To Look Pro is to strive to Look Fantastic and to be at our ease on a bicycle. It is to walk the line between form and function and is based entirely on the premise that the professional peloton is far more experienced in this endeavour than we shall ever be. Their lessons speak through their actions on the bike, serving as a beacon to provide us the opportunity to learn from their mistakes and triumphs. But this is a dangerous game; being a Pro does not mean one Looks Fantastic. Because of the Commutative Property of Looking Pro, Looking Fantastic does not mean you Look Pro. The Pros are our inspiration, but care must be taken to choose your muse wisely.
Looking Pro in good weather is an simple matter; bibs, jersey, (white) socks, shoes, and helmet. Tan your guns, match your kit properly, and get on with it. But when the chill sets in and layers are added, the matter becomes quite complicated quite quickly. Rule #21 and Good Taste dictate that we dress in our Flandrian Best; we don knickers or knee warmers, gillets, arm warmers, Belgian Booties or shoe covers, slip caps beneath our helmets, and hope to encounter some good old-fashioned gritty roads.
The preference for knee warmers over tights distills down to one elemental fact: no matter how one might try to disguise them, tights are simply not an attractive garment. Not on cyclists. Not on skiers. Not on overweight women at the market. Not on fit women at the Yoga studio. Not on runners, not on swimmers. Not in a box, not on a fox.
As is customary, I will leverage the powers of photography to illustrate my point. A casual glance at this particular photo shows a collection of proper hardmen rattling over the muddy cobbles of Omloop Het Nieuwsblad. It is plainly obvious that perennial hardman Tomeke Boonen was suffering from some kind of mental trauma, as he chose to don full tights rather than his usual knee warmers. These actions are not without their consequence, and you can plainly see he is ill at ease and destined to perform below his best for the remainder of the season. Eddy Boasson Hagen, in the blurry distance, suffered a similar fate and it took him until July to recover from his mistake. Boonen wasn’t so lucky, presumably because such an offense holds greater punishment for actual Flandrians as opposed to étrangers.
Then we have the others. Thor Hushovd, Lars Boom, and Philipe Gilbert all have two things in common: they all Look Fantastic, and they’re all dressed in their Flandrian Best. Hushovd has obviously already taken the safety off the howitzers, while Gilbert, if I’m not mistaken, is smirking – apparently at Boonen’s choice. Boom’s face can’t be read, but his posture is that of a Dutchman with intense Belgian aspirations.
When making decisions about how to dress for the cold and wet, keep the following points in mind.
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View Comments
@Souleur
I would add that the sweat is not the problem...sunburn in the shape of the vents on my LAS...that's the problem. That's why it's a cap and not a headband. Just happens that they have a little sweatband with a silicon bead built in.
BTW how can you go three years without taking all that stuff apart on your bike form maintenance ?? I need to strip mine down every six months if nothing else to clean the salt out of the headset.
Or triafletes wearing arm warmers and sleeveless jerseys.
@paolo
Although a few Sundays ago here in "sunny SoCal" I set out on my ride at 0700, and the temp was 38 degrees. Yeah, for this part of the country, that's pretty damn cold.
How does a cotton cycling cap with the brim cut off fit in? They are awesome for sweat retention and dissipation and temperature regulation, plus they are not a skullcap.
At the Lombardia in October...
out of sheer contrariness, gonna argue for tights in the real cold (
@frank
those tires are horrible in color.
@anotherdownunder
I agree that the arm warmers alone are very non pro. (Or worse, they could be arm compression garments). By way of explanation of the sleeveless-ness, he is wearing a race jersey or a tri-suit. It needs to be sleeveless as it goes under your wetsuit for the swim and after the ride you run in it. Much cooler sleeveless. Not excusing just explaining.
@doubleR
Yep, it's been the coldest winter in the 15 years I have been here. I'm in the SF Valley, where are you @ ?? Sgt is only 1.5 hrs away in Santa Barbara and there is a chap here called LA Dave who I am guessing is in LA. We may well have a So Cal chapter!!
@girl
Surely Triahtletes are exempt from needing to look "pro" or even just fabulous on a bike on the grounds that, well, they're Triathletes.