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On the front page of the Washington Post last Friday (the most recent day the paper has been delivered to subscribers buried under the snow): https://www.washingtonpost.com/spor...d97d12-bf84-11e5-9443-7074c3645405_story.html.
I noticed when Aja Wilson started playing for SC that her shorts seemed, well, pretty short. It was unlikely that the school could not provide Aja with shorts that "fit," and I wondered what was going on. Now it seems that Wilson may have been a fashion harbinger. Periodically, you see women basketball players in unis that seem not to fit very well, but with so many body types perhaps that's to be expected. The new and widely despised Nike unis are pretty sleek (even if all of the players aren't). It should be noted that Geno "loves" the new gray outfits that have raised the ire of UConn fans. That, of course, is a matter of taste, but guess whose taste counts?
The original baggy shorts were largely a product of urban culture, which is changing as all fashion does. Some have suggested that women's outfits should be "sexy" to attract more spectators (probably the same people that wrote the Bible). Dare I suggest that the overriding consideration for unis be their comfort? (Oh, and LeBron says that shorter is neater.)
I noticed when Aja Wilson started playing for SC that her shorts seemed, well, pretty short. It was unlikely that the school could not provide Aja with shorts that "fit," and I wondered what was going on. Now it seems that Wilson may have been a fashion harbinger. Periodically, you see women basketball players in unis that seem not to fit very well, but with so many body types perhaps that's to be expected. The new and widely despised Nike unis are pretty sleek (even if all of the players aren't). It should be noted that Geno "loves" the new gray outfits that have raised the ire of UConn fans. That, of course, is a matter of taste, but guess whose taste counts?
The original baggy shorts were largely a product of urban culture, which is changing as all fashion does. Some have suggested that women's outfits should be "sexy" to attract more spectators (probably the same people that wrote the Bible). Dare I suggest that the overriding consideration for unis be their comfort? (Oh, and LeBron says that shorter is neater.)