China Daily (Hong Kong)

Olympians suit up in high-tech apparel to shave seconds

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in New York

When seconds count, the right clothing matters.

For the Rio Olympics, Nike used 3-D printing technology to develop small silicone protrusion­s for redirectin­g air flow around the runner. Body scanners helped Adidas design suits to keep swimmers in ideal form. Swiss cycling specialist Assos turned to wind tunnels to craft custom, form-fitting suits for the US cycling team.

Innovation­s in suits and shoes have sped up, thanks to advancemen­ts in how clothing is designed and tested — all as manufactur­ers get creative in working around rules enacted to prevent the apparel equivalent of doping.

“We make sure we stay inside those rules, but we will get to the very edge of them if we can,” said Adam Clement, senior creative director for team sports at Under Armour. “Our goal is to innovate in a way that ultimately makes the Olympic rules change. We’ ll adjust, but we’ ll feel proud of that accomplish­ment.”

Why it matters

Clothing needs to be form-fitting to minimize air resistance, especially for speed events in cycling, swimming and track.

“Four seconds in four kilometers is (the difference between) first and eighth place,” said Jim Miller, vice president of athletics with USA Cycling.

But the wrong materials or designs could mean discomfort and unnecessar­y weight — counteract­ing the gains from drag reduction.

Even when speed isn’t a factor, clothing promises to reduce irritation­s such as sweat and heat — crucial in a hot climate like Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where the Summer Olympics open on Friday.

Preventing problems

Clothing alone won’t make up for years of training, good coaching and the right body mechanics, but the wrong kind can hurt.

“You’re not going to catch magic on race day from magic shoes,” US marathoner Desiree Linden said in an interview. “But if I train really hard and I get a blister or don’t step on my foot right, the race doesn’t matter anymore.”

A late introducti­on of Under Armour’s high-tech suit for speedskati­ng got some of the blame for the U.S. team’s dismal performanc­e two years ago in Sochi, Russia. UA said it is already testing suits for 2018 and will try to get them to competitor­s sooner, with more customizat­ion for individual body types.

For Rio, US cyclists got their Assos suits just two weeks ago and will have the option of wearing their reg- ular outfits if they don’t like the fit.

The outfits

Athletes typically get clothing and shoes as part of brand-sponsorshi­p deals. Running specialist Brooks turned to Linden to help design her Hyperion shoes. The shoe fabric eliminates seams to reduce the risk of blisters, while rubber rings on the bottom boost traction in slippery terrains and serve as barriers to contain and propel energy back up, according to the company.

“It feels like you do get a spring,” Linden said. “There’s no wasted energy. It’s going right back into you. It feels fast.”

Brooks started selling the shoes in June, though Linden and other Olympians will get extra laser perforatio­ns in their shoes for ventilatio­n in Rio’s heat.

Under Armour uniforms for the Canadian rugby and the Swiss and Dutch beach volleyball teams borrow NASA spacesuit technology to reduce body temperatur­e. The insides have crystal-pattern sheets to absorb heat from the body.

As for Nike’s air-resistance protrusion­s, the company is embedding them in track suits for about two dozen teams, including the US, Brazil, China and Germany. Nike will also make the protrusion­s available as a tape for runners to stick on their arms and legs.

The boundaries

Swimming has among the toughest guidelines after Speedo’s suits propelled Michael Phelps and other swimmers to medals and records at the 2008 Olympics. Their full-body suits — which are no longer permitted — were developed with NASA to boost buoyancy and reduce drag.

Clothing makers can still innovate; they just have to be creative. Michelle Miller, Nike’s apparel concept director, said figuring out how “is one of my favorite parts of the design process.”

Adidas’ Adizero XVI swimsuits for Britain’s Chris Walker-Hebborn and other swimmers have elasticlik­e bands meant to keep bodies in streamline­d positions. That minimizes drag and propels swimmers in the pool. Because the rules allow Adidas to place the bands only over seams where pieces of fabric meet, Adidas moved the seams over to where it wanted the bands to be.

Now that it had bands, Adidas also took the unusual step of designing a model just for the breast stroke to account for the way a swimmer’s legs move outward in the frog kick, rather than up and down in the more traditiona­l flutter kick.

In the labs

Omar Visentin, chief operating officer and former research chief at Assos, said clothing manufactur­ers now have more sophistica­ted ways to tests fabrics and the way they are cut and measure minute difference­s in performanc­e.

Other companies even use computer modeling to design that perfect suit with fewer prototypes, said Ajoy Sarkar, a professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology.

For the Vazee Sigma track shoes that US sprinter Trayvon Bromell will wear, New Balance turned to 3-D printing technology to test multiple configurat­ions to improve traction and energy transfer.

Nike also used 3-D printing and wind tunnels to improve its air-resistance protrusion­s, which worked only for sprints during the 2012 Olympics. Miller said prototypes from 3-D printing allowed Nike to find a shape that works for longer distances, too.

Adidas designed its Adizero MD mid-distance shoes to account for curvatures in the track, rather than just the straightaw­ay portions of races. It tested various combinatio­ns of stiffness and thinness to keep runners like Kenya’s David Rudisha stabilized so they don’t slow down at curves.

Adidas’ director of future, Deborah Yeomans, said engineers are already at work on designs for 10 years from now — when expectatio­ns will be even higher.

 ?? BEN DUFFY / ADIDAS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Creative Director Stella McCartney joins Team GB athletes to unveil the new Adidas and Stella McCartney Team GB kit for Rio 2016.
BEN DUFFY / ADIDAS VIA GETTY IMAGES Creative Director Stella McCartney joins Team GB athletes to unveil the new Adidas and Stella McCartney Team GB kit for Rio 2016.

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