Adidas is a well known brand that initially started with sports shoes. Today, it is still focused on sports but has since branched out to many different sports, including cycling. Adidas cycling products are getting more and more popular these days. The product lines range from Adidas cycling shoes to sportswear like jerseys.
Adidas used to sponsor T-Mobile cycling team but had recently pulled out its sponsorship due to the doping problems and allegations that have plagued the team last 2007. For this year, the company is focusing more on individual athletes instead of teams for sponsorships.
Adidas Cycling Shoes
Adidas cycling shoes are being developed with the partnership of Mavic, another very well known cycling brand. The partnership between Adidas and Mavic mainly concerns the cycling shoes so other products are not included in the Adidas/ Mavic collaboration. Adidas cycling shoes have sponsored Thor Hushovd as their consultant regarding the needs of athletes.
One of the more prominent cycling shoes produced by Adidas is the Adistar Ultra in which Hushovd helped to develop. It was also worn by the professional athletes in many of his races. The cyclist gives his input regarding the cycling shoes and both Mavic and Adidas interpret the input into specification for the shoes.
Adidas Cycling Apparel
Adidas also dabbles in sports wear which are focused on cycling. Adidas cycling sportswear are very durable and are also conscientiously designed and manufactures with the comfort and needs of the athletes in mind. The durability is one of the aspects that make the Adidas cycling sports wear appealing to cyclists because they are assured that their jerseys, jackets and bicycle shorts can last longer than others.
The sports wear is usually made from lightweight materials that can easily wick away sweat and moisture from the cyclists skin, ensuring comfort. This feature is essential for companies who wish to manufacture sports wear focused on cycling. Keeping the cyclists dry and comfortable entails using fabrics or materials which dry easily and are form fitting enough to ensure less wind drag, comfort and style.
Adidas cycling apparel have all these in mind when they are manufactured while Adidas cycling shoes bear in mind the suggestions and finding that their professional cyclist recommend for the comfort and function of their shoes. The company prides itself in making sports wear and cycling shoes that portray the desire and intention of the company to meet the demands of the consumers for better products.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Reviews for Adidas Cycling Products
Posted by Team Nick at 5:39 AM 0 comments
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Cycling: The World of Wheels
Any day spent in one of America’s cities will be a day spent in the presence of countless cyclists. Curriers ride bicycles, as do college students and police officers and even the occasional postal worker. Some taxis are pedicabs, seats attached to bicycles and powered by the feet of young men and women.
Even tourist attractions, from Swan Boats to parade floats, are often powered by hidden bicycle-like contraptions. And this is just on the city streets of downtown urban areas. In the country, with more room and less traffic, cycling is the sport of freedom, transportation for the free spirit.
Bicycles have come a long way through history. The first bicycles introduced in 1818, push bikes and hobby horses, were powered by the rider’s feet; he or she would self-propel the wooden frame on two wheels. By the 1850s, however, the modern bicycles had been given shape, and the world of transportation would forever be changed; soldiers would even ride bicycles to war in a type of bicycle infantry.
Utility bicycles remain the most popular bicycles, as they provide added comfort and easier steering. Still, road bicycles and race bicycles are the bicycles built for speed, and remain crucial additions to the sport of cycling.
Going for Gold
Once bicycles were introduced to the world, it did not take long for the birth of the sport of cycling. These first races, littered across the globe, were dangerous and resulted in numerous injuries and death due to the poor design of early bicycles. By the 1890s, considered to be the “Golden Age of Cycling,” large races were held across Europe, the United States and Japan, on both roads and on manmade Velodrome tracks.
While in the 19th century almost every major American city hosted a cycling competition, in the 20th century, the sport has become a minority athletic event in the United States. In Europe, however, cycling remains a major sport, especially in France, Italy and Belgium, and since 1903, the Tour de France has captured the attention of the entire sporting world.
Depending on the type of race, different bicycles are used. Mountain bikes are used on rugged outdoor train and indoor dirt tracks, while track bicycles are used in Velodrome races. The Union Cycliste Internationale, the governing body for the sport of cycling, sanctions almost every road race and has instituted various rules concerning the types of bicycles that can be used in the sport of cycling. For road races, bicycles must weigh more than 6.8 kilograms, and certain bicycle frame innovations are banned; only the double triangle structure is permitted.
Posted by Team Nick at 3:45 AM 0 comments