Why Your Running Shoes Are Destroying Your Tennis Game
Tennis shoes are engineered for lateral movement — side-to-side slides, quick direction changes, and toe-dragging serves. Running shoes are engineered for forward motion. Playing tennis in running shoes increases your ankle sprain risk by 3–5x (per a British Journal of Sports Medicine study on court sport injuries) because they lack lateral support and have rounded soles designed for heel-to-toe roll.
Beyond injury risk, the court surface you play on determines the outsole pattern you need. Wrong soles = wrong grip = slips, falls, and club managers yelling at you for damaging the court.
Hard Court Shoes
Hard courts (concrete or acrylic) are the most abrasive surface in tennis. They eat through soles faster than any other surface. Hard court shoes prioritize durability, cushioning, and modified herringbone tread.
- Outsole: Dense rubber with modified herringbone pattern. Designed for traction without being "sticky" (you need controlled slides on hard court).
- Cushioning: Maximum midsole padding — hard courts have zero give, and your joints take the full impact.
- Durability: Reinforced toe cap (for serve drag), durable outsole rubber, often with 6-month outsole guarantees.
Clay Court Shoes
Clay courts require a completely different outsole. The full herringbone pattern provides grip without clogging, and the shallower tread allows for controlled sliding — an essential technique on clay.
- Outsole: Full herringbone pattern, non-marking rubber. The pattern must be deep enough for grip but shed clay between the grooves.
- Upper: Often lighter and more breathable (clay season = summer).
- DO NOT wear hard court shoes on clay — the wider tread pattern damages the court surface and provides wrong traction characteristics.
Grass Court Shoes
Grass courts are rare outside of Wimbledon and private clubs, but if you play on them, you need nubbed or pimpled rubber soles. These tiny rubber bumps grip grass without tearing it up (which club groundskeepers will enforce).
All-Court Shoes: The Practical Choice
If you play on multiple surfaces or primarily hard court with occasional clay, all-court shoes with modified herringbone outsoles are the most practical choice. They won't be optimal on any single surface but work adequately on all of them.
Fit Considerations
- Thumb-width space in the toe box (your feet swell during play)
- Snug heel lock — no heel slippage during lateral movements
- Width options matter — many tennis shoes run narrow. ASICS and New Balance offer wide options; Nike tends to run narrow.
- Replace every 45–60 hours of play or when the outsole tread is visibly worn. Worn soles lose lateral grip.
Budget Pick
Common Mistakes
Sources & Further Reading
- Tennis Warehouse. "Tennis Shoe Buying Guide." tennis-warehouse.com
- British Journal of Sports Medicine. "Ankle Injury Rates in Court Sports by Footwear Type." bjsm.bmj.com, 2023.
- Tennis.com. "Best Tennis Shoes 2025." tennis.com
- ASICS. "Court-Specific Shoe Technology." asics.com
- Tennis Warehouse University (YouTube). "Shoe Reviews and Technology Explained." youtube.com/@tenniswarehouse