F1 driver Daniel Ricciardo is pretty in pink and it’s a game changer

Style Editor

Just when you thought nothing could be louder than the roar of a Formula One race car,take a look at McLaren driver Daniel Ricciardo in a shocking pink Gucci jumpsuit with a gold zipper and Tiffany&Co. diamond brooch on the collar. Thearresting portrait in Vanity Fair magazine by Nick Riley Bentham is something that you rarely hear used to describe a photograph of an Australian sportsman – FAAAABULOUS.

Jumpsuit and brooch by Gucci;shoes by George Cleverley;socks by London Sock Company;brooch (on collar) by Tiffany&Co. Styled by Michael Darlington.

Jumpsuit and brooch by Gucci;shoes by George Cleverley;socks by London Sock Company;brooch (on collar) by Tiffany& Co. Styled by Michael Darlington.Nick Riley Bentham for ‘Vanity Fair’

Boldly styled by Michael Darlington,fellow drivers Pierre Gasly,Esteban Ocon,George Russell and Lando Norris all appear in high fashion finery that challenges traditional notions of masculinity that have been embedded in sports culture since long before people made fun of tennis champion Andre Agassi’s highlights.

In the pages ofGQ,Men’s Health and advertisements male sports stars have been relegated to stiff portraits in sportswear,tuxedos or tight white underpants,staring at five-figure watches or clutching fragrances destined for the crowded shelves of Chemist Warehouse. French driver Gasly in a jaunty striped Saint Laurent top,silk Hermes scarf and rose cherry blossom brooch breaks outdated taboos faster than a lap around the Albert Park track for the Melbourne Grand Prix.

A high-kicking Norris in a dandy polka dot scarf from Turnbull&Asser,Louis Vuitton monogrammed jacket and pink socks as bright as Ricciardo’s jumpsuit,is not camp,effeminate nor androgynous. It’s simply fashion,which is a new frontier for sport – soccer star David Beckham’s more adventurous looks and five-time NBA champion Dennis Rodman’s sequined crop tops in the ’90s aside.

TheVanity Fair article is prompted by the success of the Netflix documentary seriesDrive To Survive,now airing its fourth season,which could explain this cataclysmic collision of sport and fashion. The gripping reality soap opera has attracted a greater female audience to F1,removing misplaced fears that male athletes must purely appeal to manly men drowning in a sea of Lynx body spray,Pringle crumbs and stubbie twist tops on a condemned sofa.

At a Melbourne Fashion Festival dinner on International Women’s Day hosted by Viktoria + Woods,the main topic of conversation among the mostly female crowd,fresh from the front row,was the personalities inDrive To Survive and plans for the upcoming Melbourne Grand Prix. Wage parity and gender fluid jackets were a distant second and third.

With fashion now on the track,expect future Grand Prix events to feature luxury looks rivalling the hats and gloves at Spring Carnival horse racing.

It’s definitely time for sportsmen to follow in the asphalt wake of F1 drivers and play catch up with singers Harry Styles,Troye Sivan and Olly Alexander wearing pearl earrings,black dresses and leather chokers,actors Timothée Chalamet and Jared Leto experimenting with harnesses from Louis Vuitton and Gucci kaftans and television personality Guy Sebastian onThe Voice wearing Burberry,Valentino and Balenciaga.

Fingers crossed that at this year’s Brownlow and Dally M awards the focus can shift from WAGs in Jason Grech and J’Aton to the actual players in printed Prada jumpsuits,Cerrone brooches and the occasional Carla Zampatti skirt.

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Damien Woolnough is the style editor of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age

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