The Restring Duffle

Written by: Jonas Eriksson | February 1, 2025

The company Restring are more famous for their strings Sync and Zero. Now, they introduce the Restring duffle.

Introduction

Many of my friends know me as a bag fan. It sounds weird, and maybe it is, but since I have always travelled a lot, I enjoy searching for the perfect bag for every occasion.

Duffle bags are excellent as you can access and organize the contents easier when it opens straight from the top. I prefer that over a backpack generally, although the ADV backpack has been great. I also really enjoy the Geau Sport Axiom backpack.

This duffle can fit two racquets, but they will poke out. So it’s more like a mini or mid-duffle than those racquet duffle bags that Tecnifibre brought onto the market as the “Rackpack” and some other brands later copied.

I have a mid-duffle from HEAD that I have been using for years and been very happy with. I tried searching for it among backpacks on Tennis Warehouse, but could not find it. It feels like the tennis bag space is exploding and the amount of options are increasing drastically.

However, this Restring duffle might replace my HEAD duffle backpack. There are more pockets and seemingly a little more space as well. I have not used it for travel yet, but I will try to do that shortly.

Features

The Restring duffle is described as follows on their website:

Fitting up to four rackets, our duffle comes equipped with a removable center divider and a separate shoe compartment. Built to last and made sustainably from recycled polyester material.

Bag dimensions: L 19.5 x D 10.5 x H 10 inch
Material: Recycled Polyester (RPET)

The divider and pockets make organizing your tennis life pretty easy. I also like the size of the bag, not too large, not too small. That perfect middle ground for a duffle.

Summary

I am about a week into using the Restring duffle and so far I am impressed. The quality seems durable, I enjoy the organizational features and it feels natural to just pick and go.

I prefer putting across the shoulder than carrying it as a backpack. It doesn’t feature the most natural backpack straps and I feel like that is fine, it’s after all a duffle bag.

Since I almost always bring a bunch of racquets for testing sessions, I add this as an accessory bag to the Cancha Racquet Bag Pro. They work really well as a combo.

If you only want to bring a more traditional tennis bag to the court, maybe a standard bag like the ADV Pro or a larger duffle like the Nordicdots Duffel bag, will work better, as they have more natural space for racquets.

Check out the Restring Duffle from their official website. Use our code TENNISNERD10 and get 10% off!

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Jonas Eriksson

Jonas has been known as "tennis nerd" mainly for his obsessing about racquets and gear. Plays this beautiful sport almost every day.