On July 31, 1923, René Lacoste faced Manuel de Gomar, Spain’s top tennis player, in a Davis Cup round in Deauville when a downpour flooded the grass court, prompting spectators to throw newspapers on it to speed drying. Players and onlookers weathered the torrent, sheltering under umbrellas and donning trench coats, ponchos, slickers and rubber boots.
Rainfall stretched the match to two days but Lacoste prevailed, winning in four sets and advancing France to the finals. The washed out match set young René on the road to becoming a world champion.
For Fall-Winter 2026, Creative Director Pelagia Kolotouros draws inspiration from that event and its twin idea of souvenir - a memory of tension and resolve, preparation and performance, what it takes to wait and win. Expanding on functional elegance, she looks to the stands and examines Lacoste’s heritage not in the heat of competition but in those interstitial moments where spectator culture matters as much as, if not more than, what transpires on centre court.
Having introduced a new relationship to outerwear in previous seasons, Pelagia Kolotouros pursues the thought through waterproofing and technical fabrication: the trench as foundation, the poncho as evolved polo, bonded tech wool as shield against the elements. Padded and voluminous pieces in transparent nylon, or with wet or reflective finishes, layer and contrast with sensual, plush velvet and the soft tailoring of the emblematic René blazer. The crocodile returns in confident new expressions, worked into embroideries and emblem treatments that honor the archives.
Raw functionality meets refinement in this Lacoste’s Roots Collaboration: a capsule co-created with Mackintosh, the legendary Scottish outerwear house founded in 1824. Renowned for its mastery of rubberized fabric, Mackintosh continues to make garments largely as it always has, its signature color-matched, waterproofed cotton hand-glued and hand-taped according to techniques passed down since the 19th century.