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Le Flop 5 RugbyPass des maillots de 2024

Dan Lydiate (Dragons) (Photo de George Wood/Getty Images)

Après le Top 10, il est temps de présenter le Flop 5 des maillots 2024. L’année a plutôt été bonne sur le plan du style, mais certains maillots nous ont un peu fait mal aux yeux.

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Retrouvez notre flop 5 des maillots de rugby en 2024. Notez que nous ne tenons compte que des maillots dévoilés en 2024 (ce qui écarte les maillots de 2023/24).

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RUGBYPASS FRANCE – MAILLOTS 2024 – FLOP 5

  • 5 – Stade toulousain (home)

Soyons clairs : le maillot domicile du Stade Toulousain n’est pas laid à proprement parler. Mais il s’agit clairement d’une déception tant Nike nous a habitué à de belles créations pour le Stade.

Le manque d’inspiration est criant sur ce maillot. Si Nike argumente qu’il s’inspire de la ferveur du public d’Ernest-Wallon, on constate qu’il rappelle le maillot porté par l’équipe de rugby à 7 depuis plusieurs saisons.

À gauche : le maillot domicile du Stade Toulousain 2024/25. À droite : le maillot de l'équipe de rugby à 7

  • 4 – Gloucester (away)

On ne va pas se mentir : les maillots et équipements de la marque Oxen font cheap. Les matériaux n’ont pas l’air d’être d’excellente qualité et les designs sont assez basiques et hasardeux.

Cela ressort d’autant plus sur le maillot away de Gloucester. Si le maillot domicile n’est déjà pas heureux, le maillot extérieur est fade.

Les lignes horizontales vert d’eau, couleur qui a pourtant du potentiel, ne s’expliquent pas tellement et transpirent le manque d’inspiration. Sans parler du col au design très daté.

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Le maillot extérieur de Gloucester 2024/25 (Photo : boutique officielle de Gloucester)

 

  • 3 – Les franchises de Super Rugby

Comment un championnat aussi prestigieux que le Super Rugby peut faire appel à des équipementiers aussi bon marché que Classic ou Dynasty pour les maillots de ses franchises ?

On avait l’habitude de voir adidas créer de superbes tenues pour les Crusaders, les Chiefs, les Blues ou les Highlanders. Aujourd’hui, ces équipes de légende se retrouvent avec des maillots sont on dirait qu’ils ont été conçus par des amateurs.

Les looks sont bas de gamme, les designs criards. Vivement 2025.

Le maillot des Blues réalisé par Classic (Photo : Rugbystuff.com)

  • 2 – Stormers (away)

BLK (Beyond Limits Known) n’a jamais été réputé pour la subtilité de ses designs. Toujours « in your face », les maillots de la marque australienne – anciennement connue sous le nom de KooGa – ne sont pas de ces créations que l’on peut facilement porter dans la rue et cela ressort particulièrement sur le maillot extérieur des Stormers.

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Le maillot domicile bleu n’a rien de choquant, mais le maillot extérieur affiche ce design grossier inspiré d’une tempête mélangeant le gris, le rose et le bleu, le tout affublé d’un bloc sponsor DHL jaune et rouge sur des empiècements peu grâcieux.

Le maillot away des Stormers 2024/25 Photo : boutique officielle des Stormers)

  • 1 – Dragons (third)

Les maillots jaune fluo n’étaient déjà pas beaux quand ils étaient en plein boom, dans les années 2010. Désormais, ils sont laids ET démodés.

Cela n’empêche pas les Dragons d’arborer cette vilaine création jaune fluo et noire en guise de troisième maillot. L’équipementier VX3 semble jouer la carte high-tech futuriste au détriment du style et ça donne le pire maillot de l’année.

Les Dragons avec leur maillot extérieur (Photo de George Wood/Getty Images)

 


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It started with a gut-wrenching realization. I’d been duped. Months earlier, I’d poured $133,000 into what I thought was a golden opportunity a cryptocurrency investment platform promising astronomical returns. The website was sleek, the testimonials glowed, and the numbers in my account dashboard climbed steadily. I’d watched my Bitcoin grow, or so I thought, until the day I tried to withdraw it. That’s when the excuses began: “Processing delays,” “Additional verification required,” and finally, a demand for a hefty “release fee.” Then, silence. The platform vanished overnight, taking my money with it. I was left staring at a blank screen, my savings gone, and a bitter taste of shame in my mouth.I didn’t know where to turn. The police shrugged cybercrime was a black hole they couldn’t navigate. Friends offered sympathy but no solutions. I spent sleepless nights scouring forums, reading about others who’d lost everything to similar scams. That’s when I stumbled across a thread mentioning a group specializing in crypto recovery. They didn’t promise miracles, but they had a reputation for results. Desperate, I reached out.The first contact was a breath of fresh air. I sent an email explaining my situation dates, transactions, screenshots, everything I could scrape together. Within hours, I got a reply. No fluff, no false hope, just a clear request for more details and a promise to assess my case. I hesitated, wary of another scam, but something about their professionalism nudged me forward. I handed over my evidence: the wallet addresses I’d sent my Bitcoin to, the emails from the fake platform, even the login credentials I’d used before the site disappeared.The process kicked off fast. They explained that scammers often move funds through a web of wallets to obscure their tracks, but Bitcoin’s blockchain leaves a trail if you know how to follow it. That’s where their expertise came in. They had tools and know-how I couldn’t dream of, tracing the flow of my coins across the network. I didn’t understand the technical jargon hash rates, mixing services, cold wallets but I didn’t need to. They kept me in the loop with updates: “We’ve identified the initial transfer,” “The funds split here,” “We’re narrowing down the endpoints.” Hours passed , and I oscillated between hope and dread. Then came the breakthrough. They’d pinpointed where my Bitcoin had landed a cluster of wallets tied to the scammers. Some of it had been cashed out, but a chunk remained intact, sitting in a digital vault the crooks thought was untouchable. I didn’t ask too many questions about that part; I just wanted results. They pressured the right points, leveraging the blockchain evidence to freeze the wallets holding my funds before the scammers could liquidate them. Next morning, I woke up to an email that made my heart skip. “We’ve secured access to a portion of your assets.” Not all of it some had slipped through the cracks but $133,000 worth of Bitcoin, my original investment, was recoverable. They walked me through the final steps: setting up a secure wallet, verifying the transfer, watching the coins land. When I saw the balance tick up on my screen, I sat there, stunned. It was real. My money was back.The ordeal wasn’t painless. I’d lost time, sleep, and a bit of faith in humanity. But the team at Alpha Spy Nest Recovery turned a nightmare into a second chance.  I’ll never forget what they did. In a world full of thieves, they were the ones who fought to make things right. Contacts below: email: Alphaspynest@mail.com, WhatsApp: +14159714490‬, Telegram: https://t.me/Alphaspynest

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