Is the wilson T-2000 still viable in modern tennis?

Zorak11

New User
DISCLAIMER: I'm a noob so this answer may be obvious

Hey TW, I was wondering if the Wilson T-2000 is still a racquet that can perform at least decently in modern tennis?
Thanks!
 
For most players, I would say no. If you have classic strokes the yes. While not a beast at the net, very serviceable from the baseline, serving and passing shots. It was m first serious racquet, Wicked slice serves and two-handed backhands easy to drive deep with topspin. Don't forget the awesome forehand slice drop shots.
 

nyta2

Hall of Fame
side note.. i've been playing with the toalson sweet area racquet... similar head size to t2000... while playable... i can't produce nearly the spin/pace as the rf97 and paero+ i've been playing with.
 

struggle

Legend
side note.. i've been playing with the toalson sweet area racquet... similar head size to t2000... while playable... i can't produce nearly the spin/pace as the rf97 and paero+ i've been playing with.

that is cool, heck the Toalson is even abit smaller than classic rackets.
 

Zorak11

New User
wel
As long as you can find some demented old fella to string it for ya, SURE!!

Haha, funny stuff.

well, the reason I was asking was that I wanted to make a tennis racquet that had rubberband strings, and the t2000 seemed easier than trying to get it through grottings.
 

struggle

Legend
wel


well, the reason I was asking was that I wanted to make a tennis racquet that had rubberband strings, and the t2000 seemed easier than trying to get it through grottings.

Yes, it's a good (maybe only?) candidate as getting rubber bands through the grottings would be difficult.
 

Zorak11

New User
Yes, it's a good (maybe only?) candidate as getting rubber bands through the grottings would be difficult.

that's what I was thinking. My only other issue if finding the right tension for the rubberband so that they can hit the ball well but not snap.
 
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