Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic

In the early 2000s, pro gamers had much simpler uniforms. They wore cotton hoodies and T-shirts while competing for prize pools that were in the tens of thousands of dollars, rather than the hundreds of thousands. You can see how much has changed from looking at esports jerseys.

SK Gaming’s Counter-Strike team celebrating their first place win at the Intel Extreme Masters 2005. (Image via SK Gaming

SK Gaming, founded in 1997, is still a force in the Counter-Strike competitive scene, but their team’s fashion choices have changed a lot since those early days. Today, SK Gaming pros have traded in the hoodies for short-sleeved athletic jerseys made out of synthetics rather than cotton.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
(image via SK Gaming/Twitter)

Image via SK Gaming/Twitter

More athletic styles first picked up steam in 2006, when Fnatic’s Counter-Strike team wore these black T-shirts with thin orange lines on the shoulders, almost like racing stripes. Back then, the team wore their shirts with jeans, which de-emphasised the athletic vibe of the shoulder detailing. Still, the trend of dressing pro gamers like cyclists took off after that.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
Two pro gamers from Birmingham Salvo show off the racing stripes on their uniforms for the CGS in 2008 (image via VideogameVisionary.com/Flickr)

Two pro gamers from Birmingham Salvo show off the racing stripes on their uniforms for the CGS in 2008. Image via VideogameVisionary.com/Flickr

In 2007 and 2008, the racing stripe showed up on many team uniforms in the Championship Gaming Series, which was North America’s first televised esports tournament series. The CGS tried to model its league structure after traditional sports, and that included the look of the jerseys. The shirts on the CGS had a much looser fit than any cyclist would wear in a race, but the short sleeves, bright colours and logos definitely made these pro gamers look more like riders in the Tour de France… except they were all still wearing jeans.

This faux-athletic trend for esports jerseys has stuck around for a whole decade, with very few exceptions. As noted, SK Gaming’s teams now wear synthetic short-sleeved jerseys that look like they could withstand a more strenuous workout than sitting in a desk chair. When tournament settings get cold, SK Gaming’s pros don’t always opt for a hoodie. Instead, they have these official black windbreakers.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
Windbreakers, with racing stripes. (image via SK Gaming)

Windbreakers, with racing stripes. Image via SK Gaming.

One alternate trend that has ducked in and out of favour is the polo shirt, for those who prefer to see pro gamers as equivalent to tennis players rather than cyclists. Starting in 2015, Gambit Esports clad their CS:GO team in red and blue polo shirts with a star logo that looks like it’d be at home on a 2002 punk kid rather than on a modern-day team shooter squad.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
(image via Gambit Esports/Twitter)

Image via Gambit Esports/Twitter

Athletic-inspired styles might finally be on the outs. Last April, eUnited partnered with ULT apparel to create a new line of uniforms, and the results do look different from anything we’ve seen in a while. ULT’s designs are black cotton T-shirts, featuring the logo and players’ names. It’s all very 2005:

In a promotional video, James “Clayster” Eubanks takes note of the shirt’s comfort, saying, “this is, by far, the comfiest material I have ever felt. You could sleep in that. You could make a blanket out of it.”

The shirt front looks more toned-down compared to the amped athletic vibe of other esports jerseys. They’re plain black with just an eUnited logo on the left side. The rest of the shirt makes room for ads and other text, with logos on the sleeves, plus a motto, player names and the full team name on the back. There’s still a dark grey stripe on the side of the sleeve made out of a breathable fabric, almost like a subtle tribute to esports’ long-running obsession with traditional sports styles.

The new eUnited designs harken back to a simpler time, as reflected in these old Ninjas In Pyjamas outfits from 2006.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
(image via SK Gaming)

Image via SK Gaming.

Back then, the players wore either the muted olive green Ninjas polo shirt with a relatively tasteful embroidered “NiP” logo (centre), or the even more relaxed T-shirts with the team’s name in a font justified to the left side (far left, second from right). The players also had hoodies with a simple “Ninjas” on the front, only visible when zipped (far right). The diversity of looks here captures the slapdash, up-and-coming, indie vibe of CS at the time. The gamers look casual, comfortable, yet united enough to each be showing off their team’s name.

These days, Ninjas in Pyjamas’ jerseys are more athletic and more corporate. They also feature a big ad for Betway, as well as smaller ads for the rest of the team’s sponsors. Having logos on team jerseys isn’t even typical for traditional sports, by the way. Just this year, six NBA teams added corporate logos to team jerseys. In esports, however, it’s become common to see a brand taking centre stage.

Esports Team Jerseys Keep Getting More Athletic
(image via Ninjas in Pyjamas)

Image via Ninjas in Pyjamas.

This modern-day Ninjas In Pyjamas look makes the team’s 2006 style choices feel all the more distant. But ULT apparel has just partnered with Versus Sports, a Madden esports organisation, so perhaps more understated esports looks are on the horizon this season.


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