Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet Run It Back With Their Courtside Style
Seated for The Knicks’s triumphant game, Kylie and Timmy prove that opposite couples style totally works on the arena floor.

Reported by Vogue.
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet just reminded us that courtside is fashion's most underrated arena. The couple showed up to a Knicks playoff game in New York this week serving the kind of contrasting energy that somehow works perfectly when you're sitting three feet from a basketball court. She went full Y2K fantasy; he leaned into effortless guy style. Both won.
Jenner's approach was nostalgia with edge: a white scoop-neck tank paired with low-slung, raw-hemmed white Isabel Marant jeans from spring 2013—the pair adorned with delicate crystal details trailing up the legs. Black Manolo Blahnik thong heels, a '90s French pedicure, and tousled waves completed the moment. It's the kind of understated-but-intentional dressing that reads as "I didn't try too hard" while clearly requiring considerable effort. Chalamet, meanwhile, occupied the opposite end of the spectrum: oversized black leather jacket, charcoal hoodie layered over a gray tee, black cargo pants, and Timberland boots. The silhouette felt lived-in, which is precisely the point.
Courtside Is Its Own Dress Code
According to Vogue, this game marked Jenner's first court appearance of the season—and with the Knicks heading into playoff territory against the Hawks, it was clearly a significant outing. What's striking is how basketball games have evolved into a distinct fashion category entirely, one where the usual hierarchy of "dressed up" versus "dressed down" dissolves completely. Kendall Jenner, Rihanna, and Hailey Bieber have all proved that sitting courtside demands its own visual language: you can show up in statement jewelry and designer heels one night, then slip into sweats and sneakers the next, and both feel equally right.
The Jenner-Chalamet pairing echoes a legacy established by couples like Beyoncé and Jay-Z, who demonstrated that opposite energy—one polished, one casual—can actually strengthen a look rather than muddy it. There's something about the intensity and movement of a live game that makes fashion feel more permissive, more playful. You're not trying to be the focus; the sport is. So your outfit gets to breathe differently.
Courtside style works because it's honest—it reveals what celebrities actually reach for when they're out to support something real, not perform for cameras.
Read the original at Vogue.


