The elements of the skies have put a damper on play at Roland-Garros as second-week play begins in Paris, but the elements of style remain.

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Without further pomp, here are the 2016 French Open fashion faults. (The complementary fashion aces are already out.)

Blink and you miss it. Jelena Jankovic covered up the true nature of her Fila dress designed by Marion Bartoli, as the first few days of Roland-Garros play were quite cool as temps were concerned. Meanwhile, as style itself was concerned, the frock looked like a doodled collage meets ClipArt, or Lisa Frank creating a PowerPoint slide. In short, it's a lukewarm mess.

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Hydrogen's ongoing sponsorship of Simone Bolelli provides fodder aplenty for the Spin's style roundups, and this year's French Open is no different. Pseudo McEnroe says it best below, but yes, the look is decidedly Ed Hardy does Jimmy Buffett.

Andy Murray, a glutton for punishment on court, is a bore for fashion. Black/dark green + white + gray = yawn. Come now, Under Armour. Your guy is No. 2 in the world. Then again, he could be in his former clothier and sporting black-and-white drunken-referee stripes.

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Ah yes, to the Adidas zebra print, post haste! This Y-3 Collection is said to be based on 1930s and '40s warships' exterior patterns, intended to disguise their exact sizes and locations. If you have to explain the inspiration in so many press releases and blog posts, it's probably not a hit. And yet, in the end, everyone's talking about it. So what then, Adidas wins?

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Ana Ivanovic have weighed in with their takes on it, as has the New York Times "On the Runway" scribe Vanessa Friedman, who wrote, "And it is true, the Paris runways were full of tiger stripes last season. But this particular translation is so unsubtle as to be silly. The players look like refugees from a 1980s disco party." To use a Stephen Colbert-ism, that's some harsh "truthiness."

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The look, seen on Tomas Berdych, Dominic Thiem, Kristina Mladenovic, Angelique Kerber (fleetingly), and many more, showed its true stripes in a match-up between Thiem and Alexander Zverev. Two words: too much.

In all that zebra-haha, Simona Halep's suspenders look with ruffle skirt was a particular fashion offender.

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Stan Wawrinka, let's leave the fluorescent hues to that "Happy Slam," the Australian Open. If TV broadcaster Ted Robinson is referring to your attire as "highlighter-yellow," that qualifies as ad-out, Yonex.

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Uniqlo needs to do Novak Djokovic a solid. His polo's solid red shade on the terre battue's similarly hued clay surface reminds me of a band name: The Clash. The ATP's runaway No. 1 (still) deserves better.

Your Turn: Whose sartorial disaster is worst, and whose ironed-out style did I get flat-wrong? Is anyone MIA here? Sound off below and tell me on Twitter.

Follow Jon on Twitter @jonscott9.