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Lee Chong Wei Racket Timeline: What to Buy in Canada 2026

Flat vector banner showing a timeline of badminton rackets and a shuttlecock with subtle Canadian styling

Last updated: July 2026 · Written by the team at Badminton House

Quick Answer: Lee Chong Wei Racket

If you want something to actually play with in Canada in 2026, buy a modern head-heavy Yonex power racket rather than chasing discontinued LCW signature frames.

Best buy

Yonex Astrox 100 ZZ: the closest practical Badminton House option for LCW fans who want a serious attacking frame today — head-heavy, extra-stiff, and much more playable than hunting a collector racket. Check live availability.

Collector

If you specifically want a Voltric Z-Force II LCW, Duora 10 LCW, Astrox 99 LCW, or Armortec 900 Power LCW edition, treat it as a collector search, not a normal racket upgrade; verify authenticity carefully before buying.

Setup

To copy the feel more than the exact racket, LCW’s known setup points are thin Yonex BG66 Ultimax/BG66 Force strings around 30 lbs and Yonex court shoes; 30 lbs is advanced-player territory, so most club players should choose a lower tension.

If you are searching for a Lee Chong Wei racket in Canada in 2026, the main thing to know is this: do not treat the old signature models like normal current rackets. LCW’s famous Yonex frames — from the Armortec and Voltric eras through the Duora 10 LCW and Astrox 99 LCW limited edition — are mostly discontinued collector pieces now, so the smarter buying decision is usually to match the feel: head-heavy power, stiff response, fast handling, or a more controlled all-around setup.

That is what this guide is for. We will walk through the Lee Chong Wei racket timeline, explain which models were true playing rackets versus legacy editions, and translate his setup into modern options Canadian players can actually consider today. LCW’s own setup was not beginner-friendly — BG66 Ultimax around 30 lbs is a serious advanced-player tension — so the goal is not to copy every detail blindly. The goal is to understand what made his rackets work, then choose a version that fits your swing, level, and weekly court time.

One Canadian teaser before we get into the timeline: LCW was seen with a Nanoflare 1000Z at the 2023 Yonex Canada Open Legends’ Vision event, which is a fun post-retirement twist rather than a competitive-era racket change.

Looking for the closest modern feel? Start with our badminton rackets collection and check live availability on current power, control, and all-around frames before chasing discontinued LCW collector models.


Lee Chong Wei Racket Timeline: Every Major Yonex Era

Horizontal illustrated timeline showing six badminton rackets representing Lee Chong Wei's Yonex eras, each labelled with its model name.
Lee Chong Wei's major Yonex racket eras, from early Muscle Power frames to the ceremonial Astrox 99 LCW.

The easiest way to understand the Lee Chong Wei racket story is not as one magic model, but as a long Yonex evolution: early Muscle Power and Nanospeed frames, the Armortec attacking era, the Voltric power era, the dual-sided Duora experiment, and finally the ceremonial Astrox 99 LCW release.

For Canadian players shopping in 2026, the important lesson is this: most of LCW’s actual rackets are discontinued, so you are usually choosing a modern equivalent feel, not buying the same frame he used in competition.

Era Lee Chong Wei racket What defined it 2026 buying takeaway
Pre-2006 Yonex Muscle Power 88 A blue/silver Muscle Power 88 has been identified from LCW’s early racket history. It is also noted as a beginner-friendly racket, which makes it an unusual-looking starting point compared with his later attacking frames. Do not chase this as a performance clone. Treat it as early-career history, not the best modern path for an attacking singles player.
Before the Duora era Yonex Nanospeed 9000 A gold/white/blue Nanospeed 9000 is part of the documented LCW sequence. The model is long discontinued. If you like the idea of speed and handling, compare modern even-balance or head-light rackets rather than hunting an old Nanospeed frame.
Armortec attacking era Yonex Armortec 900 Power The Armortec 900 Power appeared in a red/white version and an LCW yellow limited edition. The LCW edition was designed for hard hitters and offensive/attacking players. This is where the “LCW = attacking singles power” image becomes clearer. Modern head-heavy rackets are the closest shopping direction.
Bridge era Yonex Arcsaber Z-Slash The Arcsaber Z-Slash sits in the LCW racket sequence before the Voltric period. Later Voltric Z-Force II descriptions compare its compact aerodynamic head direction with the ArcSaber Z-Slash. Think of this as a speed-and-aero bridge, not the easiest LCW-era frame to replicate from current Canadian shelves.
Voltric transition Yonex Voltric 80 The Voltric 80 appears in the LCW sequence before the Voltric Z-Force and Z-Force II LCW period. Use it as a signpost toward the Voltric power identity: if this era interests you, start your modern comparison with head-heavy rackets.
2012–2015 Yonex Voltric Z-Force / Voltric Z-Force II LCW The Voltric Z-Force II LCW combined Nanometric technology with an aerodynamic compact head design and was marketed as Yonex’s most powerful racket at the time. This is the clearest “power-first LCW” reference. Advanced players should compare extra-stiff, head-heavy modern frames; developing players may want a more forgiving version of that idea.
2015–2018 Yonex Duora 10 LCW The Duora 10 used a dual-sided frame concept: box-shaped for power and aerodynamic for speed. LCW went through multiple colour versions, ending with the Frosty Blue Duora 10 LCW in his final competitive years before his 2019 retirement. If you want the Duora idea today, look for a balanced control racket that still gives enough punch from the rear court.
2019 and after Yonex Astrox 99 LCW LCW did not use the Astrox 99 competitively, but Yonex released a green/purple LCW limited edition to honour his legacy. The green colour was tied to vitality, speed, power, and his lucky colour. This is more of a legacy and collector reference than an on-court LCW competition racket.

Shopping note for Canada. LCW’s actual signature rackets are discontinued collector items, so most players should compare current rackets by feel: head-heavy power for the Voltric/Astrox side, or balanced control for the Duora side. You can check live racket availability before choosing a modern equivalent.

If you are trying to map this timeline to your own game, start with three questions: do you want a head-heavy smash racket, a quicker balanced racket, or a collectible LCW piece? For the playing-performance route, our guides to head-heavy vs head-light balance and stiff vs flexible shafts will help you translate the Lee Chong Wei racket timeline into something practical for your club matches.

For a modern power-racket comparison beyond LCW, see our Viktor Axelsen racket and gear setup. For a different pro setup built around elite women’s singles movement and control, see the An Se Young racket and gear guide.


The Four LCW Signature Rackets Are Collector Items Now

The important buying point for 2026: Lee Chong Wei’s true signature-edition rackets are no longer normal retail recommendations. They belong more in the collector category than the “what should I play with this season?” category.

That distinction matters. Badminton House is not presenting the Armortec 900 Power LCW, Voltric Z-Force II LCW, Duora 10 LCW, or Astrox 99 LCW as current-performance buys. If you want a racket to train, compete, and restring regularly, look at modern equivalents instead. If you are hunting an original LCW edition, treat it like a collectible and verify condition and authenticity carefully before paying.

Collector first, player second. For a playable 2026 racket, check live availability in our badminton rackets collection. For used LCW signatures, use extra caution and review our fake badminton racket authentication guide before buying privately.

LCW signature racket Why collectors care 2026 buying note
Yonex Armortec 900 Power LCW The LCW yellow limited edition of the Armortec 900 Power, a racket associated with hard hitters and offensive attacking play. Buy only if you specifically want an LCW-era collectible. Inspect the frame, grommets, cone, shaft code, and grip area carefully because age and storage condition matter.
Yonex Voltric Z-Force II LCW The 2014–2015 LCW edition tied to the Voltric Z-Force II era, built around a compact aerodynamic head and Nanometric technology, and marketed as Yonex’s most powerful racket at the time. Highly desirable to LCW fans, but demanding as a playing racket. Do not assume a used one is match-ready without checking for hairline cracks and previous stringing stress.
Yonex Duora 10 LCW The 2015–2018 LCW signature era, using the Duora concept: one box-shaped side for power and one aerodynamic side for speed. The Frosty Blue version is associated with his final competitive years before his 2019 retirement. A meaningful piece for fans because it connects directly to the late-career LCW setup. For playability, many players are better served by a modern even-balance or control-power frame.
Yonex Astrox 99 LCW A green and purple LCW limited edition created to honour his legacy. LCW did not use the Astrox 99 competitively because of nose cancer. Best viewed as a commemorative piece rather than a racket that defines LCW’s competitive match setup. If you want the Astrox power feel for current play, compare modern Astrox models instead.

For Canadian players, the trap is paying “legend tax” for a racket that looks exciting online but arrives with hidden damage, questionable codes, or a handle that has absorbed years of sweat and humidity. A discontinued LCW racket can be a great display piece, but it is not automatically a smart court purchase.

How to judge a used LCW signature racket

  • Ask for clear close-up photos: frame top, frame sides, T-joint, cone, shaft code area, butt cap, and any chips.
  • Separate paint chips from structural damage: cosmetic wear is common on old rackets, but cracks near shared grommets, the T-joint, or the top of the frame are a serious warning sign.
  • Check the grommets: sunken, split, or missing grommets can suggest the frame has seen heavy stringing or poor maintenance.
  • Be realistic about tension: LCW’s own setup was around 30 lbs, but that does not mean an older collector frame should be restrung that high today.
  • Verify before you buy: if the seller cannot provide detailed photos or basic history, walk away.

If your goal is performance, use LCW’s rackets as a direction cue: attacking balance, crisp response, and pro-level timing demands. If your goal is collecting, buy the story and condition, not just the paint colour. Those are two different purchases.


LCW’s Full Setup: Strings, Tension, Grip, and Shoes

Illustrated badminton racket and court shoe with callout labels for string, tension, grip and shoes.
Lee Chong Wei's known setup: thin BG66 strings at high tension, a Super Grap overgrip, and Yonex court shoes.

The Lee Chong Wei racket story is not just about the frame. His playing feel came from a very specific setup: thin Yonex strings at very high tension, a Yonex Super Grap overgrip, and LCW-edition Yonex court shoes built for fast, stable movement.

Setup area LCW setup What Canadian players should take from it
String Yonex BG66 Ultimax for many years; later Yonex BG66 Force BG66 Ultimax is a thin 0.65 mm string. It suits players who want a crisp, fast response, but it is not automatically the best choice for every level.
Tension About 30 lbs Treat 30 lbs as an advanced-player tension, not a beginner default. If you are building technique, start with a more forgiving range and move up only when your timing and contact quality justify it.
Grip Yonex Super Grap overgrip The practical lesson is simple: keep your grip fresh. A worn, slippery overgrip changes how tightly you hold the racket and can affect touch, defence, and late forehand recovery.
Shoes Yonex SHB-PC-03 Z LCW yellow/blue signature shoes Copy the shoe category, not the collector colourway: use real non-marking badminton shoes with lateral support for lunges, split steps, and recovery steps.

Do not copy LCW’s 30 lbs blindly. If you are not an advanced player, use the badminton string tension guide first, then choose a tension that matches your level, racket, and swing speed.

The string setup: BG66 Ultimax, then BG66 Force

For much of his career, LCW’s setup was listed with Yonex BG66 Ultimax at about 30 lbs. Later setup references list Yonex BG66 Force, still around 30 lbs. That tells you two things: he preferred a very responsive thin-string feel, and he had the consistency to use a high-tension bed without needing extra forgiveness from the strings.

For regular club players, the better takeaway is not “string at 30.” It is “match the string and tension to your contact quality.” If you mishit often, play once a week, or are still developing clear length and smash timing, a lower tension will usually be easier to live with than a pro-style setup.

Badminton House’s badminton stringing service in Moncton, NB lists BG66 Ultimax among its Yonex string options and is set up for walk-in racket drop-off with a 2–3 day turnaround. If you play regularly, it is worth treating stringing as maintenance rather than waiting until the string bed feels dead or breaks.

The grip setup: Super Grap overgrip

LCW’s listed grip choice was Yonex Super Grap overgrip. That fits the way many high-level players manage feel: they keep the handle consistent, replace the outer layer often, and avoid letting a slick grip force unnecessary squeezing.

If you are trying to build an LCW-inspired attacking setup, grip condition matters more than the logo on the racket. A fresh overgrip helps you stay relaxed before impact, then squeeze at the shuttle without over-gripping through the whole rally.

The shoe setup: SHB-PC-03 Z LCW

LCW also had a signature Yonex SHB-PC-03 Z LCW shoe in a yellow/blue colourway. The important point for today’s buyer is not to chase that exact discontinued model; it is to choose proper badminton footwear built for indoor court traction, braking, and side-to-side movement.

If you are upgrading your setup in Canada, put shoes on the same priority level as the racket. LCW’s game depended on early preparation, explosive recovery, and repeated lunges, and those movements are much safer and cleaner in badminton-specific court shoes than in running shoes.


Post-Retirement Canada Hook: Nanoflare 1000Z at Legends’ Vision

For Canadian Lee Chong Wei fans, one fun post-retirement sighting came at the 2023 Yonex Canada Open “Legends’ Vision” event, where LCW appeared with a Yonex Nanoflare 1000Z. It is a useful Canada connection for this timeline — but it should not be treated as one of his career rackets.

The important distinction is timing. LCW retired in 2019, and his final competitive Yonex eras were tied to rackets like the Duora 10 LCW and the planned Astrox 99 LCW legacy edition. The Nanoflare 1000Z sighting happened after retirement, in an exhibition and ambassador-style context, not in his peak international match setup.

How to read the Nanoflare 1000Z sighting: it shows LCW staying visible at major badminton events in Canada, not a rewrite of his racket history. If you are choosing a racket based on his competitive style, compare modern power and all-court options rather than assuming the Nanoflare was his match-era frame.

Racket context What it means for buyers
LCW’s competitive timeline Look at his Muscle Power, Nanospeed, Armortec, Voltric, Duora, and Astrox legacy eras when studying his actual match equipment.
2023 Canada Open Legends’ Vision Treat the Nanoflare 1000Z as a post-retirement appearance racket, not proof that it was part of his professional match setup.
Canadian fan angle It gives Canadian players a neat local connection to LCW’s ongoing role in badminton culture after retirement.

If you are trying to buy a “Lee Chong Wei racket” in Canada today, the better question is not “Which racket did he hold at an exhibition?” but “Which modern racket recreates the part of LCW’s game I actually want?” For a quick framework across Yonex families, see our Astrox vs Arcsaber vs Nanoflare guide. If you want a modern pro power comparison, the Viktor Axelsen gear setup is a useful bridge because it sits closer to today’s Astrox power era.


What to Buy Instead in Canada: Modern Equivalents

Four badminton rackets side by side, each labelled with model name and its balance and flex character.
Four modern Yonex frames mapped to the LCW feel you want, from extra-stiff power to even-balance control.

If you are searching for a Lee Chong Wei racket to actually play with in 2026, the smarter move is usually not to chase a discontinued LCW edition. Buy the playing characteristics instead: head-heavy power for the Voltric and Astrox eras, or a stiffer even-balance control frame if you liked the Duora 10 LCW idea.

Best live shopping path in Canada. Start with the Yonex Astrox 100 ZZ — check live availability as Badminton House’s main modern power-era alternative, or browse all badminton rackets — check live availability if you want a less demanding option.

LCW era you are trying to replace Modern equivalent to consider Why it fits Best Canadian buying path
Voltric Z-Force II LCW / Voltric attacking era
LCW’s compact, power-focused period.
Yonex Astrox 100 ZZ Head-heavy, extra-stiff, advanced/pro-level frame with 3U and 4U weight options. The 4U version is listed with 20–28 lb stringing advice, and the model is known for its very slim 6.2 mm shaft. Check live availability for Astrox 100 ZZ
Astrox 99 LCW tribute era
For players drawn to the final LCW-labelled Astrox concept.
Yonex Astrox 99 Pro
Reference spec
A head-heavy singles power reference with Namd and a +10 mm longer length. Use it as a benchmark if you want a modern singles-first power feel rather than a collector racket. Check live availability in badminton rackets
Armortec / rear-court power preference
For doubles players who admire LCW’s smash but play mostly from the back court.
Yonex Astrox 88D Pro
Reference spec
A stiff, head-heavy doubles rear-court specialist with 3U and 4U weight options. The listed stringing advice is 20–28 lbs for 4U and 21–29 lbs for 3U. Check live availability in badminton rackets
Duora 10 LCW balanced/control era
For players who liked the idea of power on one side and speed/control on the other.
Yonex Arcsaber 11 Pro
Closest reference feel
A stiff, even-balance, control-oriented frame with 3U and 4U weight options. The stringing advice is 19–27 lbs for 4U and 20–28 lbs for 3U, making it the cleanest comparison point for the Duora-style all-court feel. Check live availability in badminton rackets

How to choose the right LCW-inspired replacement

  • Choose Astrox 100 ZZ if you are an advanced player with clean timing and you want the most direct modern power path from the Voltric-style LCW eras. The extra-stiff, head-heavy setup rewards sharp technique but can feel demanding if you contact late.
  • Use Astrox 99 Pro as your singles power reference if you want a head-heavy modern benchmark for steep attack and full-court singles pressure.
  • Use Astrox 88D Pro as your rear-court doubles reference if your version of “LCW power” is mostly smashing, clearing, and controlling from the back in doubles.
  • Use Arcsaber 11 Pro as your Duora-style reference if you want a stiffer, even-balance control frame rather than the heaviest smash-first feel.

Not sure whether head-heavy and extra-stiff is too much racket? Before buying, compare the basics in our guides to head-heavy vs head-light balance, stiff vs flexible shafts, and 3U vs 4U vs 5U racket weight. For another pro power comparison, see our Viktor Axelsen racket and gear setup.


Shoes and Accessories: What Still Makes Sense Today

LCW’s Yonex SHB-PC-03 Z LCW was a real signature badminton shoe in the yellow/blue colourway, built around improved fit and stability for court movement. But for Canadian players in 2026, the better move is not trying to recreate that exact discontinued shoe. Buy the modern version of the job it performed: a stable, non-marking badminton court shoe that supports lunges, split steps, recovery hops, and fast direction changes.

That matters more than the colourway. LCW’s footwork was built on balance, early preparation, and sharp recovery; the shoe should help you trust the floor, not make you feel like you are wearing a collector piece you are afraid to scuff.

Shop the function, not the museum piece. For current court-shoe options, check badminton footwear. If you specifically want LCW-branded items, use the Lee Chong Wei collection only as a live availability check for LCW apparel or accessories — not as a promise of LCW signature rackets.

What to Prioritize in a Modern LCW-Inspired Shoe

Feature Why it matters for LCW-style movement Buying note
Non-marking badminton outsole Helps with the stop-start grip needed for lunges, rear-court recovery, and defensive resets. Choose badminton or indoor court shoes over running shoes.
Lateral stability Badminton loads the foot sideways constantly; stability is more useful than a soft straight-line running feel. Look for a secure midfoot and heel hold.
Cushioning without wobble LCW-style singles movement includes repeated lunges and jumps; the shoe should absorb impact without feeling unstable. If you play several nights per week, comfort under fatigue matters.
Fit for your foot shape A great shoe in the wrong width can cause sliding, toe pressure, or poor push-off confidence. Prioritize fit over matching a pro’s exact model.

If you are coming from running shoes, start with the footwear change before obsessing over LCW’s exact racket history. Court shoes are one of the few upgrades beginners, club players, and competitive players all feel immediately — especially in Canadian community gyms where floors can vary from freshly refinished hardwood to older multi-sport surfaces.

Accessories That Still Translate from LCW’s Setup

LCW’s known setup included Yonex BG66 Ultimax around 30 lbs, Super Grap overgrip, and his SHB-PC-03 Z LCW shoes. The exact pro tension is not the part most players should copy. The useful lesson is that he kept the contact points consistent: strings, grip, and shoes all supported timing and feel.

  • Overgrips: keep your handle tacky and predictable. A worn grip makes you squeeze harder, which can hurt timing and control.
  • Spare grips and towel: useful for humid summer sessions and long club nights, especially when you are playing back-to-back games.
  • Badminton socks: a snug court sock can reduce sliding inside the shoe and make lunges feel cleaner.
  • String choice: thin, repulsive strings can feel sharp and fast, but most non-pro players should pair them with a realistic tension rather than copying 30 lbs.

For more detail on shoe selection, compare indoor court-shoe fit in Best Badminton Shoes in Canada and the difference between badminton shoes and runners in Badminton Shoes vs Running Shoes. If your main issue is grip feel, the overgrip guide is the better next read.

Bottom line: LCW-branded shoes and accessories are fun for fans, but performance today comes from fit, support, grip, and maintenance. If an LCW item appears, treat it as a fan piece first; for actual play, choose current badminton footwear and replaceable accessories you can keep using week after week.


How LCW’s Setup Compares with Other Pro Setups

Lee Chong Wei’s gear profile sits at the demanding end of the badminton spectrum: attacking rackets, precise timing, and string tension around 30 lbs. That does not mean every serious player should copy it. It means his setup rewarded elite preparation, clean acceleration, and the ability to hit early under pressure.

The useful question for Canadian club and tournament players is not “What did LCW use?” but “Which modern setup profile gives me the same strengths without punishing my timing?” Here is the cleaner way to compare LCW’s setup with other pro-style profiles.

Setup profile What it feels like Best fit
LCW attacking singles profile
Voltric, Duora, Astrox 99 LCW era
Explosive and precise, but not forgiving. The racket helps when you are early, balanced, and committed through the shuttle; it feels harder when contact is late. Advanced singles players who generate their own racket speed and want a sharper attacking response.
Astrox 100 ZZ power profile
Modern head-heavy, extra-stiff power
The closest modern power connection in this article: direct, fast through the shaft, and built for players who can control a demanding frame. Players who liked LCW’s attacking direction and want a current power-era reference. For another pro comparison around this racket family, see our Viktor Axelsen racket and gear setup.
Rear-court doubles power profile
Astrox 88D-style role
Still power-focused, but the purpose is different: holding the back court, pressing down, and supporting a front-court partner. Doubles players who want rear-court authority more than a pure singles-style LCW feel.
Control and all-court profile
Arcsaber 11 Pro-style role
More balanced and controlled, with less of the “all-in” attacking feel. This is the better conceptual match for players who liked the dual-purpose idea behind Duora but want a calmer modern option. All-court players, doubles control players, and intermediates who value placement, drives, blocks, and shot quality over maximum smash weight.
Speed-first profile
Nanoflare direction
A contrast to LCW’s signature attacking years. LCW being seen with a Nanoflare 1000Z at the 2023 Yonex Canada Open Legends’ Vision event is interesting post-retirement context, not evidence that his competitive setup changed. Players who lose rallies because the racket feels slow in defence, flat exchanges, or front-court reactions.

If you want the LCW feeling, start with the power profile. If you want LCW’s discipline but not his difficulty level, move one step toward control. If you play mostly doubles and live in the rear court, compare the doubles power profile before buying a pure singles-style racket. If your defence is always late, do not force a head-heavy setup just because a legend used one.

His stringing choice belongs in the same category: excellent for a professional with world-class timing, but not the default for most recreational players. The tension discussion earlier in this guide matters because a demanding racket plus very high tension leaves less room for mishits.

Shopping the LCW profile in Canada? For the most direct modern power comparison, check live availability on the Yonex Astrox 100 ZZ, or browse all badminton rackets if you want a less demanding fit.

For a broader modern pro comparison, especially if you want to see a different elite setup philosophy rather than another LCW-style power build, read our An Se Young racket and gear setup.


Which LCW-Style Setup Should You Choose?

If you came here searching for a Lee Chong Wei racket, the right choice depends on whether you want a collectible, a modern power racket, or simply a playable setup inspired by LCW without copying his pro-level demands.

Choose this route Best for Decision note
Original LCW signature rackets Collectors and longtime LCW fans Treat these as collector items now, not the easiest everyday buy. LCW signature rackets are discontinued, and Badminton House does not currently sell LCW signature rackets.
Modern LCW-style power racket Advanced attacking players who like a demanding, smash-focused feel This is the closest practical buying path if you liked LCW’s Voltric, Duora, and Astrox-era attacking direction. It makes more sense than chasing a rare collectible for regular club or tournament play.
Astrox 99 Pro direction Singles players who want a power-first Yonex path Use this as the modern reference if your priority is rear-court pressure and singles power. LCW had an Astrox 99 LCW limited edition, but he did not use it competitively.
Astrox 88D Pro direction Doubles rear-court players Pick this direction if your LCW inspiration is the steep, heavy attack, but your real matches are mostly doubles and you spend more time setting up from the back court.
Arcsaber 11 Pro direction Players who want a more controlled all-round feel This is the safer direction if the Duora 10 idea appeals to you, but you do not want to commit fully to a power-heavy setup.
LCW string setup Advanced players with clean timing LCW used BG66 Ultimax for many years and later BG66 Force around 30 lbs. For most Canadian club players, copying the string model is more realistic than copying the full 30 lb tension.

Practical Canada pick: if you want a playable LCW-style power option rather than a collector racket, the Yonex Astrox 100 ZZ is the most relevant current Badminton House path — check live availability.

If you are comparing pro setups rather than buying purely from nostalgia, the Astrox 100 ZZ also connects naturally to Viktor Axelsen’s racket setup. For a control-first contrast, see An Se Young’s racket and gear setup.

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LCW’s exact signature rackets are collector pieces now, but the playing feel is still useful: head-heavy power, crisp strings, reliable court shoes, and a setup you can actually control. We play badminton ourselves, so if you’re trying to choose a modern LCW-inspired racket for singles, doubles, or club play in Canada, contact us and we’ll help you narrow it down honestly.

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