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Oh, the fewer teams with POC the better. I've never forgiven them for the bucktoothed blobfish aero helmet.
T-Mobile redux!Their continental squad will race with this kit. I've read that EF will be in the same style, don't know if it's true. This kit is made by Ekoi, not Rapha and the helmet is from Kabuto instead of POC.
Yeah, that is just the worst piece of filth any cyclist has ever donned.
And all Danes wear it on the track and in international level time trials...
Color scheme is gorgeous here. Some really nice looking kits all the way around.
Color scheme is gorgeous here. Some really nice looking kits all the way around.
Glorious!Amore e Vita provides some much-needed jersey greatness:
Should have stuck with the ducks and tie-dye just as a F*** you to the UCI.View: https://twitter.com/EFprocycling/status/1355489734903148550
So, EF made a jersey with a set of measurements included to assure that there is no rule-breaking in the kit
Should have stuck with the ducks and tie-dye just as a F*** you to the UCI.
And also because it was one of the greatest team uniforms in sporting history.
The wall of mediocrity
I do find it a bit lame myself and smacks of the "2 kool 4 skool" X games posturingWhile I agree that UCI are entirely hopeless in terms of consistency and prioritising in the application of their rules, I think the press releases and attitude that the team have assumed looks to me like nothing other than truculent immature posturing. Quite how that is meant to represent a company whose business is predicated upon appealing to the parents of adolescents I am not sure.
But from a distance, when the pettiness of the detailing is unseen, a smart enough and distinctive kit.
Quite possibly. They could have registered the kit, didn't, but factored in the fine because they've then used that to fire up their promotion for the next kit, and now people are talking about them. Vaughters knows about business and PR. You can say a lot about him, and I indeed have done, but you can't say he's not shrewd when it comes to this side of things, and they've painted it as "the old stuffy suits at the UCI won't let us have any fun and we're the cool rebels you should support" when in reality it's "our PR department deliberately baited them into a reaction so that we could paint ourselves as the good guys." A bit conspiratorial, but I certainly wouldn't put it past them.I don't think that would have been against the rules at all. Nor did the UCI have any objection to the "ducks and tie die". I don't think there are any restrictions on the appearance of kit, apart from possibly public decency issues (and alcohol/tobacco/gambling promotion).
The fine at the Giro was because it was an unregistered kit, and EF management knew full well what they needed to do and by when to register it. If they are either incompetent or deliberately provocative in that administrative responsibility, they deserve no sympathy for being fined: I suspect it was a very deliberate part of the publicity drive.
Those issues are not mutually exclusive. They could work harder on safety and still have approved gearMy point was if the UCI spent as much time worrying about things like barrier designs or course safety or moto's covering an event etc in collaboration with the event organisers as they do about registration of kits, or logo placements or sock lengths or any other numerous things that in the grand scheme, the sport would be be in a better and safer place.
The new EF/Rapha kit just emphasises the point that worrying about kits is a fairly trivial waste of resources
And the evidence that the latter is at the expense of the former is what exactly?My point was if the UCI spent as much time worrying about things like barrier designs or course safety or moto's covering an event etc in collaboration with the event organisers as they do about registration of kits, or logo placements or sock lengths or any other numerous things that in the grand scheme, the sport would be be in a better and safer place.
The new EF/Rapha kit just emphasises the point that worrying about kits is a fairly trivial waste of resources
Rather than dissecting the ins and outs of Rapha and EF messing with their kit to wind up the UCI, I'm more concerned with how Carlton Kirby is going to tell the difference between that bottom row of Trek, Quebeka and UAE almost identical kits !
Add to them the FDJ, Bike Exchange, Cofidis, Israel, Bora and Wanty white blandness (I'll give AG2R a pass as their kits is quite funny/cool) I fear it's goin to be a long and frustrating year of shouting at the TV
Bring back Euskadi to World Tour level! With no CCC this year we are carrot-lessIt is kind of amazing that there is one of each of: dark blue, red, yellow, black and red, and pink. Two easily distinguishable black and two lighter blue. Everyone else is primarily white.