Monday, May 17, 2010
  • Brazil's Carlos Alberto, captain of the victorious 1970 World Cup winning team in Mexico

    Brazil's Carlos Alberto, captain of the victorious 1970 World Cup winning team in Mexico
    Photo by Popperfoto/Getty Images 01 Jan 1970

  • George Best at Manchester United FC, 1972

    George Best at Manchester United FC, 1972
    © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS

  • Alexi Lalas in the USA strip, World Cup, 1994

    Alexi Lalas in the USA strip, World Cup, 1994
    © Neal Preston/CORBIS

  • Holland's stars Johan Neeskens (left) and Johnny Rep,1974 World Cup Final

    Holland's stars Johan Neeskens (left) and Johnny Rep,1974 World Cup Final
    Photo by Bob Thomas/Getty Images

  • Diego Maradona, the Argentine football captain, before the start of a World Cup match, 1986

    Diego Maradona, the Argentine football captain, before the start of a World Cup match, 1986
    © Jean-Yves Ruszniewski/TempSport/Corbis

  • Englands captain Bobby Moore, World Cup Final, 1966

    Englands captain Bobby Moore, World Cup Final, 1966
    Photo by Popperfoto/Getty Images

Monday, May 17, 2010 Replay
Nike Goes Green for the World Cup
Star Footballers Take to the Pitch in Recycled Strips
Strip Tease
The Best and Worst of Fashion on the Football Pitch
  • View Fullscreen
  • Credits

Strip Tease

The Best and Worst of Fashion on the Football Pitch

Football shirts are generally associated with the wrong end of the fashion spectrum. Coventry’s ill-fated dalliance with the color brown was emblematic of the very worst of the 70s; Hull once played a season in strips that made them look like effete tigers; and if anything’s going to stop much-fancied underdogs Ivory Coast at this year’s World Cup it could be this horror show of an away kit. Now and again teams pull off something special and allow their players to pull on a shirt that isn’t a disgraceful mess of go-faster stripes and stomach-turning color combinations. Very occasionally, such shirts become iconic and indelibly linked to moments of glory in the minds of football fans. Brazil’s bold yellow, blue and white will forever bring back memories of the first World Cup to be shown in grainy color in 1970, while the simple red change strip England wore for their only triumph in 1966 is now as familiar as the home colors of white and blue. We’ve put together a gallery of some of our favorite football shirts, from Adidas’s remarkable achievement of taking the Netherlands’ garish orange and making it elegant in 1974, to Umbro’s recent Kasabian-fronted update of England’s away shirt. There’s also one joker in the pack to keep you on your toes.

Add Comment
You must be logged in to comment
Login  |  Register
Comments
No comments have been added yet

Send to a friend

Thank you

Your email has been sent to your friend.

Follow us on twitter NOWNESS on Twitter
  • Great night! RT @mjtraynor: So Many Fancy Ladies at #NownessAdvancedStyle with @Chandon @ New Museum http://t.co/ntyesE7j 4 hours ago
  • Hope you enjoyed the ladies as much as we did RT @Styleite: At the New Museum to celebrate @AriSethCohen's Advanced Style book w/ @NOWNESS! 5 hours ago
  • Victoria rollerbladed to tonight's event http://t.co/hW3sj3sO #nownessadvancedstyle 5 hours ago
PLEASE SELECT YOUR LANGUAGE:   中文 | ENGLISH