Nowadays, in many applications metal parts are replaced by light-weight polymer products. As a result of the processing history, these polymer fabricates are, more often than not, anisotropic, leading to a direction dependent mechanical performance. Recently we showed the frictional response of isotactic polypropylene is improved by pre-stretching the crystalline network. In the present work, the scratch response of isotropic high-density polyethylene (HDPE) is compared with that of several pre-stretched samples of the same material, subjected to a single-asperity contact with a rigid diamond indenter. The surface penetration and lateral force are measured in-situ for a range of applied loads and sliding velocities. In the direction perpend...