Executive Summary
The Head Prestige is one of the most storied frames in tennis history — a control-first player's racquet that has been a fixture on the professional tour for over three decades. Where the Speed prioritises power and the Gravity favours spin, the Prestige stands for one thing: uncompromising precision.
Key Characteristic: A smaller head size (95–98 sq in), flexible beam (~62–65 RA), and dense string pattern combine to produce one of the most direct, honest feels of any frame on the market. The Prestige will not add power or spin to your game — it will transmit your intentions to the ball with exceptional fidelity, rewarding technical excellence and exposing anything less.
Key Positioning: Occupies the purist end of the Head range, sitting well below the Speed and Radical in terms of power assist. It is the frame for serious, technically complete players who want a tool that disappears in hand — one that communicates, rather than compensates. Many of the most technically sophisticated players on the ATP and WTA tours have built their careers around Prestige moulds.
Performance Profile
The Prestige Pro leads the range in precision and feel. It gives up power and forgiveness versus more mainstream Head frames — this is a deliberate, performance-focused trade-off.
Performance Comparison: Prestige Pro vs Prestige MP
Prestige Pro leads in control and touch · Prestige MP offers slightly more forgiveness and spin
Model Context
The Prestige line spans from the demanding tour-spec Pro through to more accessible options, all sharing the same precision-first character. Pro stock TGT moulds used on tour are distinct from all retail offerings.
Prestige Pro
The demanding tour flagship. A 95 sq in head with an 18x20 pattern produces the tightest, most precise string bed in the range. Exceptional plow-through and directional control — requires complete ball-striking confidence and a full, committed swing.
Prestige MP
The more accessible Prestige. A larger head and more open pattern restore spin potential and forgiveness while preserving the family's feel identity. The most popular retail Prestige and a popular base for pro stock customisation (TGT moulds).
Prestige Tour
Heavier and slightly larger than the MP, offering more plow-through at the cost of manoeuvrability. Sits at the intersection of the Prestige's precision identity and the mass-based power of a pro stock-weight frame.
Technical Must-Knows
Who Plays With This?
The Prestige is the choice of technically refined players who value feel and shot-shaping over power assistance. Tour frames are heavily customised on TGT moulds — these profiles reflect playing style rather than retail spec.
ADF's ferocious, physical baseline game — built around extreme topspin and aggressive court positioning — benefits from the Prestige Pro's precision and plow-through. His heavy, full-swing groundstrokes load the frame's flexible beam effectively, while the tight 18x20 pattern keeps his powerful shots in the court with directional discipline.
Cerundolo plays on a PT57A pro stock mould — a Prestige-family frame renowned among equipment enthusiasts for its exceptional feel. His high-RPM, heavy topspin game uses the frame's precision to consistently hit deep, penetrating balls that pin opponents behind the baseline, particularly on clay where his game is most dangerous.
Ugo Carabelli's patient, defensive baseline style benefits from the Prestige MP's clean directional response. The TGT 345.1 mould gives him a precisely customised feel platform — he uses the frame's honest feedback to redirect pace accurately and construct points methodically from the back of the court.
The young Austrian's all-court game, built around a technically precise forehand and strong net game, suits the Prestige MP's feel-first identity. The TGT 334.1 mould provides the customised stability he needs to execute attacking shots at pace while maintaining the touch required for his transition game at net.
String Setup Guide
The Prestige's flexible beam and (in the Pro) dense 18x20 pattern make string selection unusually impactful. Getting this right unlocks the frame's character; getting it wrong produces a stiff, wooden response that masks its true quality. Reference range (Prestige Pro): 45–57 lbs (20.5–26 kg).
Quick Start (Most Players)
- Start point (co-poly, 1.25mm, full bed): 47–51 lbs (21.3–23.2 kg) — the flexible beam at moderate tension produces the Prestige's signature pocketed feel. Lower than many players expect.
- If the ball is flying long: Unusual with the 18x20 Pro pattern. Check mechanics first. If confirmed, add 2 lbs or move to a slightly firmer poly — avoid exceeding 55 lbs with a co-poly in this frame.
- If you want more spin: Lower tension by 2–3 lbs and use a shaped co-poly. The 18x20 pattern significantly limits snapback; shaped strings compensate by maximising bite at contact.
- If your arm is struggling: Drop tension to 43–47 lbs and switch to a multifilament or natural gut. The flexible beam is inherently arm-friendly — the combination of low RA and a soft string at moderate tension makes this one of the most comfortable control frames available.
- Prestige MP (16x19) note: The more open pattern plays livelier — string 2–3 lbs higher than your equivalent Pro tension to maintain similar control and trajectory.
Pro Reference
Setup idea: Kirschbaum Max Power co-poly, reportedly in the low-to-mid 50s lbs range.
Cerundolo's choice of Kirschbaum Max Power reflects a preference for a softer, more elastic co-poly that works with the Prestige's flexible beam rather than fighting it. The combination preserves the PT57A's renowned feel while delivering adequate control for his heavy topspin baseline game. Tour setups vary by surface — use as a starting reference.
Recommended Setups by Goal
| Goal | Recommended Setup | Starting Tension | What You'll Feel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balanced | Co-poly (full bed), 1.25mm | 47–51 lbs (21.3–23.2 kg) | The Prestige at its best — pocketed, connected, precise. Clean directional feedback. |
| More spin | Shaped poly mains (1.25mm), optional soft cross | 45–49 lbs (20.5–22.3 kg) | Meaningful bite gain for the tight pattern — compensates for limited natural snapback |
| More control | Firmer poly or thicker gauge (1.27–1.30mm) | 50–54 lbs (22.7–24.5 kg) | Very flat, surgical trajectory — for elite full-swing players. Can go stiff if overdone. |
| Premium feel | Natural gut (full bed) or gut mains / poly crosses | Gut 52–56 lbs (23.5–25.5 kg) | Revelatory comfort and touch — the flexible beam amplifies gut's elastic properties beautifully |
| More comfort | Multifilament full bed or hybrid with soft cross | 45–49 lbs (20.5–22.3 kg) | Very soft impact — arm-friendly and forgiving, reveals the Prestige's natural gentleness |
Maintenance Rule
- Dead poly in a Prestige is immediately obvious. The flexible beam has no stiffness to prop up a dead string bed — the combination of lost tension and frame give produces a vague, trampoline-like feel that is the opposite of what the Prestige is designed to deliver. Restring proactively at 20–30 hours for poly users.
Top 3 Recommended Strings
These strings consistently perform well in the Prestige range based on tour usage and community playtests. The flexible beam rewards strings that amplify feel and precision over raw power or stiffness.
Best for: Advanced players wanting a Head-ecosystem pairing that complements the Prestige's feel identity.
Hawk Touch's softer, touch-oriented co-poly composition pairs excellently with the Prestige's flexible beam. Its lower stiffness versus standard Hawk means it works with the frame's natural give rather than stiffening the response. Clean, precise feel at contact, good tension maintenance, and a forgiving impact profile for a co-poly — one of the most natural-feeling poly pairings for the Prestige.
Best for: Players seeking a slightly livelier, more elastic co-poly that reveals the Prestige's feel character fully.
The choice of Cerundolo in the PT57A Prestige. Kirschbaum Max Power's elastic composition sits on the softer end of the co-poly spectrum, producing a pocketed, connected feel that the Prestige's flexible beam amplifies. More power return than Head Hawk without losing the directional precision the Prestige demands. A popular non-Head-endorsed choice among Prestige users.
Best for: Players (like Tirante) who want a balance of control, comfort and spin-bite in the Prestige's flexible frame.
Luxilon 4G's unique rough-surface co-poly creates natural bite at contact without the sharpness of a fully shaped string. Used by Thiago Tirante in the Prestige MP, it provides meaningful spin enhancement to a frame that doesn't generate spin naturally through its geometry. The gold texture reduces harsh feel common with other rough-surface polys, complementing the Prestige's inherently dampened character.
Pro tip: The Prestige rewards patience with string testing. A difference of 3 lbs in either direction, or a change between a round and shaped poly, creates a noticeably different playing experience in this frame. Change one variable at a time and play a full session before drawing conclusions.
Full Specifications
| Specification | Prestige Pro | Prestige MP | Prestige Tour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Head Size | 95 sq in (613 cm²) | 98 sq in (632 cm²) | 99 sq in (639 cm²) |
| Weight (Unstrung) | 305g / 10.8oz | 305g / 10.8oz | 315g / 11.1oz |
| Length | 27 in | 27 in | 27 in |
| Balance | ~308mm / 7–8 pts HL | ~312mm / 6–7 pts HL | ~310mm / 7–8 pts HL |
| String Pattern | 18x20 (dense, max control) | 16x19 (open, more spin) | 16x19 (open, more spin) |
| Stiffness (RA) | ~62–64 (flexible) | ~63–65 | ~62–64 |
| Swingweight | ~320–326 | ~320–325 | ~335–340 |
| Beam Width | 20–22mm (thin, flexible) | 21–23mm | 21–23mm |
| Pro Stock Moulds | PT57A, TGT 345.1 | TGT 334.1, TGT 293.2 | — |
| Target Player | Advanced / Dense Pattern | Advanced (4.0–5.0) | Advanced / Heavy |