- Sep 12, 2016
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Ever since I started watching cycling on TV, I'm wondering whether wearing the leaders jersey issued by the organizers impacts your performance. I don't mean the supposed extra motivation it gives you, but more in terms of aerodynamics, especially during TT's. Riders get to wear skinsuits issued by the organization (tailor made thankfully)
Often teams with TT specialists, such as Sunweb and Team Sky, use windtunnel-tested suits with all kind of new features that are said to gain you an X amount of seconds per km.
Take this year's Giro for example. Tom Dumoulin won the Giro in the final GT, with a 31 second advantage on GC. He was in his own windtunnel-tested skinsuit, while Quintana was in the organizers' pink skinsuit. Say that Dumoulin's skinsuit would gain him 1-2 seconds per km, he basically won the Giro because of his skinsuit. Had Tom been in pink, no way that Quintana would beat him in a TT, but still.
Does wearing organization issued jerseys/skinsuit impact riders' performance or is this overrated? It keeps me puzzling...
Often teams with TT specialists, such as Sunweb and Team Sky, use windtunnel-tested suits with all kind of new features that are said to gain you an X amount of seconds per km.
Take this year's Giro for example. Tom Dumoulin won the Giro in the final GT, with a 31 second advantage on GC. He was in his own windtunnel-tested skinsuit, while Quintana was in the organizers' pink skinsuit. Say that Dumoulin's skinsuit would gain him 1-2 seconds per km, he basically won the Giro because of his skinsuit. Had Tom been in pink, no way that Quintana would beat him in a TT, but still.
Does wearing organization issued jerseys/skinsuit impact riders' performance or is this overrated? It keeps me puzzling...