Tour de France runs through July 27. Cycling solved the trophy logistics problem 120 years ago: the prize is a piece of clothing the winner wears in the next race. There is a design lesson there.
Tour de France runs through July 27. Cycling solved the trophy logistics problem 120 years ago: the prize is a piece of clothing the winner wears in the next race. There is a design lesson there.
The yellow jersey is on camera every minute of every stage. No other trophy gets that exposure. For amateur racing leagues that struggle with trophy logistics, consider a jersey, jacket, or sash that the current champion wears at every event. Production cost is one-time per season; the visibility is constant.
Tour winners receive a Sèvres-porcelain trophy alongside the jersey — proof that wearable and physical trophies coexist. For any sport with a season-long jersey or sash system, add a small physical trophy at the year-end ceremony. The jersey is the journey; the trophy is the achievement marker.