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Richard Mille RM 41-01 Tourbillon Soccer | Chrono 10:10

Richard Mille RM 41-01 Tourbillon Soccer

23/02/2026

Richard Mille RM 41-01 Tourbillon Soccer - Completely Unnecessary, Completely Insane

There are sports watches… and then there’s whatever this is.

Richard Mille just dropped the RM 41-01 Tourbillon Soccer, and it might be the most aggressively overengineered way to time a football match ever created. This thing tracks match time, overtime, the score, and somehow still squeezes in a tourbillon - because apparently just telling time wasn’t challenging enough.

Other brands make football timers. This one feels like it was built by a Formula 1 pit crew and a space agency working overtime.

Nobody asked for this level of madness. That’s exactly why it exists.

Source: Watch Insanity

A Football Timer… But Turned Up To 11

The core idea is simple. A soccer timer measures two 45-minute halves of a match. That’s it. Basic stuff.

Except here, nothing is basic.

The RM 41-01 adds:

  • A flyback chronograph

  • A rotating match phase display (first half, second half, overtime)

  • A mechanical scoreboard for both teams

  • A central minute counter

  • And a full tourbillon because why not

Every time you reset the chronograph, the watch cycles through the stages of a match - first half, second half, extra time. It literally knows where you are in the game.

Then there’s the score tracker. Pushers on the case let you log goals for each team. One press equals one goal. If you mess up… well, start over. Very professional.

It’s wildly impractical for most people, but insanely cool from a mechanical perspective.

Source: Hodinkee

The Dial - Pure Controlled Chaos

The dial looks like a mechanical command centre.

You’ve got a skeletonised layout showing layers of titanium components, counters everywhere, rotating displays, and a horizontal score indicator running across the watch. Somehow, despite all that, it’s still readable once you understand the layout.

The match timer sits on the left side. A function indicator shows whether the movement is winding, neutral, or setting mode. The chronograph tracks elapsed minutes and even includes a special segment for added time.

Basically, if a referee wore this, they’d never need to check the stadium clock again.

Will referees actually wear it? Probably not. More likely this lives courtside in a VIP box next to champagne.

Source: Hodinkee

The Case - Peak Richard Mille Energy

The RM 41-01 looks exactly how you’d expect: huge, technical, and slightly aggressive.

The tonneau-shaped case measures roughly 43mm wide, nearly 50mm long, and over 16mm thick. It’s big. Not “big for a dress watch” big. Just big.

The case comes in two versions:

  • Red Carmin Basalt TPT

  • Dark Blue Quartz TPT

The basalt version is especially interesting. It uses layered basalt fibres stacked at angles to create that signature striped texture. It looks almost like exotic wood but behaves like a high-performance composite material.

Translation: extremely light, extremely strong, extremely expensive.

The Movement - Ridiculous Engineering Inside

Inside sits the RM41-01 manual movement, developed over five years. And yes, it’s as complex as you’d expect.

Highlights include:

  • Flyback chronograph with two column wheels

  • Tourbillon regulator

  • 70-hour power reserve

  • Shock resistance tested up to extreme forces

  • Titanium baseplate and bridges

  • Anti-magnetic components

There’s even a specialised winding system designed to improve power efficiency. The level of engineering here is borderline obsessive.

You could argue it’s overbuilt. You’d be right. That’s the whole philosophy.

Source: Hodinkee

How It Actually Works During A Match

Here’s the simple version of using it:

Start the chronograph when the match begins. The central display tracks minutes. When halftime hits, reset it - the watch automatically moves to the second-half indicator. Same process for extra time.

Meanwhile, you track goals using dedicated pushers. The scoreboard runs across the dial, showing home and away totals.

Honestly, the amount of engineering dedicated to timing football is kind of hilarious in the best way.

Price - Brace Yourself

The official price isn’t public, but let’s be realistic.

Based on similar models, this is likely somewhere between €500,000 and well over €1,000,000, depending on configuration.

Yes, that’s house money.

But nobody buying this is comparing mortgage rates.

Each version is limited to just 30 pieces, so scarcity is part of the package.

Who Is This Even For?

Not casual fans.

Not typical collectors.

This is for people who already own everything else and want something extreme. People who see watches as mechanical art, engineering statements, or flex pieces.

It’s also for people who think understatement is overrated.

Source: Hodinkee

Is It Practical? Absolutely Not

Let’s be honest.

No one needs a mechanical football timer with a tourbillon and scoreboard. A €20 digital stopwatch does the job quite similarly.

But mechanical watchmaking stopped being about need a long time ago. At this level, it’s about pushing limits, showing technical capability, and making something absurdly impressive.

And on that front, this delivers.

Why It Still Deserves Respect

You can dislike the size.
You can dislike the price.
You can think it’s ridiculous.

But the technical execution is undeniable.

Richard Mille consistently pushes materials, engineering, and mechanical design further than most brands are willing to go. Even when the concept feels excessive, the watchmaking behind it is serious.

It’s basically the philosophy of: if mechanical watches are already unnecessary, you might as well go completely wild.

Fair point.

Final Thoughts - Peak Mechanical Excess

The RM 41-01 Tourbillon Soccer is outrageous, complicated, expensive, and borderline absurd.

It’s also fascinating.

It turns a simple sports timer into a mechanical spectacle packed with engineering solutions nobody else would even think of. Whether you love it or hate it, it’s impossible to ignore.

And honestly, in a world full of safe releases and vintage reissues, something this extreme feels weirdly refreshing.

 

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