Ranking soccer’s all-time top 101 kits

Football

Zinedine Zidane once told Vogue, during his dalliance with modelling: “It’s not that I’m doing something different — it’s a continuation.” And he was right: the elegant playmaker would not look out of place on the catwalk wearing the tricolore France jersey in which he won the World Cup, or the classic all-white Real Madrid kit he wore when lifting the Champions League trophy.

The designers and models on the runways in the world of haute couture may turn their nose up at football culture, but every fan of the sport knows the thrill of seeing an amazing new kit.

With the help of ESPN’s football writers and editors from around the globe, we have gone back through the years to rank the 101 greatest kits of all time. We have taken into account both club and national teams and have considered their home, away and third alternate uniforms on their own individual merits.

When to comes to something as cherished as football kits, everyone will have their opinion, and this ranking is no different. But, treated as a celebration of the art form, it is something we can all enjoy as we wait to return to the stadiums.

– ESPN+: Stream ESPN FC TV daily and 30 for 30: Soccer Stories

image

101. SENEGAL (home)

Seasons worn: African Nations Cup 2017

Notable players in this kit: Sadio Mane (pictured), Kalidou Koulibaly, Keita Balde

UAE-based kit manufacturer Romai only made one set of kits for Senegal in their short-lived deal, but this 2017 jersey, with its roaring lion on the shoulder, is a beauty. The lion is a nod to the team’s nickname “Les Lions de la Teranga,” Teranga being a word used in Senegal that means hospitality, warmth and selflessness. Mane & Co. went out in the quarterfinals to Cameroon.


image

100. MANCHESTER UNITED (away)

Seasons worn: 1993-95

Notable players in this kit: Eric Cantona (pictured), Ryan Giggs, Roy Keane, Paul Scholes

Manchester United signalled their status as the Premier League’s most fearsome team by wearing this black away kit with yellow trim. The uniform certainly had an effect on Cantona — all three of his Premier League red cards for United came while he was wearing it, most infamously when he was sent off at Crystal Palace in 1995 and delivered a flying kick to a supporter as he was leaving the field, earning him an eight-month ban. Here he is pictured after receiving a red card at Swindon, strutting toward the locker room with his collar flicked up in his trademark style.


image

99. VALENCIA (home)

Seasons worn: 1999-2000

Notable players in this kit: Gaizka Mendieta (pictured), Claudio Lopez, Miguel Angel Angulo

Mendieta ran the Valencia midfield in this white shirt with orange-and-black trim, sponsored by a theme park that had just opened in the region. Mendieta now brings the same flair to the dance floor as a club DJ.


98. REAL MADRID (away)

image

Seasons worn: 2011-12

Notable players in this kit: Cristiano Ronaldo (pictured), Sergio Ramos, Karim Benzema, Mesut Ozil

Any kit with gold is going to catch our eye. Real always seem to produce good away kits, but this sleek black effort with those iconic three Adidas stripes in gold is among the best. The club’s monogram on the socks is a nice touch, too.


image

97. BASTIA (home)

Seasons worn: 1977-78

Notable players in this kit: Johnny Rep

After pulling a transfer coup signing Netherlands winger Johnny Rep, who was as talented as his name was awesome, the former Ajax and Valencia star helped Corsican club Bastia make a surprise appearance in the 1978 UEFA Cup final. They lost to PSV Eindhoven, but their crest was now recognised across Europe thanks to it being worn proudly across the players’ chests.


image

96. PUMAS UNAM (home)

Seasons worn: 2016-17

Notable players in this kit: Jesus Gallardo (pictured), Nicolas Castillo

Not a season to remember (sixth in Apertura, 17th in Clausura) but Pumas’ home shirt — inspired by the mural at the library of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, where the team was founded in the 1950s — makes this a kit steeped in heritage.


image

95. CHELSEA (away)

Seasons worn: 1997-98

Notable players in this kit: Gianfranco Zola (pictured), Ruud Gullit, Gianluca Vialli

This kit shouldn’t really work given its clashing elements and garish design, but somehow it does. Like the Chelsea team at the time it was a bit of a mess (player-manager Gullit was sacked midway through the season) but also a success (they won the League Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup). That’s so Chelsea.


image

94. WOLVERHAMPTON WANDERERS (home)

Seasons worn: 1977-79

Notable players in this kit: George Berry (pictured), John Richards

No club does gold kits like Wolves, especially their mid-to-late 1970s shirts, with the big black collar and three wolves down the middle of the chest. They won the 1974 League Cup in a version of this, but Umbro added black logos down the sleeves to really set it off.


image

93. INTER MILAN (home)

Seasons worn: 2005-06

Notable players in this kit: Adriano (pictured), Javier Zanetti, Luis Figo

You could pick out almost any of Inter’s iconic Nerazzurri home strips, but this one was so good they won the domestic Treble of Serie A, Coppa Italia and Supercoppa Italiana in it.


image

92. ITALY (away)

Seasons worn: 1999

Notable players in this kit: Paolo Maldini (pictured), Alessandro Del Piero, Enrico Chiesa

Much like Maldini, Kappa’s first Italy kits were superb in their simplicity, yet stunningly beautiful at the same time. The blue stripe across the white chest was a nod to their past, with white being the first colour the team wore in 1910.


91. BELGIUM (away)

image

Seasons worn: Euro 2016

Notable players in this kit: Eden Hazard (pictured), Kevin De Bruyne, Romelu Lukaku

Fans and neutrals loved this kit ahead of the tournament in France, but their manager, Marc Wilmots, not so much. He likened the design to that of a cycling jersey. His team’s own Tour de France ended in defeat to Wales in the quarterfinals. Also, for a reason which no one is able to explain, the numbers on the shorts were absolutely massive.


image

90. MARGATE (third)

Seasons worn: 2019-20

Notable players in this kit: Nobody you’ve heard of

Designed by local Kent-based pop artist Luke McLean, this kit has a lot going for it. The distorted purple-and-turquoise diagonal stripes have the names of supporters printed on them in tiny font, and yes, the jersey really is sponsored by rock band The Libertines. Time for heroes to wear it.


image

89. MEXICO (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 2010

Notable players in this kit: Rafael Marquez (pictured), Giovani dos Santos, Carlos Vela

This was the first time in their history that Mexico had gone with an away kit that wasn’t white or burgundy. However, according to its designer Brad Day, that didn’t stop it being Adidas’ fourth-best-selling shirt that year — behind only those of Germany, Spain and Argentina.


image

88. AC MILAN (away)

Seasons worn: 1988-90

Notable players in this kit: Marco van Basten (pictured), Ruud Gullit, Frank Rijkaard

Any Milan kit of this period, when Italy’s Serie A was the envy of the world, would be a worthy entry but this away kit gets the nod for its simplicity and its understated sponsor text and logos. Milan retained the European Cup in it, playing the best football in the world and with some of the best players ever seen.


image

87. FIORENTINA (home)

Seasons worn: 1998-99

Notable players in this kit: Gabriel Batistuta (pictured), Rui Costa, Eduardo

This late-90s kit was sponsored by Nintendo, and the white blocks on the shoulders and down the sides have more than a shade of games console aesthetic about them. It takes real confidence to wear purple, and La Viola have always been able to pull it off.


image

86. PALERMO (third)

Seasons worn: 2012-13

Notable players in this kit: Paulo Dybala (pictured), Josip Ilicic, Abel Hernandez

You can’t go wrong with a sash. Palermo’s official website claimed this kit had a “future-classic” look, although their immediate future was anything but classic; they were relegated at the end of the season. Still, they looked nice doing it.


85. BARCELONA (home)

image

Seasons worn: 2010-11

Notable players in this kit: Lionel Messi (pictured), Xavi, Andres Iniesta, Gerard Pique, David Villa

The first Barcelona kit to feature yellow trim, as Nike announced at the time, in a nod to the yellow-and-red stripes of the Senyera, the Catalan flag. This kit brought untold success as Messi & Co. secured a domestic Treble as well as the Champions League. This was the last Barcelona kit to bear the logo of global charity UNICEF, to which the club donated €1.5 million a season, on the front.


image

84. UNITED STATES WOMEN (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 2019

Notable players in this kit: Megan Rapinoe (pictured), Alex Morgan, Carli Lloyd, Julie Ertz

The United States‘ thrilling victory at the Women’s World Cup in 1999 was echoed 20 years later in this Nike kit that the USWNT wore as they cruised to their fourth world title in France. It had that striped sleeve cuff in red and blue and three stars down the shorts to signify their three previous global triumphs. The likes of Rapinoe and Morgan did the Class of ’99 proud.


image

83. ROMANIA (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1994

Notable players in this kit: Gheorghe Hagi (pictured), Gheorghe Popescu, Dan Petrescu

Those three stripes emerging from the hips, the matching collar, those boxy numbers … my word, this kit is just so beautiful and so ’90s. This was a special design that was only worn during the World Cup finals, and it worked as Romania made it all the way to the quarterfinals in their best showing at the tournament.


image

82. LEEDS UNITED (away)

Seasons worn: 2000-02

Notable players in this kit: Harry Kewell (pictured), Mark Viduka, Rio Ferdinand

It feels like just yesterday that Leeds were in the Champions League semifinals, but it was actually 20 years ago. Nike kept Leeds’ uniforms straightforward in this period, with this yellow away strip featuring one blue pinstripe running from each shoulder to the waist.


image

81. BORUSSIA DORTMUND (third)

Seasons worn: 2019-20

Notable players in this kit: Jadon Sancho (pictured), Marco Reus, Julian Brandt

Worn just once, to commemorate Dortmund’s 110th anniversary, this sleek strip sold out in just three hours. BVB smashed Fortuna Dusseldorf 5-0, giving them a 100% record in all black. Sancho was definitely a fan: “The black shirts are the best I’ve ever worn. Maybe we should keep playing with them.”


image

80. MANCHESTER CITY (home)

Seasons worn: 1993-95

Notable players in this kit: Keith Curle (pictured), Uwe Rosler, Niall Quinn

Worn by famous fan Noel Gallagher before Oasis’ iconic gig at the club’s old Maine Road ground in 1996, and it’s one of City’s best. A bit like Oasis’ music, it seems a bit bland on the surface, but look a little deeper and you can see so much more, including a pseudo-holographic pattern of the manufacturer’s logo that is typical of the period.


image

79. DULWICH HAMLET (home)

Seasons worn: 2019-20

Notable players in this kit: Dominic Vose (pictured), Lionel Ainsworth, Quade Taylor

Dulwich Hamlet enjoy remarkable support for an English non-league side. The club, based in an affluent south London suburb, even claim to have registered the biggest-ever attendance (16,254) for a match outside of the professional ranks. Plus they are probably the only team bold enough to pull off a purple-and-pink sash.


image

78. CHELSEA (home)

Seasons worn: 2012-13

Notable players in this kit: Frank Lampard (pictured), John Terry, Didier Drogba

Chelsea’s home kit for the 2012-13 season was a classic Adidas design but with gold highlights, a bit like Fernando Torres’ hair. The gold was added not to celebrate their recent Champions League victory, but the London 2012 Olympics.


77. ROMA (home)

image

Seasons worn: 2000-01

Notable players in this kit: Francesco Totti (pictured), Cafu, Gabriel Batistuta

When you look at this kit you instantly see Totti — hair in a band, No. 10 on his back, strutting like a Roman deity. This was Kappa’s first Roma shirt, and they brought with them the club’s first Scudetto in 15 years.


image

76. FRANCE WOMEN (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 2019

Notable players in this kit: Amandine Henry (pictured), Wendie Renard

The 2019 Women’s World Cup was an ultimately disappointing one for France as they went out to eventual winners the USWNT in the quarterfinals, but their highlight came beating Brazil in the round of 16 wearing this Nike away kit. White with what looks like navy blue dots — a nod to a look of classic bygone French fashion, according to the kit manufacturer — on closer inspection the dots were tiny hexagons, referencing the country’s nickname “L’Hexagone.”


image

75. REPUBLIC OF IRELAND (home)

Seasons worn: 1990-92

Notable players in this kit: Niall Quinn (pictured), Paul McGrath, Ray Houghton

The late ’80s and early ’90s were a great time to be an Ireland fan thanks to consecutive World Cup knockout appearances and memorable wins over Italy and England, and the kits were just as good. This kit, worn at Italia ’90, is as beautiful as the Emerald Isle itself.


image

74. BOHEMIANS (away)

Seasons worn: 2018

Notable players in this kit: Keith Ward (pictured), Dinny Corcoran

We stay in Ireland for this another beauty of a sash kit from a club not afraid of doing things differently. Bohemians are a fan-run club who, in 2020, released an away kit with the slogans “Refugees Welcome” and “Love Football, Hate Racism.” In 2019 their away kit had Bob Marley’s face on it to celebrate an iconic gig he played at their Dalymount ground in 1980. It was later withdrawn at the request of his family and redesigned with an image of a clenched fist.


image

73. MANCHESTER CITY (away)

Seasons worn: 1969

Notable players in this kit: Tony Book (pictured), Mike Summerbee, Colin Bell, Neil Young

City’s red-and-black stripes are almost as synonymous among their fans as their sky-blue home kit, so much so that it has been brought back several times, including for the 2019 FA Cup final where City wore warm-up shirts inspired by this kit, with names from that 1969 FA Cup-winning team on their back.


image

72. FLAMENGO (home)

Seasons worn: 1977-81

Notable players in this kit: Zico (pictured), Junior, Leandro, Tita

Flamengo wore this red-and-black hooped shirt for one of the most successful periods in their history as they dominated the Campeonato Carioca and won the Brazilian Championship, the Copa Libertadores and Intercontinental Cup for the first time.


image

71. BELGIUM (home)

Seasons worn: Euro 1984

Notable players in this kit: Enzo Scifo (pictured), Leo Clijsters

This design shouldn’t work; the white block behind the red-and-yellow argyle pattern, the central badge and the tiny Adidas logo where the crest should be. Yet what should be a messy jumble adds up to more than the sum of its parts and is now regarded as a classic. The same can’t be said for the Belgium team of this era, who were thrashed 5-0 by a Michel Platini-inspired France.


70. MEXICO (home)

image

Seasons worn: World Cup 1998

Notable players in this kit: Cuauhtemoc Blanco (pictured), Luis Hernandez

Made by Mexican manufacturer ABA Sport and made famous by the Blanco Bounce, this kit is as bold as it is wonderful. El Tri have been using stylish apparel suppliers for years: their 1978 kits were made by Levi’s.


image

69. AJAX (away)

Seasons worn: 1994-95

Notable players in this kit: Clarence Seedorf (pictured), Patrick Kluivert, Edgar Davids, Marc Overmars

Ajax won the Champions League in this gorgeous shirt, with its burgundy hatching on dark blue and its buttoned collar. They didn’t lose a game in this shirt, as between 1994 and 1996 they completed an unbeaten run of 52 domestic and 19 Champions League matches. No other team has done that and lifted the Champions League and domestic title, before or since.


image

68. MANCHESTER UNITED (home)

Seasons worn: 1994-96

Notable players in this kit: Ryan Giggs (pictured), David Beckham, Eric Cantona, Paul Ince

United didn’t have things all their own way in this uniform; they lost the 1994-95 Premier League title to Blackburn and Cantona was banned for eight months for kicking a fan, but at least that all played out in this Umbro classic. The oversized crest, the black, extremely flickable collar and the faint Old Trafford stencil really make this one work.


image

67. LIVERPOOL (Home/Away)

Seasons worn: 1989-91

Notable players in this kit: John Barnes (pictured), Ian Rush, Peter Beardsley, Steve Nicol

The last time Liverpool were champions of England — well, the last time before this season — this was their kit. While it looks as though they were sponsored by the marketing board for sweet treats, Candy is actually an Italian manufacturer of domestic appliances.


image

66. CHICAGO FIRE (home)

Seasons worn: 1999

Notable players in this kit: Lubos Kubik (pictured), Ante Razov, Piotr Now, Chris Armas

This jersey literally has the word “FIRE” on it, what’s not to love? Sadly, in 2008 the club replaced that with a sponsor. This effort, from their second season in MLS, came off the back of winning MLS Cup and the US Open Cup in their first year.


image

65. SWEDEN (home)

Seasons worn: Euro 1992

Notable players in this kit: Tomas Brolin (pictured), Stefan Schwarz, Kennet Andersson, Anders Limpar

When you throw a party you have to turn out well, and that’s what Sweden did when hosting Euro ’92 by wearing one of the best kits of the tournament. It’s an Adidas template we’ve seen before, but the strong yellow and blue trim (with Adidas trefoil shadow print) is truly iconic and we saw a lot of it as Brolin & Co. made the semis.


image

64. CLUB AMERICA (home)

Seasons worn: 1993-94

Notable players in this kit: Luis Roberto Alves “Zague” (pictured), Cuauhtemoc Blanco

Club America have a thing for excellent kits, but they really hit the heights here. The Mexican side boldly went with the sponsor above their own badge, with both neatly sat in a giant blue triangle with red trim on a yellow shirt. Just incredible.


image

63. CENTRAL COAST MARINERS (home)

Seasons worn: 2015-16

Notable players in this kit: Luis Garcia (pictured)

When an Australian football kit is also an ad for the tourism board. Shaun Mielekamp, CEO of the Queensland-based A-League club, said at the time: “The palm tree design is a call nationally to all sports fans to pencil in a visit to Central Coast Stadium, where there are water views from every seat and a matchday experience you will never forget.”


62. BAYERN MUNICH (home)

image

Seasons worn: 1995-97

Notable players in this kit: Jurgen Klinsmann (pictured), Markus Babbel, Mehmet Scholl, Dietmar Hamann

Bayern wore this for two years and won two Bundesliga titles in it. They have never looked better than when they had this shirt, thanks to its chunky bars of colour flanked with pinstripes.


image

61. TAMPA BAY ROWDIES (home)

Seasons worn: 1978-81

Notable players in this kit: Rodney Marsh (pictured), John Wegerle, John Gorman

This kit, with the word “Rowdies” emblazoned across the front, is peak NASL, peak 1970s aesthetic and peak America. Did you know the club had a “Rowdiest Fan” contest, won by a guy donning a giant soccer hat and chucking himself into the goal? Everyone loved it so much he became a de facto mascot. The club also encouraged the crowd to “Get up, get out and get Rowdy!” and their fans were known as “Fannies.”


image

60. PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN (home)

Seasons worn: 1977-78

Notable players in this kit: Jean-Michel Larque (pictured), Johan Cruyff

PSG were formed in 1970 after the merger of Paris Football Club and Stade Saint-Germain, and they began wearing this red stripe with white piping on a navy background in 1974. They wore variations of the kit created by fashion designer Daniel Hechter, who was the club’s president at the time, until 1981. Johan Cruyff was such a fan of Hechter that he played two games for PSG in a preseason tournament in 1975.


image

59. PALMEIRAS (home)

Seasons worn: 1992-93

Notable players in this kit: Roberto Carlos (pictured), Rivaldo

Palmeiras had suffered 20 years of disappointment before they donned this pea green, white pinstriped shirt and promptly swept all before them. Two youngsters called Roberto Carlos and Rivaldo helped them win the Campeonato Paulista, Rio-Sao Paulo Championship and Campeonato Brasileiro.


image

58. NEW YORK COSMOS (home)

Seasons worn: 1975

Notable players in this kit: Pele (pictured), Werner Roth

New York Cosmos played in green for the first five years of their existence until they signed Pele in 1975. Because of his success at Santos, who played in white, the Cosmos changed their home colours to white with green trim. Did it work? Well, they did finally win the NASL Championship in 1977, Pele’s final season.


image

57. CELTIC (home)

Seasons worn: 1965-72

Notable players in this kit: Bobby Lennox (pictured), Jimmy Johnstone, Willie Wallace

For Celtic fans, the hoops are sacrosanct and the same went for the traditionalist chairman Robert Kelly, who in the 1960s refused to put numbers on the back of the shirts because it would break the sacred green and white. No wonder their 1967 European Cup-winning side looked so resplendent. But they could not resist the modern way forever, and they finally began wearing numbers on their backs in 1994.


image

56. ENGLAND (home)

Seasons worn: 1982-83

Notable players in this kit: Kevin Keegan (pictured), Trevor Francis, Glenn Hoddle

The great manager Brian Clough, never one to mince words, wrote in a column when this jersey was released: “The wraps are off England’s new kit, and I’m saying now I don’t like it. It has the looks of one of my mother’s old pinnies!” But Admiral stuck by their design, made “shinier” to impress under floodlights and on TV and, thanks to a half-decent 1982 World Cup appearance, it became cherished.


image

55. RIVER PLATE (home)

Seasons worn: 1985-88

Notable players in this kit: Antonio Alzamendi (pictured), Claudio Caniggia, Nelson Gutierrez

Another sash, and a classic of the genre. Adidas remain River’s kit manufacturers to this day — the deal is second only to Bayern Munich as the German kit-maker’s longest. This kit was worn by the team that won an impressive Treble of the Intercontinental Cup, the Copa Libertadores and Argentina’s Primera Division.


image

54. CROATIA (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1998

Notable players in this kit: Davor Suker (pictured), Zvonimir Boban, Robert Prosinecki

Croatia have worn red-and-white squares ever since they gained independence in 1991, save for Kappa’s bland all-red jerseys of 1994. At their first World Cup in 1998, Croatia turned up in these beauties, with the checks draped over the shoulder like someone was whipping off a tablecloth. They came in third and this kit went down in history.


image

53. WEST GERMANY (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1990

Notable players in this kit: Lothar Matthaus (pictured), Jurgen Klinsmann

There is a long-standing myth that West Germany’s change colour is green because the first team they played after World War II was Ireland. Sadly this isn’t true. Their first post-war opponent was Switzerland in 1950, Ireland were their fourth a year later. The colour actually came from the German Football Association (DFB)’s logo, and they first wore green against Turkey in June 1951. This incarnation, the same funky Adidas template that the Netherlands wore as they won Euro ’88, brought the Germans similar luck, although they only wore it just once; that night in Turin against England in the semifinals of Italia ’90.


image

52. BRAZIL (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1970

Notable players in this kit: Rivellino (pictured), Pele, Jairzinho, Carlos Alberto

Brazil originally played in white, but fans demanded change after the Selecao lost the 1950 World Cup final to neighbours Uruguay on home soil. After a public competition they switched to yellow and green and began sweeping all before them. At the 1970 World Cup, where they won their third title, they wore this classic kit but actually had two different versions with them in Mexico; a traditional cotton shirt made by longtime and local manufacturer Athlete and a newer, lighter weight one by Umbro. Each game they wore the old one for the first 45 minutes and the newer one for the second 45 minutes and went on to win.


image

51. WEST GERMANY (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1990

Notable players in this kit: Jurgen Klinsmann (pictured), Lothar Matthaus

This kit’s sloped triple stripe of black, red and gold marked a bold new direction for Adidas. It would also go on to be the first kit worn by a reunified Germany national team (in in December 1990) following the fall of the Berlin Wall.


50. NIGERIA (home)

image

Seasons worn: World Cup 2018

Notable players in this kit: John Obi Mikel (pictured), Victor Moses, Ahmed Musa

Easily the most popular shirt at the 2018 World Cup. Released in January 2018, Nike dubbed the kit a “subtle homage to Nigeria‘s ’94 shirt.” It was an instant hit with 3 million people preordering it. Despite the hype, Nigeria failed to make it out of their group in Russia.


image

49. WALES (home)

Seasons worn: 1980-84

Notable players in this kit: Ian Rush, Terry Yorath

After UK-based manufacturer Admiral hit financial issues, Adidas stepped in and gave Wales white sleeves. At the time it was seen as just another kit, but has since become something of a cult classic. Which is a bit odd, as the Wales teams that wore it did absolutely nothing spectacular; the closest they came to glory was missing out on the 1982 World Cup on goal difference.


image

48. FRANCE (home)

Seasons worn: 1984-86

Notable players in this kit: Michel Platini (pictured), Alain Giresse, Jean Tigana, Luis Fernandez

The kit that spawned a thousand kits, Adidas hit on something when they designed France’s outfit for the 1984 European Championship, hosted on home soil. It was the first time red had been used as a main colour on a France shirt (not including collar trim in the past) and not only was it a hit, so were France. They won their first major tournament that summer and went on to win two more trophies, the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000, in kits heavily influenced by this one.


image

47. BORUSSIA DORTMUND (home)

Seasons worn: 1996-97

Notable players in this kit: Lars Ricken (pictured), Matthias Sammer, Andreas Moller, Karl-Heinz Riedle

Dortmund wore this kit on the road to winning their first Champions League title, but they didn’t actually wear it in the final. Instead, they decided to showcase their (inferior) home kit for the following season. This one had that bright yellow base with the black tyre track marks down the bottom half of the shirt and giant black C of Die Continentale — somehow making a German insurance company cool.


image

46. NETHERLANDS (home)

Seasons worn: Euro 1988

Notable players in this kit: Ruud Gullit (pictured), Marco van Basten, Ronald Koeman, Frank Rijkaard

That Adidas template is back, and this is how it is best remembered; Gullit’s dreadlocks, Rijkaard’s guile and *that* Marco van Basten volley as the Dutch beat the Soviet Union in Munich to claim their only major international title.


image

45. ENGLAND WOMEN (away)

Seasons worn: 2019

Notable players in this kit: Steph Houghton (pictured), Fran Kirby, Ellen White, Lucy Bronze

It seems almost embarrassing that it took until 2019 for the English women’s team to get their own kit, but when they did it was worth the wait. The home kit was classic white with dark red trim, but the away strip, in “dark red crush” as Nike dubbed it, featured an interwoven design with flora from across the country. England forward Fran Kirby said: “It is great to see kits designed specifically with us in mind.” The Lionesses lost in the semifinal to eventual winners the U.S. after a valiant run.


image

44. BOTAFOGO (home)

Seasons worn: 1963-70

Notable players in this kit: Garrincha (pictured), Nilton Santos

Botafogo wore simple stripes for most of the 1960s and ’70s and had some incredible players wearing them, none more so than the incomparable Garrincha. The inclusion of the stunning lone star badge (a nod to Botafogo’s inception as a rowing club) elevates this shirt.


image

43. ARSENAL (home)

Seasons worn: 2019-20

Notable players in this kit: Mesut Ozil (pictured), Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Alexandre Lacazette

Based on the kit from the title-winning 1988-89 season, Adidas somehow managed to make the 2019-20 update even better than the original. It was the first time in 25 years that the German manufacturer had returned to make the Gunners’ kits, so it made sense to go back to a classic. Former Arsenal star Ian Wright leaked the kit on Instagram before it was officially launched, although that slip of the thumb ramped up the pre-release clamour and sales went up an incredible 84% on the previous season’s strip.


image

42. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR (away)

Seasons worn: 1994-95

Notable players in this kit: Jurgen Klinsmann (pictured), Teddy Sheringham, Gheorghe Popescu

Think of Klinsmann’s one full season at Tottenham (he would return on loan in 1997-98 to help steer the club clear of relegation) and you’ll probably think of him in Umbro kit, with its navy blue backing and dark purple brush stroke pattern on the front and one arm. Wearing it when he scored on his Spurs debut, he celebrated by theatrically throwing himself to the floor in a riposte to criticism from those in the British press who had accused him in the past of diving.


41. COLOMBIA (home)

image

Seasons worn: World Cup 2018

Notable players in this kit: Radamel Falcao (pictured), James Rodriguez, Juan Cuadrado

Adidas decided to go retro in 2018; almost all of their World Cup kits were nods to previous designs. Colombia‘s was an updated version of their 1990 effort. It was one of the most popular kits of the tournament. Los Cafeteros did exactly as well as they did in Italia ’90, too, reaching the round of 16.


image

40. INTER MILAN (away)

Seasons worn: 1995-96

Notable players in this kit: Maurizio Ganz (pictured), Roberto Carlos, Javier Zanetti, Paul Ince

Not a memorable season for Inter as they finished seventh, had three managers and went out of the UEFA Cup in the first round to Lugano. But they did it all looking resplendent in their white away kit with jazzy black and blue panels on the shoulders that had flashes of their badge in gold.


image

39. VISSEL KOBE (home)

Seasons worn: 2020

Notable players in this kit: Andres Iniesta (pictured), David Villa

These maroon and white diamonds show that innovations in football shirts are still possible in 2020. Japanese club Vissel Kobe had never had this diamond pattern on their kit before but wore this look for the first time back in January for their Emperor Cup final clash with Kashima Antlers. It worked as they won 2-0, although they may have had more to do with Iniesta and Villa playing for them.


image

38. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR (home)

Seasons worn: 1985-87

Notable players in this kit: Glenn Hoddle (pictured), Chris Waddle, Diego Maradona

When Hummel became Spurs’ kit manufacturer in 1985, they made a splash by bucking almost a century of tradition with the introduction of navy to the front of the kit. The classic Hummel chevrons were there too, down the arm. They changed the shorts from navy to white, which was another big departure. And no, that’s not a typo, Diego Maradona really did play for Tottenham in this kit, during Ossie Ardiles’ testimonial against Inter Milan in May 1986.


image

37. REAL MADRID (home)

Seasons worn: 1994-96

Notable players in this kit: Fernando Redondo (pictured), Clarence Seedorf, Raul, Fernando Hierro, Michael Laudrup

This kit is all about manufacturer Kelme, a tiny Spanish company more known for its cycling apparel that supplied shirts for European football giants. Their iconic little paw print down the sleeves is certainly distinctive. Kelme now provide kits for Premier League side Watford.


image

36. GREMIO (home)

Seasons worn: 1963

Notable players in this kit: Everaldo (pictured)

Gremio’s club colours were originally inspired by those of English club Exeter City. After various different versions, they landed on black-and-blue stripes with white piping in 1928. The gold star above the Porto Alegre-based club’s crest is in honour of legendary full-back Everaldo, who won the World Cup with Brazil in 1970.


image

35. LIVERPOOL (away)

Seasons worn: 1995-96

Notable players in this kit: Steve McManaman (pictured), Robbie Fowler, John Barnes, Jamie Redknapp

Liverpool first had a taste of green as their away kit four years earlier but really pushed the boat out with this quartered kit design. They wore this kit in the 1996 FA Cup final defeat to bitter rivals Manchester United. However, it is the awful cream suits worn by Jamie Redknapp, David James and the rest of Liverpool’s “Spice Boys” upon arriving at Wembley that live longest in the memory from that day.


image

34. AS MONACO (home)

Seasons worn: 1984-85

Notable players in this kit: Daniel Bravo (pictured), Philippe Anziani, Bernard Genghini

Monaco’s distinctive kit template was designed by Oscar-winning actress Grace Kelly, who became Princess Grace of Monaco when she married Prince Rainier III in 1956. Her royal duties included designing the fledgling AS Monaco’s kit, changing their red-and-white stripes to the diagonal they wear today. It had an instant impact, as they won their first French championship a year later. This 1985 version by Adidas is one of the best incarnations.


image

33. RAYO VALLECANO (third)

Seasons worn: 2015-16

Notable players in this kit: Pablo Hernandez (pictured), Razvan Rat, Bebe

A club known for their strides toward social justice, Madrid-based Rayo put a rainbow on their 2015-16 third kit, with each colour representing a different marginalised group in society. Red for those tackling cancer, orange for disabled people, yellow for “those who have lost hope,” green for people striving to protect the environment, blue for those fighting against child abuse and pink for the victims of domestic violence, while the rainbow itself was support for the LGBT community. They donated €7 from the sale of each shirt to charities fighting for each cause.


32. AC MILAN (home)

image

Seasons worn: 1990-92

Notable players in this kit: Marco van Basten (pictured), Ruud Gullit, Frank Rijkaard

Milan’s clubs must surely be the most consistent purveyors of quality uniforms out there, perhaps no surprise as they are based in one of the world’s fashion capitals. This one, from 1990 to ’92, with its untouched black-and-red stripes echoed in the collar and tiny Adidas trefoil, is an exemplary incarnation of one of world football’s most iconic kits.


image

31. ARGENTINA (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1986

Notable players in this kit: Diego Maradona (pictured), Jorge Valdano, Daniel Passarella

Look away now, England fans, it’s the kit that Diego Maradona wore when he punched the ball into Peter Shilton’s goal and somehow got away with what would become known as his “Hand of God” goal. Maradona also scored one of the greatest solo goals ever a few minutes later. And, according to FIFA, the story behind this particular shirt also involves Maradona. Argentina coach Carlos Bilardo decided the blue cotton Aertex shirts would not be comfortable in the scorching sunshine of Mexico City. So, hours before the game, he instructed one of his coaches to head to a local sports store and buy something lighter. The coach brought back two blue kits and Maradona got to decide. He pointed to one and said: “That’s a nice jersey. We’ll beat England in that.”


image

30. CORINTHIANS (third)

Seasons worn: 2018-19

Notable players in this kit: Mateus Vital (pictured), Douglas, Jadson, Gabriel

When football meets Formula 1. Motor racing legend Ayrton Senna was a big Corinthians fan, and in 2018, the Sao Paulo club released a third shirt honouring the 30th anniversary of the Formula 1 racing legend’s first world championship, an event still cherished by Brazilians. The kit included the trademark black and gold of Senna’s Lotus F1 cars, 41 golden lines representing the number of victories he achieved and his signature in place of a sponsor across the front.


image

29. UNITED STATES (away)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1994

Notable players in this kit: Alexi Lalas (pictured), Cobi Jones, Roy Wegerle, Eric Wynalda

When the World Cup rocked up to the U.S. in 1994, Adidas and U.S. Soccer wanted to produce a memorable kit for the hosts. They certainly managed it with this shirt that is supposed to look like denim — and, originally was intended to be made of denim. When the players were shown it, Lalas assumed it was a prank, later admitting: “I’d be lying if I said people weren’t looking around for the hidden camera.” And yet, the denim print (which was literally photocopied from the original design) with floating stars has since come to represent that tournament perfectly: unapologetically brash, wild and memorable.


image

28. BARCELONA (away)

Seasons worn: 1995-97

Notable players in this kit: Ronaldo (pictured), Pep Guardiola, Luis Figo, Hristo Stoichkov, Luis Enrique

This jersey’s teal oblongs with red and blue flourishes, matched with classic Kappa logo down the sleeves, ensured Ronaldo looked good during his one season at Barcelona, when he won the FIFA World Player of the Year award for the first time.


image

27. AUSTRALIA (home)

Seasons worn: 1990-93

Notable players in this kit: Robbie Slater (pictured), Kevin Muscat, Tony Vidmar, Ned Zelic

Just as great art isn’t always appreciated in the artist’s lifetime, this abstract kit was widely derided upon its release but has gone on to become a cult classic. Designed by KingRoo, each jersey was actually slightly different from the last as they weren’t able to regulate the print across a range of sizes. At the time, opposition players refused to swap shirts after games, but Aussie fans have since come to love what they have dubbed the “spew shirt” due to its unruly brushstrokes and bright colours. The Socceroos qualified for the 1992 Olympics, where they just missed out on bronze, wearing it.


image

26. JAPAN (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1998

Notable players in this kit: Hidetoshi Nakata (pictured)

Flames on the arms. Flames on the actual arms. Japan started using that distinctive motif on their kit in 1996. Asics provided the kit for the 1996 Olympics, but Adidas became the kit sponsor for the 1998 World Cup and stuck with the same design.


25. AJAX (home)

image

Seasons worn: 1994-95

Notable players in this kit: Frank Rijkaard (pictured), Patrick Kluivert, Edgar Davids, Marc Overmars, Clarence Seedorf

Ajax have such an iconic kit that you could pick one from any season and it would make the list. The 1994-95 season was just as good for Ajax on the pitch — they won the Champions League, Eredivisie and Johan Cruyff Shield — as it was for their kits. The Amsterdam giants kept the distinctive sponsor logo of Dutch bank ABN-AMRO turned on its side until 2008.


image

24. LAZIO (home)

Seasons worn: 1998-99

Notable players in this kit: Christian Vieri (pictured), Roberto Mancini, Diego Simeone, Pavel Nedved, Juan Veron

Around the turn of the century, Lazio had some great players in some superb kits. But this one, with its black band across the chest, was so good they recommissioned this season to mark the club’s 120th anniversary. Back in 1999, they won the Supercoppa Italiana, UEFA Cup Winners Cup and came in second in Serie A before going on to win the league the following year.


image

23. WEST HAM UNITED (home)

Seasons worn: 1999-2001

Notable players in this kit: Paolo Di Canio (pictured), Trevor Sinclair

For those who saw it at the time, it’s impossible to look at this West Ham kit without thinking of *that* Di Canio goal against Wimbledon. The mercurial Italian scored 47 Premier League goals in his 3½ years wearing claret and blue. He is still clinging on to that club record with Hammers captain Mark Noble just one goal behind him.


image

22. MANCHESTER UNITED (away)

Seasons worn: 1990-92

Notable players in this kit: Mark Hughes (pictured), Paul Ince, Brian McClair, Dennis Irwin

This snazzy blue-and-white zigzag design has aged remarkably well. United were on the cusp of greatness at the time having just won the FA Cup, their first trophy under Sir Alex Ferguson, and in the two years with this away kit, they won the Cup Winners’ Cup, League Cup and European Super Cup. The following season, they won the first of their 13 league titles under Ferguson.


image

21. AS ROMA (third)

Seasons worn: 2019-20

Notable players in this kit: Justin Kluivert (pictured), Edin Dzeko, Chris Smalling

This kit somehow manages to be incredibly retro but also very modern at the same time. From the chunky collar to the old-school Nike logo, this shirt ticks every box for your kit-loving millennial. There is a subtle pattern in the fabric that features elements of several iterations of Roma’s badge, including the iconic Lupetto (“little wolf”) and the club’s initials.


image

20. SANTOS (home)

Seasons worn: 1963-66

Notable players in this kit: Pele (pictured)

Shortly after Santos were founded in 1912 their owners decided to change the club’s colours from white, azure blue and golden lemon to a simpler white with black trim. Thank goodness they did. This mid-’60s kit, with its plunging V-neck and eye-catching black badge, was worn with distinction by a young lad called Pele.


image

19. PALERMO (home)

Seasons worn: 2014-15

Notable players in this kit: Paulo Dybala (pictured)

Get ready for the most poetic colour choice of any team ever. Palermo had previously worn red-and-blue shirts, but Count Giuseppe Airoldi, a prominent founding member of the club, suggested pink and black as they are “colours of the sad and the sweet” and would suit a football team with “results as up and down as a Swiss clock.” You could pick any Palermo kit really, but this one from 2014-15 wins it for us.


18. BARCELONA (home)

image

Seasons worn: 1976-78

Notable players in this kit: Johan Cruyff (pictured), Johan Neeskens

Barcelona do red-and-blue better than any other. At the time of this kit there were no sponsors (which Barca resisted all the way into the 21st century) or even kit manufacturer logos. The only thing that seemed to change was the collar, which went from V-neck to rounded and back again. Barca didn’t win much during this period, despite having the likes of Cruyff and Neeskens in their ranks, but they looked great nonetheless.


image

17. ITALY (home)

Seasons worn: Euro 2000

Notable players in this kit: Alessandro Del Piero (pictured), Francesco Totti, Alessandro Nesta, Fabio Cannavaro, Paolo Maldini

The ’90s was a decade of near-misses and disappointments for Italy on the pitch, but it gave them some incredible kits, and that continued into the new millennium with their much-hyped Euro 2000 shirts. The Azzurri went from Nike back to Italian brand Kappa, who started the trend for slimmer-fitting shirts with these skin-tight “Kombat” kits. The players all wore one size up to get a comfy fit and it nearly paid off as they reached the Euro 2000 final, but lost in extra time to world champions France.


image

16. BARCELONA (away)

Seasons worn: 1975-76

Notable players in this kit: Johan Neeskens (pictured), Johan Cruyff

Back to Barcelona for this iconic away strip, which proudly displays the club’s heritage with the colours of Catalonia’s Senyera flag — yellow, red and blue — into a classic sash. This colour combination has been used a fair few times since, including another sash design this season, but the stripped-back ’70s version with red-and-blue cuffs and no collar can’t be beat.


image

15. BOCA JUNIORS (Home/Away)

Seasons worn: 1981-82

Notable players in this kit: Diego Maradona (pictured)

Maradona only spent one season at Boca Juniors at the start of his career (he would return toward the end), but what a season. He helped them to the Argentina title and a 3-0 win over archrivals River Plate in his first Superclasico. He did it all in this Adidas kit, with its thick yellow band, no sponsor and four stars bearing the initials “CABJ” (Club Atletico Boca Juniors). The club originally played in sky blue, but settled on blue and yellow in the early 20th century after taking inspiration from the Swedish flag flying on a ship docked in the Buenos Aires port of La Boca.


image

14. PARMA (home)

Seasons worn: 1998-99

Notable players in this kit: Fabio Cannavaro (pictured), Juan Veron, Lilian Thuram, Hernan Crespo

Parma were historically a relatively small and unsuccessful Italian club, but they burst on to the scene in 1990 by landing promotion to the top flight for the first time. Over the next decade they won seven trophies including both the UEFA Cup and Coppa Italia in 1998-99, though this marked the first time they had ever worn yellow-and-blue hoops. Their traditional home kit of white shirts with blue-and-yellow trim or a navy cross was originally influenced by Juventus. But as the Turin giants had become their Serie A rivals in the ’90s, Parma made the change, as they wanted to forge their own identity.


image

13. NEWCASTLE UNITED (home)

Seasons worn: 1995-97

Notable players in this kit: David Ginola (pictured), Alan Shearer, David Batty, Les Ferdinand, Faustino Asprilla

There is so much to love about this shirt; the black-and-white “bar code” stripes, that button-up collar that went halfway down the shirt, the sponsorship by Newcastle Brown Ale. Newcastle twice came close to winning the Premier League in this kit, and it was also their home kit at the time when Kevin Keegan had *that* outburst live on TV. He, and Newcastle, were never quite the same after that, and neither were the Magpies’ kits.


image

12. JUVENTUS (away)

Seasons worn: 1995-96

Notable players in this kit: Fabrizio Ravanelli (pictured), Alessandro Del Piero, Gianluca Vialli, Antonio Conte

It’s a tradition in Italian football that when you’ve won your 10th Serie A title you get to have a golden star on your jersey. Most teams put them modestly above their badge, but when you’re as confident as Juventus, why not slap giant stars on your shoulders? That’s exactly what shirt makers Kappa did for two seasons from 1994 to 1996, a spell where they won four trophies, including the Champions League in 1996. That shirt, with Sony replacing Danone as shirt sponsor, and the Scudetto badge under two more little gold stars rather than the Juventus logo, was sheer perfection.


image

11. ARGENTINA (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1982

Notable players in this kit: Ossie Ardiles (pictured), Diego Maradona, Mario Kempes, Daniel Passarella

Not a vintage World Cup for defending champions Argentina, as they were knocked out in the second group stage, but the kit they wore doing so was their best. The Albiceleste (white and sky blue) stripes had a new Argentina crest for that tournament and, unusually, squad numbers assigned in alphabetical order. Attacking midfielder Ossie Ardiles was No. 1 and goalkeeper Ubaldo Fillol took No. 7. A 21-year-old Maradona should have been No. 12 but was given his preferred No. 10, with Patricio Hernandez having to give that up.


image

10. ENGLAND (third)

Seasons worn: 1991

Notable players in this kit: Dennis Wise (pictured), John Barnes, Gary Lineker

The only kit in the ranking that is more famous for being in a music video than worn on the pitch. New Order’s Bernard Sumner has actually worn this shirt as many times as the England players after he donned it in the video to “World In Motion,” England’s official 1990 World Cup song that included Barnes rapping. The blue jersey, with its multi-layered rhombus pattern, was officially the third kit for the tournament and was never worn in Italy. It was only ever worn once, for a Euro ’92 qualifier in Turkey a year later. England won 1-0, making Wise the only player to ever score a goal in this shirt.


image

9. NETHERLANDS (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1978

Notable players in this kit: Johan Neeskens (pictured), Johnny Rep, Wim Jansen

Netherlands were one of the first teams to adopt Adidas in the early ’70s. Their striking orange kit with black trim has become iconic. While the team wore these tops with the classic three stripes down the arms, Cruyff’s only ever had two stripes because of a clash with his personal Puma deal. That was not an issue at the 1978 World Cup, as Cruyff didn’t go to Argentina. Despite guiding the Dutch to the finals, he quit international football after a terrifying kidnap attempt at the family home when he was held at gunpoint. Netherlands made the final but lost to the hosts.


image

8. JUVENTUS (home)

Seasons worn: 1985-86

Notable players in this kit: Michel Platini (pictured), Gaetano Scirea, Michael Laudrup

No one is better known for black-and-white stripes than Juventus, even though they got the design from English club Notts County back in 1903, having previously worn pink kits that kept fading in the wash. The best has to be this one from the mid-’80s. And in Platini, a star to do the Bianconeri kit justice, two stars to represent more than 20 league titles, giant collar, bold sponsor logo of Italian heating systems supplier Ariston, and the Kappa icon. They won Serie A for the 22nd time wearing this, and Platini retired a year later.


7. ARSENAL (away)

image

Seasons worn: 1991-93

Notable players in this kit: Ian Wright (pictured), Tony Adams, Paul Merson

Arguably the most memorable English kit of the ’90s was another that made the journey from figure of fun to cult classic. Known as the “Bruised Banana,” which sounds more like a wrestling move than a football shirt, the jersey took its nickname from its strong black-and-yellow horizontal zigzag. Arsenal won the FA Cup and League Cup with stars like Wright wearing it, and it is linked inextricably with that success. Arsenal released a new version last summer. Such was the appetite among supporters that the club’s website crashed within minutes of it going on sale.


image

6. CRYSTAL PALACE (away)

Seasons worn: 1975-77

Notable players in this kit: Dave Swindlehurst (pictured), Peter Taylor

We’ve had a lot of sashes on this list, but the team most associated with it in England is probably Crystal Palace. They are the only team in this ranking to feature while playing in the third tier, as they were in 1976 when they first wore this classic red-and-blue sash on white. It was designed by flamboyant manager Malcolm Allison, who had also changed the club’s colours from claret and light blue to scarlet and royal blue three years earlier. They played in the FA Cup semifinals, the last team from that far down the league to do so, wearing this away kit. It was so popular they made it their home kit for the following season, and within two years were in the top flight. The club badge and kit-maker logo swapping sides just adds to the magic.


image

5. PERU (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1978

Notable players in this kit: Teofilo Cubillas (pictured)

The global pioneers of the sash were Peru, with a look so iconic it is now woven into the country’s fabric. According to Peruvian historian Jaime Pulgar-Vidal Otalora: “The national team’s jersey has been part of Peru’s identity, so much so that many think it’s a national symbol.” Peru have been wearing a red sash on white since the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, but it was the 1970 World Cup — the first on colour TV — that brought it to the masses. However, it was the 1978 tournament in Argentina where they had their first official kit-maker in Adidas, and they really nailed it.


image

4. BRESCIA (away)

Seasons worn: 2003-04

Notable players in this kit: Roberto Baggio (pictured), Luigi Di Biagio

This kit is iconic for two main reasons; the “V” on the front and man who wore No. 10 on the back. This was Baggio’s last season as a footballer after a 22-year career and the 36-year-old led Brescia to 11th in Serie A, scoring 12 goals in 26 games. Their kits that year were made by Kappa and, while it was the classic white chevron on blue for the home kit, it was the away kit that caught the eye. Combined with Baggio’s multi-coloured captain’s armband and that ponytail, the kit was a classic. The designs stems back to 1927 when they added “V” so that the team could use a new stadium that was built for another team called Virtus. Brescia retired his No.10 shirt after this season, and quite right too.


image

3. DENMARK (home)

Seasons worn: World Cup 1986

Notable players in this kit: Michael Laudrup (pictured), Morten Olsen

Hummel’s bold design for Denmark‘s 1986 World Cup campaign was initially met with anger but is now beloved. It quickly became known as the “Carnival Suit” among indignant journalists, with one, Per Hoyer Hansen, saying: “Others would use such rags for kitchen drapes.” The players were less damning, with captain Morten Olsen calling it “a breath of fresh air.” It didn’t matter what they thought, as the Danish fans in Mexico absolutely loved the white-and-dark red pinstripe blocks with chevrons down the arms, decking themselves out in homemade pinstripes. The template was later adapted for Aston Villa, Southampton, Coventry City, Feyenoord and Sporting Lisbon but the Danes wore it best.


image

2. NAPOLI (home)

Seasons worn: 1985-86

Notable players in this kit: Diego Maradona (pictured)

Some kits are synonymous with a single player, and with any mid-’80s Napoli shirt, it can only be one man you think of: Maradona. He arrived in Naples in 1984 after a tumultuous two seasons at Barcelona, and within three years had led the Azzurri to their first ever championship. The light blue, short-sleeved, polo-style home shirt sponsored by chocolate bar Mars may be the one everyone remembers, it was actually the kit bearing the name of pasta sauce-makers Buitoni that they were wearing when they lifted their first title in 1987.

Note the lovely switch of the Napoli badge and kit-maker Ennerre. They were the company of former footballer Nicola Raccuglia, who pioneered designs that were more like casual clothes. He made most top Italian clubs’ kits during this period and used his initials on the kits instead of a logo (Ennerre literally translating as “NR” in Italian).


1. SAMPDORIA (home)

image

Seasons worn: 1990-92

Notable players in this kit: Roberto Mancini (pictured), Gianluca Vialli, Pietro Vierchowod, Attilio Lombardo

A fourth Italian kit in the top 10 and an instantly recognisable one to top our ranking. Sampdoria might not have the trophy haul of Juventus or Milan, but they have this incredible shirt to make up for that. The white, black and red band across the torso on a blue shirt is a nod to the club’s origins with a merger between two teams; Sampierdarenese (red and black) and Andrea Doria (white and blue with a shield bearing a St. George cross).

This particular Asics kit was also worn during Samp’s most successful period, during which they won their first and only Scudetto. That silhouette on the shoulder is of Baciccia, whose name is derived from the Italian name for John the Baptist, the patron saint of both sailors and the city of Genoa. He was unveiled in 1980 and referenced, bizarrely, by Donald Duck in the pages of Topolino, a licensed Disney comic sold by Panini. Baciccia was placed on the sleeves by Errenne (him again) in 1980, leaving space for the Italian shield that teams who have won the Scudetto get to wear the following season on the chest, as Mancini is modelling here.

Products You May Like

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *