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Always read the label

Di Ian Cleverly • 27th January 2011 05:36pm • Postato in Rouleur

Unveiling of the new season’s team kit invariably attracts a disproportionate amount of comment. There is little else to discuss over the winter before racing starts in earnest, so the designers of what the pro peloton will be sporting this year undergo close scrutiny while we twiddle our thumbs.

Race commentators and fans alike will have their work cut out if Garmin-Cervelo, Sky and Leopard-Trek are all on the front setting up their sprinters for a bunch gallop. (By the way, that’s pronounced ‘LAY-oh-pard’, not Leopard). It seems black is the new black. Telling yer Boasson Hagen from yer Haussler for yer Hushovd is the new challenge.

The days of garish jerseys and shorts that made the unfortunate wearers objects of ridicule are long gone – and no bad thing – but at least you knew who was who. Pantani and Chiappucci’s attacking antics garnered hours of TV coverage for sponsors Carrera jeans, the predominantly white jersey seemingly always on the front. But it’s the shorts that everyone remembers; faux-denim abominations that preceded the current ‘jeggings’ look by some 25 years. It took a brave man (or an Italian fashion victim) to carry off a look wearing those babies.

Yes, the Carrera shorts were pretty special, but the entry of French DIY chain Castorama into cycling sponsorship a few years later raised the bar much higher. Even the late, great Laurent Fignon, a man with a certain je ne sais quoi style-wise, struggled to maintain his dignity in those shocking approximations of a workman’s overalls. The kit had the effect of turning the wearer into a cross between a children’s TV presenter and Bob the Builder’s assistant. Only the mullet-supreme of Laurent Brochard seemed to suit the image, but for all the wrong reasons.

Robert Millar was saved from the ignominy of wearing Le Groupement’s multi-coloured cock-up of a jersey for any length of time by the collapse of the pyramid sales company within months of the team’s launch – a blessing in disguise if ever I saw one. Mario Cipollini’s many crimes against the world of fashion should have received close attention from the Lycra Police, yet are somehow beyond ridicule. It’s Mario: let it go.

So, no garish clobber in my clothing cupboard. Less is more when it comes to kit design, especially in the shorts department. It’s got to be black, although that is not without its drawbacks. I splashed out on a reassuringly expensive pair in the summer and felt understandably distressed wearing them the first time that they felt less than comfortable. Closer examination at the roadside revealed the leg grippers had been stitched to the outside; the machinist obviously had an off day. A thoroughly indignant email was being composed in my head on the ride home.

Mrs C got the whole story in the kitchen (apart from how much the shorts cost, of course). With years of experience in imbecilic behaviour, and without so much as a backward glance from her laptop screen, she said: “You have checked they’re not inside-out, haven’t you?”

Perhaps faux-denim shorts have their advantages after all.

Commenti

Christopher Kvam

27th January 2011 08:33pm

No trouble telling Hushovd apart this year!!!!

ian cleverly

27th January 2011 09:42pm

We'll see…

Jon Cannings

27th January 2011 11:09pm

you need to get yourself some white shorts, LAD.

Mike Owen

27th January 2011 11:26pm

The sad thing about Robert Millar and the Le Groupment jersey is that the last pro race he rode was the British Championships on the Isle of Man (the photo may be from that race) and if the team had continued he would have been spared the indignity of the team jersey. He may even prefer the Le Groupment top to the Fagor jersey…
In the photo of Cippolini he isn't actually wearing lycra, he was riding so hard he actually flayed the skin from his own body.

Mike Owen

27th January 2011 11:30pm

Reading my last post back I realise I didn't make it clear that Millar won the championship, in fact he crushed the field. And is the disaster of the jersey offset by the fact he was riding a Bianchi?

Jamie Clarkson

27th January 2011 11:40pm

Say what you will, but the Castorama was classic and you could always spot them in a pack. Perfect!

Don Williams

28th January 2011 08:09am

Fignon actually was responsible for the design of the Castorama team kit.

Arnaud Bachelard

28th January 2011 11:04am

Ride naked !

Steven Green

31st January 2011 02:30pm

How quickly we forget Footon-Servetto…

Gem Atkinson

31st January 2011 06:55pm

Ha loving the jeggins reference. That was one hard to love kit….

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