[QUOTE=silenus]
As for the camo gear…the Padres wear camo every spring for one game in honor of the military. I think the uniforms look sharp. But as always in sports, money talks.
[/QUOTE]
Good idea. If I was a Padres fan, I’d get a camo uniform so no one noticed I was wearing a Padres shirt, too!
My Giants Super Bowl XLII Championship hat is black and white. And while my preference would be to have it in team colors blue and white, I just happily remind myself that my Super Bowl XLII Championship hat is a Giants hat at all.
[QUOTE=Elendil’s Heir]
Word. We went to a game at the Jake, er, Progressive Field hate the new name
[/QUOTE]
Call it the Jake. I’ll call it after the insurance company when it decreases the price of insurance premiums. Until then, its the Jake in my book.
Incidentally, all MLB teams will soon be wearing blue (and ugly) “Welcome Back Veterans” caps like like this one during an upcoming promotion. Welcoming back veterans is fine, but those hats are not.
[QUOTE=Siege]
Unfortunately, here in Pittsburgh, we’ve been deluged by a flood of sports gear in pink. It’s usually stuff for the Steelers, but I think I’ve seen things for the Pirates and the Penguins. Pittsburgh’s colors are black and gold. Now, I’ve never been particularly feminine or fond of pink anyway, so that affects my point of view. I don’t care. It’s still awful and something I’d never own.
[/QUOTE]
Ugh, I hate those stupid pink Steeler/Buco/Pens shirts. Its irritating and it makes no damn sense whatsoever. My girlfriend has one of those pink Pirates shirts and I always grumble about it.
I remember seeing the non-team color trend back in Jersey when I was in middle school and junior high ('96-'99). People loved to wear Yankees hats in non-team colors that would match whatever outfit they happened to be wearing that day. My cousin had a series of multi-colored Yankees hats and he was living in Greensboro, NC. If Greensboro had it in '98 then its likely been far reaching for a while.
[QUOTE=zamboniracer]
Call it the Jake. I’ll call it after the insurance company when it decreases the price of insurance premiums. Until then, its the Jake in my book.
Incidentally, all MLB teams will soon be wearing blue (and ugly) “Welcome Back Veterans” caps like like this one during an upcoming promotion. Welcoming back veterans is fine, but those hats are not.
[/QUOTE]
I understand it’s all about the Benjamins, but I’d rather they named it something, y’know, less corporatized: Indians Park, Tribe Field, Cleveland Park, New League Park (the original League Park was open from 1891-1946, and is now just an open field), or the like.
I kinda like the “Welcome Back Veterans” cap, too - looks like Chief Wahoo has his patriotic warpaint on.
[QUOTE=Dinsdale]
Is this trend widely spread beyond Chicago?
[/QUOTE]
Yes, so much so that I can’t even complain even though it does bother me.
What I will still complain about is the Giants hat that was dodger blue & white, and the Giants hat that was green with a white logo and yellow brim. Those are just unholy. And those hats zamboniracer linked to are hideous.
These idiotic off-color team clothes are incredibly efficient at one thing, one very important thing. It allows morons, douchebags and losers to readily self-identify themselves for sorting. Remember, knowing is half the battle.
I’m okay with this sort of thing if there’s a valid reason for it. Examples:
-A few weeks ago, the Washington Nationals had an environmental awareness night (or some such, I forget the name that they used) at their stadium. That night, the players were to wear (the game was rescheduled due to rain) green versions of their usual hats (which are red.) Green Nats hats were also available at the stadium stores.
-Several months ago, when the Yankees played an exhibition game against Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, maroon and orange (Hokie colors) Yankee hats were available at the university book store.
Aside from situations like these, it kind of bugs me, especially the paint-it-pink mentality aimed at women who want to wear a baseball cap without any risk of being mistaken for a regular fan.
It only irks me because I have a Brooklyn Dodgers hat, and it now looks to the world like a Red Sox hat that’s light blue with a white logo.
The pink doesn’t bother me, especially as kids’ wear, because no team’s colors are pink. Seeing a Yankees hat in the Padres 1970s colors just makes me think the wearer is color blind.
I’d complain about flattened brims, too, but I have to go check my lawn for kids.
Baseball (team) caps: If you are a male, if the team has never worn a hat on the field during a game, you can’t wear it either. Though I could see an exception for a World Series Commemoration type hat. If you are female, it’d be nice to see you following the same rules, but I’ll let it slide.
Other team caps: Eh, keep the same colors. Beyond that, who cares? They are just trying to be as cool as baseball players anyway
Jerseys: Same rules apply as the baseball cap rule, but it goes for every sport.
In Pittsburgh, every true fan wore the black and gold, men, women, and children. People decorated the football room, and in some cases, their entire houses and cars, in the team colors.
All was well.
Then I started seeing pink and white Steelers jerseys a few years ago.
That sound is Art Rooney spinning in his grave. It is an abomination.
[QUOTE=Apocalypso]
In Pittsburgh, every true fan wore the black and gold, men, women, and children. People decorated the football room, and in some cases, their entire houses and cars, in the team colors.
All was well.
Then I started seeing pink and white Steelers jerseys a few years ago.
That sound is Art Rooney spinning in his grave. It is an abomination.
[/QUOTE]
Speaking of graves and colors and Pittsburgh…posted in here some time ago was the funeral of one faithful:
Overall, yeah, I don’t get why they vary the colors. I thought team sports were a usually a metaphor for war, rallying around your colors, etc. I can understand reversing the colors, e.g. NY letters in black on a white Yankees cap, but going with totally different ones like pink? Nah!
OP, didn’t the Bears choose blue/orange to imitate U of I or vice-versa?