Cycling shorts
Cycling shorts are short, skin-tight garments designed to improve comfort and efficiency while cycling.
Their useful properties are:
- reduce wind resistance, increasing aerodynamic efficiency;
- protect the skin against the repetitive friction of the legs against the bicycle seat or frame;
- provide support to the genitals, analogously to a jock strap;
- draw sweat away from the skin to prevent chafing and rashes, and to cool the rider down through the process of evaporation;
- compress the legs, which can help combat muscular fatigue;
- do not get caught up in the bike chain or other parts of the bike;
- reduce the weight of a rider's clothing ; and
- improve comfort during long rides with extra padding in the seat area.
Short-legged elastic tights commonly worn as street wear, under girls' skirts and dresses, with longer oversized t-shirts, sweat shirts and sweaters, for gymnastics and ballet practice, or under athletic and running shorts, are sometimes also referred to as "bike shorts", but they are typically simpler and lighter garments than those worn by cyclists and generally lack the chamois or faux-chamois lining and may have plain or lace trimmed hems.
In 2021, the Norway women's national beach handball team was fined €1500 for being improperly dressed after the women wore bike shorts instead of bikini bottoms at a European championship match in Bulgaria. Critics derided the fine and the underlying rule. Although the Norwegian Handball Federation announced they would pay the fines, pop singer Pink offered to pay for them. Later, in November 2021, the International Handball Federation changed their dress rules to allow female players to wear some kinds of shorts, specifying "Female athletes must wear short tight pants with a close fit".
Bib shorts
Bib shorts are cycling shorts that are held up by a bib instead of an elastic waistband. Pro and serious riders tend to prefer bib shorts over non-bib shorts, due to the discomfort that often occurs with an elastic waistband, such as tightness and chafing. The bib part of the short is often made of spandex and polyester with large sections of netting to help keep the rider cool.The idea of modern bib shorts was a development from the braces or suspenders that cyclists once used to hold up old-fashioned wool shorts, which had a tendency to become loose and heavy from riders' sweat. Bib shorts are well-suited to tall riders and riders with protruding stomachs because regular shorts can tend to fall down in the back while riding.