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Sporty Thursday · Pants June 11, 2026
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Why You Should

Adidas Tiro 23 League Review 2026: Worth the Hype?

Introduction

The Adidas Tiro has been a fixture of British football culture for long enough that most women who play five-a-side or train outdoors have owned at least one pair. The Tiro 23 League Woven is the version designed for warmer weather: where older iterations leaned on fleece or cotton blends, this one uses a lightweight woven recycled polyester with AEROREADY moisture management to keep up with actual summer training demands.

The timing is well-placed. UK summers are increasingly humid rather than simply warm, and cotton joggers that soak through during a training session are a well-known grievance for women who go straight from pitch to café or commute home on public transport. The Tiro 23 League Woven addresses that specific problem without asking you to wear compression tights or full technical running trousers that read as clinical off the pitch.

The competitive space at £65 includes Nike's Academy track pants, Under Armour's woven training bottoms, and various own-label performance trousers from Marks & Spencer and Next. The Tiro holds its ground here on brand recognition and silhouette, but it is not automatically the best choice for every buyer. The woven fabric behaves differently from knit or stretch alternatives, and that distinction matters depending on how and where you plan to wear them.


Price

At £65, these sit in the mid-tier of performance training trousers. That price buys you a recognised performance fabric system, a tailored silhouette, recycled materials credentials, and the Adidas brand weight that makes them as wearable off the pitch as on it.

For comparison, the Nike Academy 23 Woven Trousers retail at approximately £40–£45 at JD Sports UK, offering a similar woven construction and tapered fit at a lower price. The gap is partly branding and partly the AEROREADY finish, which owners report performs better in sustained heat than Nike's standard Dri-FIT woven. The Puma Liga Baselayer Woven Pants come in at around £35, but the silhouette is looser and less suited to streetwear use.

If your use case is purely training and you do not care about the post-pitch look, the Nike saves you £20 with no meaningful performance loss. If the dual training-and-social use case is the point, £65 is justified.


Materials and Construction

The Tiro 23 League Woven is constructed from 100% recycled polyester throughout, including the lining at the ankle zip cuffs. The woven structure, as opposed to knit, means the fabric has minimal stretch: it moves with you during lateral drills or jogging but does not recover or conform the way a jersey or interlock knit would. The hand feel is smooth and slightly crisp, closer to a lightweight nylon shell than a traditional polyester fleece or French terry jogger.

The AEROREADY finish is a moisture-management treatment applied to the fabric surface that pulls sweat away from the skin and disperses it across the outer face of the material for faster evaporation. Owners consistently report that legs stay dry during warm outdoor sessions in ways that untreated polyester trousers do not achieve, particularly during interval training in temperatures above 18°C.

Construction details are competent for the price. The side seams lie flat, the ankle zips sit on the inner leg without bulk, and the elasticated waistband is double-layered to prevent roll-down during high-knees or sprint work. The drawstring threads through an internal channel and exits at a centred gusset. Verified purchasers note the drawstring has a tendency to retract into the channel after machine washing, which requires re-threading: a minor nuisance with no structural consequence, but worth knowing before you first wash them. The ankle zips feel adequately constructed rather than robust; long-term owners report the zip pull can loosen after six months of regular pitchside use.


Comfort

Out of the box, the Tiro 23 League Woven feels immediately comfortable for movement. The woven fabric does not cling, does not create heat pockets at the back of the knee, and the waistband sits without digging even during seated stretching. There is no meaningful break-in period.

The limitation is sedentary wear. In a training context these perform well; in a long car journey, a bus commute, or an extended sitting position, the woven polyester can cause mild clammy contact at the back of the thigh where the AEROREADY finish cannot compensate for reduced airflow. This is a fabric physics issue, not a product failure, but it distinguishes the Tiro from a knit jogger for all-day wear.

Owners consistently report that the ankle area is the most comfortable design detail: the zip allows full unobstructed entry and exit over trainers or boots without removing footwear, and the cuff sits at ankle bone level rather than bunching above it, provided you select the correct leg length (more on that below).


Fit and Sizing

The Tiro 23 League Woven runs true to size on the waist. UK buyers in standard proportions can order their usual size without adjustment.

The leg length is where the fit requires attention. The Regular (30") inseam sits slightly above the ankle on most buyers of average UK height (5'4"–5'7"), which reads as a cropped silhouette rather than a full-length track pant. If you want the hem to reach the ankle or sit cleanly over a trainer collar, order the Long (32") at average height. Buyers above 5'7" should order Long without hesitation. The Short (28") is suited to buyers under 5'3".

Slim-fit buyers consistently find that sizing down one in the waist produces a cleaner tapered line through the thigh without affecting the fit through the knee or ankle. The waistband elastication accommodates this without creating a gap at the back. Buyers with fuller thighs relative to their waist should stick to their waist measurement size, as the taper through the thigh is fitted rather than relaxed.


How to Style It

Training into town, summer morning: Pair with a fitted moisture-wicking sports bra in white or off-white, a cropped Adidas quarter-zip in matching Team Navy, and white low-profile trainers such as the Adidas Samba or Nike Air Force 1. Add a tote bag rather than a rucksack for the post-training look to land correctly. The tapered silhouette makes this read as intentional sportswear rather than gym overflow.

Grassroots match day: Wear over football socks with ankle zips open at pitchside during warmup, close them once on the pitch perimeter. Layer with a loose football jersey or training top tucked slightly at the front. A waterproof gilet in the same navy or black colourway completes the match-day look for the UK's unpredictable summer evenings without overheating.

Casual weekend wear: The navy colourway works directly into a relaxed summer outfit with a white linen shirt left untucked, worn open over a plain vest, and white canvas trainers. The tapered cut keeps the proportion balanced. Avoid oversized sweatshirts here; the woven fabric reads smarter than fleece and deserves a top with equivalent weight.


Alternatives

Nike Academy 23 Woven Track Pants, approx. £40–£45 at JD Sports UK
A functionally comparable woven training trouser with a near-identical tapered silhouette. The Dri-FIT woven fabric performs well in mild conditions but owners of both products consistently rate AEROREADY higher in sustained heat above 20°C. Choose the Nike if budget is the primary consideration and your training sessions are under an hour.

Under Armour Challenger Track Pants, approx. £45–£50 at Sports Direct and UA.com UK
The Challenger uses a woven stretch fabric that adds lateral mobility the Tiro's non-stretch polyester lacks. For buyers who train in exercises requiring wide hip flexion, yoga-style movement, or bouldering warmup, the stretch construction is a practical advantage. The silhouette is less tailored and less suited to off-pitch wear.

Marks & Spencer Active Woven Joggers, approx. £35 at Marks & Spencer UK
A competent own-brand option at a substantially lower price, with a straight rather than tapered leg. Buyers who prioritise ethical sourcing, longer returns windows, and accessible in-store sizing over brand recognition or athletic silhouette will find these adequate for low-intensity summer use. The moisture management is less effective than AEROREADY in warm conditions based on owner reports.


Pros

  • AEROREADY keeps the fabric surface dry during warm outdoor training sessions; owners consistently report no sweat-soaked leg feel even during interval work above 18°C.
  • The tapered silhouette and ankle zip construction hold up in social settings post-training without requiring a change of trousers.
  • Three-pocket layout (two deep side zips and one back zip) secures a phone, keys, and a bank card without bulk or bounce during movement.
  • Recycled polyester construction across 100% of the fabric meets the environmental credentials a growing share of UK buyers actively seek at this price tier.
  • Available in Short, Regular, and Long inseams at ASOS, which eliminates the leg-length compromise most performance trousers force on buyers outside average height ranges.
  • The flat-lying side seams and non-chafing waistband produce no reported pressure points or irritation during runs up to 5K based on owner feedback.

Cons

  • The woven polyester creases heavily when packed in a kit bag; buyers who commute to training will arrive with visibly crumpled trousers that do not shake out without a steam or iron.
  • UK stockists carry predominantly navy and black; buyers wanting a bolder or lighter colourway will find the range limited and may need to order from adidas.com with longer lead times.
  • The internal drawstring retracts into the channel after machine washing and requires re-threading each time, which multiple UK reviewers have flagged as a recurring annoyance.
  • The ankle zips on the Tiro 23 League are not reinforced at the base; long-term owners report loosening of the zip pull after approximately six months of pitchside use involving repeated opening and closing over boots.
  • The woven fabric is slightly translucent in lighter colourways under direct sunlight, which buyers considering the lighter grey or white-adjacent options should account for before ordering.
  • Sedentary comfort is limited by the non-stretch woven construction; for buyers who commute long distances before training, the fabric creates clammy contact at the back of the thigh in warm weather.

Current Price

£65.00

Available at Asos.com

Buy It Now →

Price verified as of June 11, 2026. WYS may earn a commission on purchases.

The WYS Verdict

✓  Buy It

The Adidas Tiro 23 League Woven Track Pants are the most practical summer training trouser at this price for UK women who move between pitchside and social or commuter contexts. The AEROREADY finish delivers on its moisture claim in warm weather, the silhouette works beyond the gym, and the three-length sizing option at ASOS removes the fit compromise that undermines most performance trousers at this price. The creasing problem is real and the ankle zip longevity is a fair concern, but neither is a deal-breaker for the intended use. At £65, buy them at full price if the training-to-social use case applies to you; if you train only and care nothing for post-pitch appearance, the Nike Academy saves you £20 with no meaningful loss.

Score: 7.8 out of 10


Frequently Asked Questions

Are the Adidas Tiro 23 League Woven Track Pants worth £65?

At a 7.8 out of 10, these earn their price for buyers who want a single trouser that handles summer training and looks presentable afterwards. If training performance alone is your criterion, the Nike Academy Woven at £40–£45 delivers comparable function at a lower cost.

How should I size these, and do they suit all body types?

Order your standard waist size; the waist measurement is accurate across UK verified reviews. Select the Long inseam if you are of average UK height and want the hem to reach the ankle rather than sit above it. Buyers with fuller thighs relative to their waist should not size down, as the taper through the thigh is already fitted.

Will the AEROREADY fabric hold up after repeated washing?

The recycled polyester construction is durable through regular machine washing, but the internal drawstring retracts into its channel after each wash and requires re-threading. The ankle zip pull is the component most likely to show wear, with long-term owners reporting loosening after approximately six months of frequent pitchside use.

What is the best alternative if these do not suit me?

The Under Armour Challenger Track Pants (approx. £45–£50 at Sports Direct UK) are the better choice if you need stretch through the hip and thigh for wide-range movement. The woven stretch fabric adds mobility the Tiro's non-stretch polyester cannot match, though the silhouette is less tailored for off-pitch wear.