Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The hard surface tennis shoes are not good for clay courts. There aren't many choices for clay court tennis shoes though. Here's my 2 cents- herringbone tread pattern is idealy the go to choice for clay courts. However, recently I have used a pair of 4 month old courtballistec 1.3's hard court sneakers and they felt great on clay.
Omni court tennis shoes' soles last the longest on astro turf surface. Lately I've been using herringbone patterned soled Adidas Adizero Ubersonic 3 because this shoes is just so comfortable and light.... The soles seem to hold up well on astro turf. Just google "omni court tennis shoes". Last edited: Jul 28, 2020.
Jan 24, 2020. #6. If you are a hard mover / like to slide on hard courts I wouldn't usually recommend it. In my experience clay court specific shoes have a small, or no, shank (so they can fit more tread on the outsole) which can cause the shoe to twist a bit more than normal when you're hard on them. Looking at the pictures the clay court ...
Jul 9, 2006. #5. jak914 said: you dont need clay shoes for har tru. i use my barricade 4 and they work fine. so do the a3's. Barricade 4s are for hard and clay. I just thought since you have slide and all, that a clay court shoes should be needed.
Apr 11, 2016. #6. Dartagnan64 said: Most clay court shoes use a classic herringbone tread which is good for all court traction, but wears down easily. Often the big difference with clay court is the depth of the tread in order to not get easily clogged with clay.
Tennis Shoes for Clay and Hard Courts. Thread starter Praprad; Start date May 15, 2012; P. Praprad New ...
Mar 23, 2020. #5. A few shoes like the Stycon clay are shod with the same material and herringbone pattern with slight modifications, so they are really all court shoes. Most of the clay versions of shoes unfortunately switch to tighter patterned herringbone outsoles and often than not, softer rubber. If the outsoles are different, the ...
Some designs following herringbone patterns work well enough on green or red clay, and even syn grass. One shoe comes to mind is the Zoom Zero. Not the most stable shoe when sliding, it worked well enough in a crunch, when I left my clay shoes at home! If you are playing on clay more than 5 times a year, I would have dedicated clay shoes.
hey guys, do any of you know where i can find a broader range of clay court shoes with the actual clay outsoles than on tennis-warehouse b/c the only ones that they have are the torneos and the yonex's. im looking for maybe something along the lines of the oscillates, BF III, vapor speed, cc feathers, whatever, but something along those lines. so if any of you guys know any sites or online ...
For sure, the fact I'm fast and inexperienced on clay were also factors, but not having appropriate tread greatly increased my chance of injury. It's dirty too. I'd buy a cheap pair of herringbone-soled tennis shoes for when you play on clay. If that's a stretch, then wear you B6s as no tread will ruin the experience. H.