Olivia Ponton wore a black strapless mini dress and statement cutout knee-high heels at the Madden Bowl February 2026 event.
Here’s the thing — if you’re going to wear a little black dress to a media event packed with brand logos and fast camera flashes, this is how you do it. Olivia Ponton showed up at the Madden Bowl presented by Super Bowl EA Sports in San Francisco , and the look? Sharp. Almost graphic. And honestly kind of fun.
Let’s break it down. The black strapless mini dress is basic at first glance, sure — clean lines, tight fit, matte finish . But it’s that oversized belt-style buckle at the bustline that changes the energy. It leans into athletic-glam, maybe even a play on uniform codes, which makes sense given the EA Sports crossover. The structured bodice adds shape without overcomplicating it. This isn’t a gown — this is about presence, not drama.
Now to the legs. The knee-high cutout gladiator heels are doing most of the talking, and I’m calling it — they’re the best part of the look. Wild enough to feel edgy, but because they stay in the same black tone, they don’t derail the rest of the outfit. It gives the whole thing a futuristic, fashion-forward vibe without feeling try-hard. Plus, they look like a challenge to wear, which adds to the visual tension in a good way.
Clutch-wise, she kept it matching — a black croc-embossed clutch , rectangular and practical, no frills. Hair’s up with a soft middle part and a slick ponytail. Light makeup, easy earrings. Like she knew the base was bold enough.
If you ask me, the shoes make this outfit — everything else is just backdrop.
Becky G wore an oversized black turtleneck and snake-print knee boots at the Apple Music Super Bowl Celebration in February 2026.
I’ll say it straight — if you’re going to do oversized , commit. And that’s exactly what Becky G did at the Apple Music Super Bowl Halftime Show Celebration in San Francisco . No drama, no sequin overload, no faux-glam. Just a comfortably sharp look that actually earns its attitude.
She wore a black oversized turtleneck sweatshirt with light graphics on the sleeves — likely event-branded or personal merch. It hangs low, stops mid-thigh, wide in the shoulders, perfectly slouchy. It’s not trying to be “elevated loungewear.” It’s just cool in that throw-it-on-and-show-up way. Think “I didn’t overthink it” energy — except, obviously, it was planned.
The twist? Thigh-high snakeskin boots . Beige base, brown-black pattern, pointed toe, skinny heel. Drama without glitter. And honestly, they pull the whole thing into deliberate territory. The boots aren’t soft. They’re bold the way reptile prints always are — aggressive but stylish. And pairing them with something this relaxed? I get it. It’s contrast dressing without being obnoxious.
Dark wavy hair, soft glam makeup, and a shoulder bag that’s neither dainty nor oversized — it’s just… there. That’s what ties it together for me. There’s no focal-point accessory trying to be the main character. Just pieces, worn with control.
If you’re going to a media event where the cameras are working overtime, this is one way to avoid looking like you’re trying too hard — but still get noticed.
Emma Raducanu wore a colorblocked Nike tennis dress with neon-accent sneakers during her semifinal win at the Transylvania Open on February 6, 2026.
Emma Raducanu didn’t just win her semifinal match in Cluj-Napoca on February 6, 2026 — she did it in high-speed blues and modern athletic precision.
Her outfit? Pure motion. The one-piece sleeveless tennis dress by Nike features sharp colorblocking in powder blue, black, and lilac. Not delicate colors. Not soft, either. They slice down the body like they were built for velocity. And they were.
The cut is classic: racer-style shoulders, high zip front, and a structured skirt that flares with each sidestep. Functional. Feminine. Not flashy. Because here, form is fashion — and utility is part of the visual.
And then there’s the footwear. Raducanu wore two-tone Nike tennis sneakers with a bright coral sole and black lacing. The kind of shoes meant to bite the court, not the trend cycle. Socks minimal, wrist tape wrapped and subtle.
No jewelry. No drama. Just fierce courtwear and maximized movement. Exactly what an event appearance looks like when you’re in the middle of business and the business is winning.
Her final point of the match wasn’t just clean — the whole look was.