
Enebe Mustang Silver 3K 2026
A diamond-shape racket with a lively response and serious punch, yet enough control to keep attacking sequences from getting messy.
Our Take
Shape
Diamond
Weight
355 - 370 gr
Touch
Medium
Core
Medium EVA
Faces
3K Carbon
Frame
Carbon fiber
What we like
- Lively ball exit
- Solid smash assistance
- Stable on volleys
What we don't
- Defense needs early prep
- Maneuverability drops late
- Touch shots less silky

The Enebe Mustang Silver 3K 2026 is an attacking racket with a pretty clear personality: lively off the face, firm enough to hit through the ball, and more stable than a lot of diamond shapes at this level. It wants to speed up points, but it does not feel like a pure cannon with no manners.
I see it as a racket for players who already use the net well and want extra punch without giving up all the order in defense. It leans toward offense, yes, but there is enough structure here to keep it from feeling wild.
Technical analysis
Shape & balance
The Diamond shape and higher balance set the tone immediately. This is not a racket that hides what it wants to do. It loads the head on purpose, so overheads feel helped and aggressive swings have more presence through the ball.
That said, it is not a lazy swing. In quick exchanges, you notice the head more than you would on a rounder, more even option. The payoff is clear: more natural leverage on smashes, bandejas, and fast attacking volleys. The trade-off is maneuverability, especially if your timing is late.
Materials & construction
The Carbono 3K faces give it a crisp, fairly direct response, while the Medium EVA core keeps the racket from becoming too dry. I get a medium feel that sits in a useful middle zone: firm enough to hit with intent, but not so hard that every touch shot turns into a punishment.
The fibra de carbono frame helps the whole structure feel solid through contact. It does not have that hollow, nervous sensation some cheaper diamond rackets bring. Ball exit is good, but it is not trampoline-like. You have to swing with purpose to unlock the best of it.
On-court feel
Baseline play
From the baseline, the Mustang Silver 3K feels clean on blocks and defensive lobs, especially when I’m set early. It gives decent response on softer defensive shots and keeps enough stability to absorb pace without folding.
What it does not do especially well is make defense effortless. If I’m late or jammed, I feel the head more and the racket asks for better preparation. Low-driven lobs are usable, but this is not the kind of frame that turns every awkward contact into an easy reset.
At the net
This is where it starts to make more sense. On volleys, the contact feels solid and the racket rewards active hands. I can push the ball with authority without losing all touch, and the response stays fairly predictable on quick exchanges.
It is not a featherlight net racket, though. If you like to improvise with very compact wristy actions, the balance can feel a bit demanding over a long match.
Bandeja and víbora
These shots suit it well. The medium-firm feel helps me get enough bite on the ball, and the head-heavy layout adds a useful extra when I want to accelerate through contact. I especially like it on flatter, heavier bandejas that need depth more than pure spin.
I would not call it magical on touch-heavy flicks. If the point asks for delicate manipulation, it is competent rather than silky. But when the goal is to hold the net and keep pressure on, it does the job with conviction.
Smash
The smashes are where the racket shows its best side. There is clear help from the shape and balance, and the frame transfers energy well when I hit cleanly. It feels made for finishing points, not just surviving them.
It still asks for proper technique. If you miss the sweet spot, the reward drops quickly. So this is power with some discipline, not free power.
Conclusion
The Enebe Mustang Silver 3K 2026 makes the most sense for players who want an attacking racket with real punch and a reasonably stable response in the rest of the game. It rewards an aggressive style, especially if you like working the net and finishing overheads.
What you give up is easy handling. It is not the most forgiving option in defense, and it will not do all the work for you on off-center contact. But if your game already leans forward and you want a diamond-shaped racket that hits with intent without feeling dead, this one earns its place.
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