see it as a one-trick racket. It has enough control to hold its line in faster exchanges, though it asks for clean mechanics in return.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The diamond format pushes the balance upward, and that changes the whole conversation. This is not a neutral, all-court frame. It wants an aggressive swing, and it rewards players who load the shot properly on smashes, overheads, and aggressive volleys.
That head-heavier setup does come with a cost. I felt less ease on quick defensive adjustments and more demand on the wrist when the point sped up at the net. If your timing is late or your swing is compact, the racket can feel a bit demanding.
Materials & construction
The fiberglass frame and 12K carbon faces give it a firm, direct response. Contact feels crisp rather than plush, and the ball leaves with a fast, dry sort of rebound that suits offensive players who like to hit through the court.
The EVA core keeps that stiffness under control, but it doesn’t soften the character much. The overall Hard feel is real. That firmness helps stability on aggressive contact, yet it also means the racket does not forgive sloppy blocks or off-center defensive contact. The sweet spot is usable, but it still wants you to find it cleanly.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the baseline, I like it most when I’m defending with intent rather than surviving passively. It handles low-driven lobs and defensive lobs well enough, and the response is solid when I block with a firm hand. The ball doesn’t sink into the faces much, so clearance over the net depends on my technique more than on help from the racket.
Where it loses points is comfort. Long defensive exchanges can feel demanding, especially if you like a softer rebound to help reset the rally. This is not the racket I’d choose for easy, lazy defense.
At the net
This is where it starts making sense. Volleys come out fast and heavy, with a nice sense of direction when I stay compact. There’s enough bite to press opponents back, but the racket never feels loose or vague.
I also found it effective on quick chiquitas and first-volley pressure. It likes an assertive rhythm. What it doesn’t love is rushed preparation. If I’m late, the head-heavy balance shows up immediately.
Bandeja and víbora
These two shots fit the racket’s personality very well. The firmness helps me keep the ball deep on the bandeja, and the response on the víbora is sharp enough to add pace without feeling like I’m fighting the frame.
Still, the racket rewards clean technique more than brute force. If I try to improvise too much, I lose some of the precision that makes these shots effective. It’s a controlled aggressor, not a magic wand.
Smash
This is the obvious happy place. The racket loads power very naturally on overheads, and the direct response makes finishing points feel straightforward when the contact is right. It has the kind of personality that encourages decisive smashes rather than tentative ones.
That said, it asks for a full swing and good timing. I wouldn’t call it effortless. The power is there, but you have to earn it.
Conclusion
I see this as a racket for advanced or strong intermediate players who want a hard, attacking frame with real overhead presence. It suits players who live at the net and like to finish with pace rather than build points patiently from the back.
The trade-off is comfort and forgiveness. Defensive work takes more effort, and the stiff feel will not suit everyone. If you want a racket that gives you easy rebound and a softer touch, this is not that model.
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