



Dunlop AO Tennis Ball Can (3 Balls)
Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is the official ball of the Australian Open Grand Slam — Dunlop’s mid-premium line combining HD Core technology for consistent bounce with HD Pro Cloth woven felt for visibility and durability.
Estimated Delivery Time: 2 - 4 Days (Delivery subject to pincode)
₹775.00 Original price was: ₹775.00.₹502.00Current price is: ₹502.00.
Estimated Delivery Time: 2 - 4 Days (Delivery subject to pincode)
GOS's Opinion
4.9
Watch this video before Buying
Type – Pressurized
Material – HD Pro Cloth
GOS’s Opinion
The Dunlop Australian Open Tennis Ball Can delivers exceptional quality and performance, mirroring the standards set at the Australian Open. With advanced technologies and durable construction, it's a top choice for players seeking consistency and longevity in their game
Overall
4.9
Durability: (5/5)
Bounce Consistency: (5/5)
Feel: (4.5/5)
Speed & Play: (5/5)
Type – Pressurized
Material – HD Pro Cloth
Frequently Bought Together
[cuw_fbt]
Specification
Description
FAQ's
Specification
Description
What Makes Dunlop AO Tennis Ball Different:
- HD Core — Remastered for Consistency and Durability : The HD Core is Dunlop’s high-specification re-engineering of their longstanding Forte Core — the same rubber compound that built Dunlop’s reputation as a ball manufacturer over decades, now upgraded for more consistent playing characteristics and greater pressure retention. In practice this means the ball bounces predictably from the first strike to well into a session, without the early-game deadness some cheaper balls exhibit straight from the can. Competitive testers consistently describe the AO as feeling “match ready” immediately on opening, with a slightly heavier, denser feel on the racket compared to lighter balls like Penn Championship — a characteristic that many hard-court players find beneficial when playing into headwinds or generating heavy topspin.
- HD Pro Cloth — Premium Woven Felt for Visibility and All-Court Use : Where Dunlop’s ATP Championship ball uses a non-woven felt (Durafelt), the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball steps up to HD Pro Cloth — a premium woven felt engineered for tournament-level performance. Woven felt is denser and more tightly constructed than non-woven, which delivers better visibility in flight, a more consistent surface texture for spin interaction, and generally superior performance in the first hour of play. The trade-off is that woven felt can fluff up faster under heavy topspin on abrasive hard courts — a characteristic noted consistently across independent tests. Players who rely on heavy topspin or who play on rough acrylic surfaces will see felt wear sooner than flat hitters or synthetic-surface players.
- Extra Duty Felt — Designed for Hard Courts : The Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is classified as extra duty — the felt specification for hard courts and other abrasive surfaces. Extra duty felt has a thicker, denser nap than regular duty felt, which provides more resistance to the abrasion caused by hard court surfaces. India’s club tennis infrastructure is overwhelmingly hard court (acrylic, concrete, and synthetic hard), making the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball extra duty classification the right choice for the vast majority of Indian players. Regular duty felt is designed for softer surfaces like clay and indoor carpet — using a regular duty ball on an Indian hard court will result in felt wearing off significantly faster.
- ITF Approval — What It Means in Practice : ITF approval means the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball has passed the International Tennis Federation’s independent testing for bounce height (135–147cm from a 100-inch drop), weight (56–59.4g), diameter (6.54–6.86cm), deformation, and durability. In India, this matters for any player competing in club tournaments, state-level events, or AITA-sanctioned competitions — the governing body requires ITF-approved balls for sanctioned play. For recreational players, ITF approval is a quality benchmark that guarantees the ball meets international performance standards. The AO is approved by both ITF and USTA, making it legal for competitive play at all levels worldwide.
Court Surface Guide — Using the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball in India:
- Hard Courts and Synthetic Hard Courts (Most Indian Clubs) : The Dunlop AO is at its best on the hard and synthetic hard courts that make up the large majority of tennis infrastructure across Indian cities. The extra duty felt is purpose-built for these surfaces — the dense HD Pro Cloth nap provides enough resistance to handle the abrasion of acrylic and concrete without wearing down too quickly in a single session. This is the right ball for Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Chennai club players. Expect 2–3 hours of quality play before the felt fluffs noticeably; the ball remains playable after fluffing but spins more readily and slows slightly, which some players actually prefer for extended rallies.
- Clay Courts (DDA, Some Club Courts) : The AO will function on clay courts but is not its optimal environment. Extra duty felt is thicker than necessary for clay, which means the ball will accumulate clay in the felt more than a regular duty ball would. For frequent clay court play, a regular duty ball — or a ball specifically designed for clay surfaces — will deliver better performance and cleaner bounce. The AO is a reasonable all-court compromise for players who switch between hard and clay courts and want a single ball type.
- High Altitude (Hill Stations, Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie) : Standard pressurised balls like the AO fly faster and bounce higher at altitudes above approximately 1,200 metres due to reduced air resistance. At Indian hill station courts — Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie, Ooty — a high altitude specification ball is recommended for normal play feel. The AO is not a high altitude ball and will play noticeably faster than expected at these elevations.
Dunlop AO Tennis Ball vs other All-Court Tennis Balls on God of Sports:
| Ball | Type | Felt | ITF | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunlop AO (this ball) | Pressurised | Extra duty woven (HD Pro Cloth) | ✓ Approved | Club / recreational hard court play. Grand Slam official ball. Mid-premium tier. Good value in bulk. |
| Dunlop ATP Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular duty non-woven (Durafelt HD) | ✓ Approved | Entry-level club and training. Longer-lasting felt than AO. Lower bounce. Better value for budget-conscious players and coaches. |
| Wilson Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular / High Altitude (Dura-Weave) | ✓ Approved | Club and practice. High availability across India. Consistent, reliable. Slightly firmer feel than AO. Available in all surface variants. |
| HEAD Tour | Pressurised | All-court (SmartOptik + Encore) | ✓ Approved | Club and tournament. Encore technology extends durability. SmartOptik felt improves visibility. Step up from AO in durability and felt retention. |
| Yonex Tour | Pressurised | All-court woven (tour-grade) | ✓ Approved | Club and competitive. Poly-isoprene core for controlled feel and flight. Water-resistant surface. Used on ATP/WTA Tour. Premium tier — comparable to or above AO. |
| Babolat Gold All Court | Pressurised | All-court plush felt | ✓ Approved | Club and training. Plush felt favoured by spin players for predictable ball bite. Lively core with comfortable feel. Good for casual and intermediate play. |
Is This Ball Right for You?
- Club and recreational players on hard courts : The AO’s extra duty felt and HD Core make it an excellent club ball for Indian hard courts. Consistent out of the can, reliable bounce for 2–3 sessions, Grand Slam quality at an accessible price.
- Coaching and academy sessions : The bulk packs offer meaningful price-per-ball savings. The AO’s can-to-can consistency — a strength independent testers consistently praise — is valuable for coaches who need reliable performance across large ball quantities.
- Players who want Grand Slam-level quality without premium pricing : Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is the entry point to the same ball played at Melbourne Park. For players who want that provenance without paying for the ATP Official, this is the right choice.
Pack Size Guide — Which Pack Should You Buy of Dunlop AO Tennis Ball?
The Dunlop AO is available in four pack sizes at God of Sports. The right size depends on how often you play and how quickly you go through balls.| Pack | Best For |
|---|---|
| 3 Balls (1 can) → Buy here | Trying the ball, match play, occasional players |
| 12 Balls (4 cans) → Buy here | Regular club players — 1–2 sessions per week |
| 36 Balls (12 cans) → Buy here | Best value for frequent players, coaching sessions, club use |
| 72 Balls (24 cans) → Buy here | Academies, high-volume clubs, ball machines |
- Dunlop ATP Championship Tennis Balls — longer-lasting club ball, lower price
- HEAD Tour Tennis Balls — Encore technology, 33% longer felt life
- Wilson Championship Tennis Balls — Dura-Weave, available in all surface variants
- Yonex Tour Tennis Balls — poly-isoprene core, tour-grade woven felt
- All Tennis Balls at God of Sports
- Tennis at God of Sports — racquets, shoes, strings and accessories
FAQ's
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Frequently Bought Together
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GOS's Opinion
Overall
4.9
The Dunlop Australian Open Tennis Ball Can delivers exceptional quality and performance, mirroring the standards set at the Australian Open. With advanced technologies and durable construction, it’s a top choice for players seeking consistency and longevity in their game
Durability: (5/5)
Bounce Consistency: (5/5)
Feel: (4.5/5)
Speed & Play: (5/5)
Product Details
Specification
Description
FAQ's
Specification
| Official Status | Official Ball of the Australian Open Grand Slam + Emirates Australian Open Series |
| Ball Type | Pressurised |
| Felt Type | Extra Duty — HD Pro Cloth (premium woven) |
| Core Technology | HD Core — remastered Dunlop Forte Core |
| Court Surface | All-court (hard, clay, grass, synthetic) — optimal on hard court |
| ITF Approval | ITF Approved · USTA Approved |
| ITF Ball Type | Type 2 — Medium speed |
| Diameter | 6.54–6.86 cm (ITF standard) |
| Weight | 56–59.4 g (ITF standard) |
| Bounce Height | 135–147 cm (ITF standard, from 100-inch drop) |
| Colour | Optic Yellow |
| Can Contents | 3 balls per pressurised can |
| Available Packs | 3 balls / 12 balls / 36 balls / 72 balls |
| Made In | Philippines |
Description
What Makes Dunlop AO Tennis Ball Different:
- HD Core — Remastered for Consistency and Durability : The HD Core is Dunlop’s high-specification re-engineering of their longstanding Forte Core — the same rubber compound that built Dunlop’s reputation as a ball manufacturer over decades, now upgraded for more consistent playing characteristics and greater pressure retention. In practice this means the ball bounces predictably from the first strike to well into a session, without the early-game deadness some cheaper balls exhibit straight from the can. Competitive testers consistently describe the AO as feeling “match ready” immediately on opening, with a slightly heavier, denser feel on the racket compared to lighter balls like Penn Championship — a characteristic that many hard-court players find beneficial when playing into headwinds or generating heavy topspin.
- HD Pro Cloth — Premium Woven Felt for Visibility and All-Court Use : Where Dunlop’s ATP Championship ball uses a non-woven felt (Durafelt), the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball steps up to HD Pro Cloth — a premium woven felt engineered for tournament-level performance. Woven felt is denser and more tightly constructed than non-woven, which delivers better visibility in flight, a more consistent surface texture for spin interaction, and generally superior performance in the first hour of play. The trade-off is that woven felt can fluff up faster under heavy topspin on abrasive hard courts — a characteristic noted consistently across independent tests. Players who rely on heavy topspin or who play on rough acrylic surfaces will see felt wear sooner than flat hitters or synthetic-surface players.
- Extra Duty Felt — Designed for Hard Courts : The Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is classified as extra duty — the felt specification for hard courts and other abrasive surfaces. Extra duty felt has a thicker, denser nap than regular duty felt, which provides more resistance to the abrasion caused by hard court surfaces. India’s club tennis infrastructure is overwhelmingly hard court (acrylic, concrete, and synthetic hard), making the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball extra duty classification the right choice for the vast majority of Indian players. Regular duty felt is designed for softer surfaces like clay and indoor carpet — using a regular duty ball on an Indian hard court will result in felt wearing off significantly faster.
- ITF Approval — What It Means in Practice : ITF approval means the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball has passed the International Tennis Federation’s independent testing for bounce height (135–147cm from a 100-inch drop), weight (56–59.4g), diameter (6.54–6.86cm), deformation, and durability. In India, this matters for any player competing in club tournaments, state-level events, or AITA-sanctioned competitions — the governing body requires ITF-approved balls for sanctioned play. For recreational players, ITF approval is a quality benchmark that guarantees the ball meets international performance standards. The AO is approved by both ITF and USTA, making it legal for competitive play at all levels worldwide.
Court Surface Guide — Using the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball in India:
- Hard Courts and Synthetic Hard Courts (Most Indian Clubs) : The Dunlop AO is at its best on the hard and synthetic hard courts that make up the large majority of tennis infrastructure across Indian cities. The extra duty felt is purpose-built for these surfaces — the dense HD Pro Cloth nap provides enough resistance to handle the abrasion of acrylic and concrete without wearing down too quickly in a single session. This is the right ball for Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Chennai club players. Expect 2–3 hours of quality play before the felt fluffs noticeably; the ball remains playable after fluffing but spins more readily and slows slightly, which some players actually prefer for extended rallies.
- Clay Courts (DDA, Some Club Courts) : The AO will function on clay courts but is not its optimal environment. Extra duty felt is thicker than necessary for clay, which means the ball will accumulate clay in the felt more than a regular duty ball would. For frequent clay court play, a regular duty ball — or a ball specifically designed for clay surfaces — will deliver better performance and cleaner bounce. The AO is a reasonable all-court compromise for players who switch between hard and clay courts and want a single ball type.
- High Altitude (Hill Stations, Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie) : Standard pressurised balls like the AO fly faster and bounce higher at altitudes above approximately 1,200 metres due to reduced air resistance. At Indian hill station courts — Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie, Ooty — a high altitude specification ball is recommended for normal play feel. The AO is not a high altitude ball and will play noticeably faster than expected at these elevations.
Dunlop AO Tennis Ball vs other All-Court Tennis Balls on God of Sports:
| Ball | Type | Felt | ITF | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunlop AO (this ball) | Pressurised | Extra duty woven (HD Pro Cloth) | ✓ Approved | Club / recreational hard court play. Grand Slam official ball. Mid-premium tier. Good value in bulk. |
| Dunlop ATP Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular duty non-woven (Durafelt HD) | ✓ Approved | Entry-level club and training. Longer-lasting felt than AO. Lower bounce. Better value for budget-conscious players and coaches. |
| Wilson Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular / High Altitude (Dura-Weave) | ✓ Approved | Club and practice. High availability across India. Consistent, reliable. Slightly firmer feel than AO. Available in all surface variants. |
| HEAD Tour | Pressurised | All-court (SmartOptik + Encore) | ✓ Approved | Club and tournament. Encore technology extends durability. SmartOptik felt improves visibility. Step up from AO in durability and felt retention. |
| Yonex Tour | Pressurised | All-court woven (tour-grade) | ✓ Approved | Club and competitive. Poly-isoprene core for controlled feel and flight. Water-resistant surface. Used on ATP/WTA Tour. Premium tier — comparable to or above AO. |
| Babolat Gold All Court | Pressurised | All-court plush felt | ✓ Approved | Club and training. Plush felt favoured by spin players for predictable ball bite. Lively core with comfortable feel. Good for casual and intermediate play. |
Is This Ball Right for You?
- Club and recreational players on hard courts : The AO’s extra duty felt and HD Core make it an excellent club ball for Indian hard courts. Consistent out of the can, reliable bounce for 2–3 sessions, Grand Slam quality at an accessible price.
- Coaching and academy sessions : The bulk packs offer meaningful price-per-ball savings. The AO’s can-to-can consistency — a strength independent testers consistently praise — is valuable for coaches who need reliable performance across large ball quantities.
- Players who want Grand Slam-level quality without premium pricing : Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is the entry point to the same ball played at Melbourne Park. For players who want that provenance without paying for the ATP Official, this is the right choice.
Pack Size Guide — Which Pack Should You Buy of Dunlop AO Tennis Ball?
The Dunlop AO is available in four pack sizes at God of Sports. The right size depends on how often you play and how quickly you go through balls.| Pack | Best For |
|---|---|
| 3 Balls (1 can) → Buy here | Trying the ball, match play, occasional players |
| 12 Balls (4 cans) → Buy here | Regular club players — 1–2 sessions per week |
| 36 Balls (12 cans) → Buy here | Best value for frequent players, coaching sessions, club use |
| 72 Balls (24 cans) → Buy here | Academies, high-volume clubs, ball machines |
- Dunlop ATP Championship Tennis Balls — longer-lasting club ball, lower price
- HEAD Tour Tennis Balls — Encore technology, 33% longer felt life
- Wilson Championship Tennis Balls — Dura-Weave, available in all surface variants
- Yonex Tour Tennis Balls — poly-isoprene core, tour-grade woven felt
- All Tennis Balls at God of Sports
- Tennis at God of Sports — racquets, shoes, strings and accessories
FAQ's
A pressurised ball like the Dunlop AO has internal air pressure higher than the outside atmosphere — this is what gives it its lively bounce and responsive feel. The pressure is locked in by the sealed can; once opened, the ball slowly loses pressure over days and weeks of play. A pressureless ball has a thicker rubber wall and bounces from the rubber’s elasticity rather than internal pressure, meaning it lasts much longer but feels heavier and less lively. Pressurised balls are used in all competitive and most recreational play. Pressureless balls are popular for ball machines and high-volume training where cost-per-use matters more than feel.
Both are pressurised ITF-approved Dunlop balls, but they use different core and felt technology. The AO has the HD Core (higher specification, more consistent) and HD Pro Cloth woven felt (premium, tournament-grade). The ATP Championship uses Max Core and Durafelt HD non-woven felt — a slightly lower specification that is notably more affordable and generally rated as longer-lasting by club players due to the non-woven felt holding its shape better than woven felt under club play conditions. The AO has Grand Slam provenance and a livelier, softer feel; the ATP Championship is the more durable everyday club ball.
Yes. The Dunlop AO is ITF Approved, which is the international standard recognised by the All India Tennis Association (AITA) and most club and state tournaments in India. Any AITA-sanctioned event that specifies ITF-approved balls will permit the Dunlop AO.
The Dunlop AO Tennis Balls are available in a standard size and are predominantly yellow with the Australian Open logo.
| Official Status | Official Ball of the Australian Open Grand Slam + Emirates Australian Open Series |
| Ball Type | Pressurised |
| Felt Type | Extra Duty — HD Pro Cloth (premium woven) |
| Core Technology | HD Core — remastered Dunlop Forte Core |
| Court Surface | All-court (hard, clay, grass, synthetic) — optimal on hard court |
| ITF Approval | ITF Approved · USTA Approved |
| ITF Ball Type | Type 2 — Medium speed |
| Diameter | 6.54–6.86 cm (ITF standard) |
| Weight | 56–59.4 g (ITF standard) |
| Bounce Height | 135–147 cm (ITF standard, from 100-inch drop) |
| Colour | Optic Yellow |
| Can Contents | 3 balls per pressurised can |
| Available Packs | 3 balls / 12 balls / 36 balls / 72 balls |
| Made In | Philippines |
What Makes Dunlop AO Tennis Ball Different:
- HD Core — Remastered for Consistency and Durability : The HD Core is Dunlop’s high-specification re-engineering of their longstanding Forte Core — the same rubber compound that built Dunlop’s reputation as a ball manufacturer over decades, now upgraded for more consistent playing characteristics and greater pressure retention. In practice this means the ball bounces predictably from the first strike to well into a session, without the early-game deadness some cheaper balls exhibit straight from the can. Competitive testers consistently describe the AO as feeling “match ready” immediately on opening, with a slightly heavier, denser feel on the racket compared to lighter balls like Penn Championship — a characteristic that many hard-court players find beneficial when playing into headwinds or generating heavy topspin.
- HD Pro Cloth — Premium Woven Felt for Visibility and All-Court Use : Where Dunlop’s ATP Championship ball uses a non-woven felt (Durafelt), the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball steps up to HD Pro Cloth — a premium woven felt engineered for tournament-level performance. Woven felt is denser and more tightly constructed than non-woven, which delivers better visibility in flight, a more consistent surface texture for spin interaction, and generally superior performance in the first hour of play. The trade-off is that woven felt can fluff up faster under heavy topspin on abrasive hard courts — a characteristic noted consistently across independent tests. Players who rely on heavy topspin or who play on rough acrylic surfaces will see felt wear sooner than flat hitters or synthetic-surface players.
- Extra Duty Felt — Designed for Hard Courts : The Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is classified as extra duty — the felt specification for hard courts and other abrasive surfaces. Extra duty felt has a thicker, denser nap than regular duty felt, which provides more resistance to the abrasion caused by hard court surfaces. India’s club tennis infrastructure is overwhelmingly hard court (acrylic, concrete, and synthetic hard), making the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball extra duty classification the right choice for the vast majority of Indian players. Regular duty felt is designed for softer surfaces like clay and indoor carpet — using a regular duty ball on an Indian hard court will result in felt wearing off significantly faster.
- ITF Approval — What It Means in Practice : ITF approval means the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball has passed the International Tennis Federation’s independent testing for bounce height (135–147cm from a 100-inch drop), weight (56–59.4g), diameter (6.54–6.86cm), deformation, and durability. In India, this matters for any player competing in club tournaments, state-level events, or AITA-sanctioned competitions — the governing body requires ITF-approved balls for sanctioned play. For recreational players, ITF approval is a quality benchmark that guarantees the ball meets international performance standards. The AO is approved by both ITF and USTA, making it legal for competitive play at all levels worldwide.
Court Surface Guide — Using the Dunlop AO Tennis Ball in India:
- Hard Courts and Synthetic Hard Courts (Most Indian Clubs) : The Dunlop AO is at its best on the hard and synthetic hard courts that make up the large majority of tennis infrastructure across Indian cities. The extra duty felt is purpose-built for these surfaces — the dense HD Pro Cloth nap provides enough resistance to handle the abrasion of acrylic and concrete without wearing down too quickly in a single session. This is the right ball for Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Chennai club players. Expect 2–3 hours of quality play before the felt fluffs noticeably; the ball remains playable after fluffing but spins more readily and slows slightly, which some players actually prefer for extended rallies.
- Clay Courts (DDA, Some Club Courts) : The AO will function on clay courts but is not its optimal environment. Extra duty felt is thicker than necessary for clay, which means the ball will accumulate clay in the felt more than a regular duty ball would. For frequent clay court play, a regular duty ball — or a ball specifically designed for clay surfaces — will deliver better performance and cleaner bounce. The AO is a reasonable all-court compromise for players who switch between hard and clay courts and want a single ball type.
- High Altitude (Hill Stations, Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie) : Standard pressurised balls like the AO fly faster and bounce higher at altitudes above approximately 1,200 metres due to reduced air resistance. At Indian hill station courts — Shimla, Darjeeling, Mussoorie, Ooty — a high altitude specification ball is recommended for normal play feel. The AO is not a high altitude ball and will play noticeably faster than expected at these elevations.
Dunlop AO Tennis Ball vs other All-Court Tennis Balls on God of Sports:
| Ball | Type | Felt | ITF | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunlop AO (this ball) | Pressurised | Extra duty woven (HD Pro Cloth) | ✓ Approved | Club / recreational hard court play. Grand Slam official ball. Mid-premium tier. Good value in bulk. |
| Dunlop ATP Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular duty non-woven (Durafelt HD) | ✓ Approved | Entry-level club and training. Longer-lasting felt than AO. Lower bounce. Better value for budget-conscious players and coaches. |
| Wilson Championship | Pressurised | Extra / Regular / High Altitude (Dura-Weave) | ✓ Approved | Club and practice. High availability across India. Consistent, reliable. Slightly firmer feel than AO. Available in all surface variants. |
| HEAD Tour | Pressurised | All-court (SmartOptik + Encore) | ✓ Approved | Club and tournament. Encore technology extends durability. SmartOptik felt improves visibility. Step up from AO in durability and felt retention. |
| Yonex Tour | Pressurised | All-court woven (tour-grade) | ✓ Approved | Club and competitive. Poly-isoprene core for controlled feel and flight. Water-resistant surface. Used on ATP/WTA Tour. Premium tier — comparable to or above AO. |
| Babolat Gold All Court | Pressurised | All-court plush felt | ✓ Approved | Club and training. Plush felt favoured by spin players for predictable ball bite. Lively core with comfortable feel. Good for casual and intermediate play. |
Is This Ball Right for You?
- Club and recreational players on hard courts : The AO’s extra duty felt and HD Core make it an excellent club ball for Indian hard courts. Consistent out of the can, reliable bounce for 2–3 sessions, Grand Slam quality at an accessible price.
- Coaching and academy sessions : The bulk packs offer meaningful price-per-ball savings. The AO’s can-to-can consistency — a strength independent testers consistently praise — is valuable for coaches who need reliable performance across large ball quantities.
- Players who want Grand Slam-level quality without premium pricing : Dunlop AO Tennis Ball is the entry point to the same ball played at Melbourne Park. For players who want that provenance without paying for the ATP Official, this is the right choice.
Pack Size Guide — Which Pack Should You Buy of Dunlop AO Tennis Ball?
The Dunlop AO is available in four pack sizes at God of Sports. The right size depends on how often you play and how quickly you go through balls.| Pack | Best For |
|---|---|
| 3 Balls (1 can) → Buy here | Trying the ball, match play, occasional players |
| 12 Balls (4 cans) → Buy here | Regular club players — 1–2 sessions per week |
| 36 Balls (12 cans) → Buy here | Best value for frequent players, coaching sessions, club use |
| 72 Balls (24 cans) → Buy here | Academies, high-volume clubs, ball machines |
- Dunlop ATP Championship Tennis Balls — longer-lasting club ball, lower price
- HEAD Tour Tennis Balls — Encore technology, 33% longer felt life
- Wilson Championship Tennis Balls — Dura-Weave, available in all surface variants
- Yonex Tour Tennis Balls — poly-isoprene core, tour-grade woven felt
- All Tennis Balls at God of Sports
- Tennis at God of Sports — racquets, shoes, strings and accessories
A pressurised ball like the Dunlop AO has internal air pressure higher than the outside atmosphere — this is what gives it its lively bounce and responsive feel. The pressure is locked in by the sealed can; once opened, the ball slowly loses pressure over days and weeks of play. A pressureless ball has a thicker rubber wall and bounces from the rubber’s elasticity rather than internal pressure, meaning it lasts much longer but feels heavier and less lively. Pressurised balls are used in all competitive and most recreational play. Pressureless balls are popular for ball machines and high-volume training where cost-per-use matters more than feel.
Both are pressurised ITF-approved Dunlop balls, but they use different core and felt technology. The AO has the HD Core (higher specification, more consistent) and HD Pro Cloth woven felt (premium, tournament-grade). The ATP Championship uses Max Core and Durafelt HD non-woven felt — a slightly lower specification that is notably more affordable and generally rated as longer-lasting by club players due to the non-woven felt holding its shape better than woven felt under club play conditions. The AO has Grand Slam provenance and a livelier, softer feel; the ATP Championship is the more durable everyday club ball.
Yes. The Dunlop AO is ITF Approved, which is the international standard recognised by the All India Tennis Association (AITA) and most club and state tournaments in India. Any AITA-sanctioned event that specifies ITF-approved balls will permit the Dunlop AO.
The Dunlop AO Tennis Balls are available in a standard size and are predominantly yellow with the Australian Open logo.
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