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Im a bit late to the party but whether a beginner should avoid it depends on their goal and their envoirement.
If a beginner is just playing for fun and mainly plays against other beginners D09c might feel amazing. All of a sudden their strokes are effortless and they hit shots they never hit before. Almost like the rubber plays by itself. And as long as the beginner has no aspiration to actually master his basic strokes and just wanna play matches the D09c will probably feel like joy to play with.
But once this same beginner starts getting more serious and competitive eventually he will hit a plateau. He will encounter more and more players that play with more quality and more spin. The ball with start jumping everywhere as soon as it hits their rubber, they will have no way of keeping the ball on the table now. And for some beginners this comes sooner, for some it comes later. That all depends on their talent and feeling for racket sports.
I actually have a recent example at my club. I played a practice match against a fellow clubmember that just got a new racket. He couldnt return any of my serves or topspins at all and the ball missed by quite a big margin. When the match was over he told me that he got a new racket. And when I looked at it I stared at it in disbelieve. He got himself a Viscaria Super ALC with Zyre 03 on both sides. He told me it played great when he tested it against his teammates, but when he played against me he could barely return a single ball.
So when a beginner just wants to have fun and doesnt care to much about money D09c can be great fun. But once he becomes more competitive he will eventually hit a wall. And the transition to some equipment more suited to his level will probably be difficult and might even kill all the fun he had before. Possibly it gets so frustrating that he ends up quitting.
If a beginner is just playing for fun and mainly plays against other beginners D09c might feel amazing. All of a sudden their strokes are effortless and they hit shots they never hit before. Almost like the rubber plays by itself. And as long as the beginner has no aspiration to actually master his basic strokes and just wanna play matches the D09c will probably feel like joy to play with.
But once this same beginner starts getting more serious and competitive eventually he will hit a plateau. He will encounter more and more players that play with more quality and more spin. The ball with start jumping everywhere as soon as it hits their rubber, they will have no way of keeping the ball on the table now. And for some beginners this comes sooner, for some it comes later. That all depends on their talent and feeling for racket sports.
I actually have a recent example at my club. I played a practice match against a fellow clubmember that just got a new racket. He couldnt return any of my serves or topspins at all and the ball missed by quite a big margin. When the match was over he told me that he got a new racket. And when I looked at it I stared at it in disbelieve. He got himself a Viscaria Super ALC with Zyre 03 on both sides. He told me it played great when he tested it against his teammates, but when he played against me he could barely return a single ball.
So when a beginner just wants to have fun and doesnt care to much about money D09c can be great fun. But once he becomes more competitive he will eventually hit a wall. And the transition to some equipment more suited to his level will probably be difficult and might even kill all the fun he had before. Possibly it gets so frustrating that he ends up quitting.