Sportswear

Our Sportswear category brings together current partner listings covering running tops, training shorts, sports leggings, tracksuits and lightweight layers, with products typically grouped by activity such as running, gym or team training. Within those groups, listings are split further by fit and fabric details including compression levels, brushed fleece linings and quick-dry weaves. Colourways and naming can vary between partners, with shades like black and charcoal sometimes listed separately or grouped together, and size availability often landing unevenly across ranges. You may also notice similar-looking items appearing more than once where partners use different style names or product codes, making side-by-side comparison useful as availability changes and seasonal drops rotate in and out.

Sportswear: what to compare across partner listings

How items are grouped on the page

Most groupings come through as product type first, so mens sportswear and womens sportswear often sit in separate runs even when the item is unisex. It’s common to see the same cut shown twice because one partner files it under “tops” while another pushes it into “base layers”. Filters tend to be practical: size, colour, sleeve length, and fabric tags like “seamless” or “thermal”. Some partners publish inseam length for shorts; others don’t. That matters. When we pull in updates from multiple partner retailers, these small differences change what you can compare at a glance.

Tops: tees, layers, and running-specific cuts

Running tops show up with the widest variation in naming and fabric detail, from mesh panels to bonded seams and reflective trims. Some listings include chest measurements; many only show S–XXL, and tall sizing appears sporadically. Colours can flip in and out fastest here, especially bright seasonal shades. Stock gaps are normal. You may also see “2-in-1” layer pieces where a long sleeve is attached under a tee, but partners don’t label them consistently. We’ve noticed Nike listings often carry clearer fabric composition fields than others, which can help when comparing like-for-like.

Bottoms: fit, rise, and pocket details

Training shorts and sports leggings tend to be split by length and support level, but partners don’t always publish the same fields. One feed might call a waistband “high rise” while another just shows a flat waist measurement, and pocket information is frequently missing even when photos show side pockets. That’s frustrating. Look for lining notes (brief liner vs compression liner) and whether a legging is squat-proof or simply “opaque”. Reebok listings sometimes include more consistent rise and seam placement notes, which makes comparisons less guessy.

Sets and matching pieces (and why they don’t always match)

Co-ords and matching gym clothing sets can appear as a single product, or as separate top and bottom listings that only match by colour name. “Berry” in one partner feed might be “plum” in another, even when the shade is identical. It happens a lot. Some retailers publish a collection name that ties items together; others don’t, so sets can look incomplete if one half sells out first. Puma product feeds sometimes keep colour names more standardised across tops and bottoms, which helps when you’re checking whether pieces genuinely match.

Swim and studio crossover items

Sportswear overlaps with swim and studio kit more than people expect: rash vests, swim leggings, and chlorine-resistant tops can land next to training layers depending on how a partner categorises them. Sizing also shifts here, with numeric sizing appearing alongside S–XL, and some listings using cup sizing for support tops. Expect uneven availability. A colour may exist in one size run but not another, especially for seasonal swim lines. Speedo items are a good example of where fabric durability notes (like chlorine resistance) are often included, while other partners leave that field blank.

Price formats, listing gaps, and what changes day to day

Across our partner retailers, sportswear updates aren’t synchronised: one feed might refresh new colour drops overnight while another lags for days, so the same product can look “missing” in one place and fully stocked in another. That’s normal. You’ll also see different price formats (single price vs “from” pricing) depending on how variants are published. Under Armour listings sometimes push each colour as its own product page, which can inflate the number of near-identical results. Separately, we can show whether a retailer has voucher codes available, but we keep that alongside product comparison rather than mixing it into the listings. Discount Promo Codes donates 20% of profits each month to charity, which sits outside how products are ranked or displayed.