The answer is American Rugby team
I think you should wear anything maroon under a yellow jersey.
Red
Oveall leader on time gets a yellow jersey, most sprints won gets a green jersey, fastest uphill gets a white jersey with red dots-the polka dot jersey.
Black and Yellow
The one with the overall shortest time.If the previous year's winner participates, he gets to wear it on the first stage of the new race as well.The yellow jersey indicates the race leader. The colour was picked up by the Tour's first sponsor, a newspaper which was printed on yellow paper.The rider that had the shortest overall time counted on finishing the previous stage(yesterday) gets to wear the yellow jersey that day.If the overall winner of the previous year's race is participating, he will ride the 1st stage in the yellow jersey. If he isn't there won't be a yellow jersey until stage 2.
Being a stage leader doesn't guarantee that you get any of the jerseys at all.The ones wearing the special jerseys are:overall fastestbest climberbest sprinterbest/fastest under the age of 25And it's entirely possible to lead a stage w/o being any of the above.
cycling.the overall leader of the tour de France will wear a yellow shirt.
The leader is given a pink jersey to wear. It is pink because the newspaper that started the Giro (La Gazetta dello Sport) was printed on pink paper.
Canada's Alex Stieda was the first North American to wear the yellow jersey, on Stage 2 of the 1986 Tour de France.
Most riders will wear team kit. Tight-fitting jerseys and bibs -cycling tights with suspenders. Sometimes one-piece Time Trial suits. The overall leader gets a yellow jersey. The best sprinter gets a green jersey. The best climber gets a polka dot jersey. Best young rider gets a white jersey.
Greg Lamond
In the 2009 Tour de France there are 21 separate stages. Competitors are timed during each stage and individuals times are accumulated from stage to stage. The rider with the fastest accumulated overall time at the end of each stage is awarded the yellow jersey to wear in the following stage. A rider that has made up enough time over the rest of the field that at that particular moment during a stage has accumulated the fastest time to that point in the race and therefore is said to have the virtual yellow jersey. That same rider would win the actual yellow jersey if he can keep that overall fastest accumulated time gap over the rest of the field to the end of that stage. Example 2009 Tour de France: Stage 14 - George Hincapie was 5 minutes 25 seconds down to the overall leader and yellow jersey of Italian Rinaldo Nocentini at the beginning of the stage. At one point Hincapie was almost 8 minutes ahead of Nocentini during the stage and at that moment Hincapie was said to have the virtual yellow jersey. Hincapie finished the stage only 5 minutes 20 seconds ahead of Nocentini and therefore Nocentini remained the overall race leader and in the yellow jersey for the next stage by a 5 second margin.