High School Wrestling Warm-Up Gear and Travel Apparel
Quick Answer- Wrestling warm-up gear is what wrestlers wear pre-match and on travel days, separate from the singlet they compete in.
- Standard kit: performance tee, long sleeve layer, team sweatpants or joggers, team hoodie, embroidered hat.
- Bear Grips covers warm-up apparel with no minimum.
- The warm-up kit doubles as travel apparel for away duals and tournament weekends.
High school wrestling warm-up gear is what a wrestler wears in the warm-up room, on the bench, and during travel to away duals and tournaments. The singlet is the competition uniform; the warm-up kit is everything around it. Bear Grips Pro Shops covers wrestling warm-up apparel with no minimum, so a 22-wrestler program gets the same per-unit pricing as a 60-wrestler program. The warm-up gear doubles as travel apparel through the season.
What Wrestling Warm-Up Gear Actually Is at HS Meets
Standard warm-up kit at HS dual meets and tournaments:
- Performance tee. Worn during warm-up jogging, drilling, and mat warm-ups.
- Long sleeve performance shirt. Cool-weather warm-up layer.
- Team sweatpants or joggers. Pulled off before stepping on the mat.
- Team hoodie. Worn during weigh-ins, between matches, and after the dual.
- Mesh shorts. For warm-up running and drilling when wrestlers prefer shorts.
- Embroidered team hat. Worn during travel and between matches.
The warm-up kit is removed before the wrestler steps onto the mat. The wrestler competes in the singlet. The warm-up kit signals identity before and after.
Why a Coordinated Warm-Up Kit Matters
A coordinated warm-up kit has several effects:
- Team cohesion at meets. 22 wrestlers in matching warm-up apparel signals organization. A mixed-apparel team looks less coordinated.
- Camera-ready for televised duals. Big rivalry duals, conference championships, and state tournaments are often filmed. Coordinated warm-ups present well on camera.
- Recruitment signal. Visiting wrestlers and parents notice when a program looks organized.
- Identity for younger wrestlers. Freshmen earning the warm-up kit is a moment of inclusion.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.
Warm-Up Gear Build for the HS Wrestling Program
Typical program warm-up kit:
- Mens Moisture-Wicking Tee (Sport-Tek), $23.86 VIP base. Performance warm-up tee.
- Mens Moisture Wicking Long Sleeve (Sport-Tek), $29.88 VIP base. Cool-weather warm-up layer.
- Mens Performance Quarter-Zip Pullover (Sport-Tek), $29.88 VIP base. Warm-up layering jacket.
- Ladies' Quarter-Zip Pullover (Sport-Tek), $29.88 VIP base. For girls wrestling and womens coaching staff.
- Mens Pocket Sweatpants (Jerzees), $40.88 VIP base. Standard team warm-up sweatpants.
- Mens Open Bottom Sweatpants (Jerzees), $40.88 VIP base. Open-bottom alternative.
- Mens Midweight Performance Joggers (Independent Trading Co.), $40.88 VIP base. Athletic-cut warm-up joggers.
- Unisex Premium Fleece Joggers (Cotton Heritage), $48.88 VIP base. Premium travel-day joggers.
- Athletic 7" Mesh Shorts (Sport-Tek), $26.88 VIP base. Warm-up shorts.
- Comfort Soft Hoodie (Bear Grips), $36.88 VIP base. Team hoodie.
- Classic Flat Bill Snapback (Yupoong, embroidered), $29.86 VIP base. Travel-day hat.
Travel-Day Apparel for Away Duals and Tournaments
Travel apparel differs slightly from warm-up apparel:
- Comfortable sweatpants over athletic joggers. Long bus rides favor open-bottom or pocket sweatpants over tight athletic joggers.
- Hoodie or crewneck for layering. Cold buses, cold tournament venues, cold hotel mornings.
- Backpack and gear bag. Wrestlers carry a team-issued backpack or gear bag (not in the Bear Grips catalog; specialty wrestling suppliers handle bags).
- Travel hat. Embroidered team hat worn during travel days.
Most programs run the same apparel for warm-up and travel; the warm-up kit doubles as travel kit. A few programs add a separate travel-specific hoodie or sweatpants that wrestlers wear for road trips but not during warm-ups.
Warm-Up Gear Pricing for the Program
| Item | VIP Base | Standard Retail | Profit |
|---|
| Performance Tee | $23.86 | $32-$36 | $8-$12 |
| Performance Long Sleeve | $29.88 | $42-$46 | $12-$16 |
| Performance Quarter-Zip | $29.88 | $44-$48 | $14-$18 |
| Ladies Quarter-Zip | $29.88 | $44-$48 | $14-$18 |
| Pocket Sweatpants | $40.88 | $56-$62 | $15-$21 |
| Midweight Joggers | $40.88 | $58-$62 | $17-$21 |
| Premium Fleece Joggers | $48.88 | $68-$74 | $19-$25 |
| Mesh Shorts | $26.88 | $36-$40 | $9-$13 |
| Team Hoodie | $36.88 | $54-$58 | $17-$21 |
Warm-up gear carries strong per-unit margin. A 22-wrestler program ordering a full warm-up kit (tee, joggers, hoodie) generates roughly $1,400-$1,800 in booster club profit in a single batch.
Build the Program Warm-Up Kit
Performance tee, long sleeve, sweatpants, joggers, hoodie. 22 wrestlers or 60, same per-unit pricing. No minimum.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is warm-up gear the same thing as a singlet?
No. The singlet is the competition uniform the wrestler wears during the match. Warm-up gear (performance tee, long sleeve, sweatpants or joggers, hoodie) is everything around the singlet: warm-up room, travel days, between matches. Bear Grips makes warm-up gear. Singlets come from specialty wrestling suppliers.
Should the program order warm-up gear in bulk or let wrestlers order individually?
Most programs do a coordinated season kit order at preseason (each wrestler orders her own kit through the shop link, but on a coordinated timeline). This gives the team matching apparel by the first dual. Late additions can order anytime through the standing shop.
Can the program offer womens warm-up gear for the girls wrestling team?
Yes. The Ladies Quarter-Zip Pullover and womens cuts on tees and hoodies cover girls wrestling warm-up needs. Bear Grips also carries Womens Wave Wash Sweatpants ($39.88) for womens-cut warm-up pants.
How does warm-up gear fit into the program revenue math?
Warm-up gear is one of the higher-margin categories per unit. A coordinated preseason warm-up kit order for 25-30 wrestlers typically generates $1,500-$2,500 in booster club profit in a single batch. Repeat orders for replacement pieces and freshman onboarding through the season add another $500-$800 ongoing.
Diego VargasBJJ Black Belt and Combat Sports Coach
Diego is a BJJ black belt under a Roger Gracie lineage and competes regularly in IBJJF tournaments. He coaches both gi and no-gi at his academy in Texas and writes about academy branding, rashguards, and event-day apparel.
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