Track and Field Team Spirit Wear for Men: Warm-Ups, Hoodies, and Travel Gear
Quick Answer- Race-day track uniforms (singlets with bib numbers) are a specialty athletic garment, not something Bear Grips prints.
- Spirit wear (tees, hoodies, joggers, quarter-zips) covers everything a track and field team wears outside actual competition.
- A team spirit shop typically outsells a single uniform order many times over across a season, since it is worn daily rather than once per meet.
- Booster clubs and team parents are the biggest spirit-wear buyers, not just athletes.
A track and field program spends far more hours in warm-ups, travel gear, and everyday team apparel than it spends in an actual competition uniform. Race-day singlets and bib-ready uniforms are a specialized athletic garment that sits outside this catalog. What does fit, and what most programs underuse, is a spirit wear shop: the tees, hoodies, and joggers that the team, the booster club, and the parents actually wear to practice, at meets from the stands, and on the bus.
Race Uniforms vs Team Spirit Wear
Race-day uniforms (the singlet and shorts a sprinter or distance runner competes in, built for bib numbers and competition rules) are a specialized athletic garment ordered through a dedicated team uniform supplier. Spirit wear is everything else: what the team wears to practice, on the bus to an away meet, and what parents and booster clubs wear in the stands. This guide covers spirit wear, which is both the larger buying category and the one that fits a no-minimum print shop.
What to Stock for a Track and Field Program
| Piece | Use | VIP base |
| Moisture-wicking tee | Daily practice wear | $23.86 |
| Performance quarter-zip pullover | Bus rides, cool mornings, coach wear | $29.88 |
| Comfort soft or Champion hoodie | Cold-weather meets, warm-up layer | $36.88 to $45.88 |
| Midweight joggers | Warm-up bottoms, travel | $40.88 |
| Snapback or rope hat | Sun protection at outdoor meets | $29.86 |
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.
Who Actually Buys Track Spirit Wear
- Athletes. Daily practice and travel-day pieces.
- Booster clubs. Fundraising items, sold to the wider school community.
- Parents and siblings. Team pride hoodies and tees worn at meets.
- Coaches and staff. Quarter-zips and polos for a professional sideline look.
A booster club fundraiser drop typically moves more units across a season than a single uniform order, since it is worn daily by a wider group than just the roster.
Setting Up a Track Program Shop
- Upload the program logo and school colors.
- List the tee, hoodie, and joggers first.
- Share the shop link with the roster and the booster club email list.
- Add the quarter-zip and hat once the first order cycle shows what sells.
Build a Track Program Shop
Spirit wear for athletes, booster clubs, and parents. No minimum, ships in about a week.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get an actual race uniform printed for my track team?
No, race-day singlets and bib-ready uniforms are a specialized athletic garment outside this catalog. Spirit wear, practice gear, and travel apparel are what Bear Grips prints.
Who buys the most spirit wear on a track team?
Booster clubs and parents typically drive more total volume across a season than the athlete roster alone, since spirit wear is worn daily by a wider group.
Whats the best cold-weather piece for outdoor track meets?
The Champion performance hoodie for the coldest mornings, or the midweight joggers paired with a quarter-zip for a lighter warm-up combination.
Is there a minimum order for a school track program shop?
No. Single-piece printing means the shop works the same whether the program has 15 athletes or 60.
Marcus ThompsonStrength and Conditioning Coach
Marcus has spent the last decade coaching strength athletes, from competitive powerlifters to general-pop lifters chasing their first 405 deadlift. He has worked with USAPL meet teams and now writes about programming, gym apparel, and what actually works under the bar.
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