From the pink jersey donned by Sicilian hardmen to the strip that hid blood on George Best’s ankles, The Times has made a selection of the Top 50 Football Kits in history.
As usual, this ranking (just like any other type of ranking involving football) has to be taken with a grain of salt: some fans will feel outraged that their favorite jersey has been forgotten, others may not agree on the selection, etc. but it’s always interesting to see what other people think.
Just like the article’s authors state, if we have forgotten anyone’s favourite, let us know.
It may be hard to remember in these days when footballers are mobile advertising hoardings, whose polyester shirts generate enough static electricity to power the Central Line, but football kits were once simple, strong statements, with nothing but a club crest as adornment - if that. And, as you can see at any big match, plenty of fans who choose to proclaim their loyalties by wearing a replica shirt prefer the reissued classics to the modern design nightmares.
So in our list of the 50 best kits of all time, most are from the days before the marketing men and failed graphic design students got their hands on the visual identities of clubs and countries. There are exceptions, but pitifully few. And when we get around to the 50 worst kits, many will be much more modern. We have no doubt you will send us your suggestions.
In the meantime, here is our list. If we have forgotten anyone’s favourite, let us know. Often we had to choose between very similar designs: for example, Aston Villa, Burnley and West Ham United were almost identical for many seasons. Sometimes, of course, the fine line between a classic kit and a plain dull one is a matter of association. In the 1960s, there wasn’t much difference between the outfits sported by Wrexham and Manchester United. But George Best didn’t play for Wrexham.
| 50 |
Dukla Prague |
“All I Want For Christmas Is A Dukla Prague Away Kit” sang Half-Man, Half-Biscuit. We prefer the home version. The away shirt was a simple reversal, gold with maroon sleeves. |
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| 49 |
Palermo |
For sheer nerve. If you’re going wear pink - in Sicily - you’d better be ready to play hard. |
| . |
| 48 |
Flamengo |
If Dennis The Menace managed a football club, his team would wear a similar shirt to the best supported team in Brazil. |
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| 47 |
Northern Ireland 1970s |
As worn by George Best when knocking the ball out of Gordon Banks’ hands. |
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| 46 |
Scotland 1967 |
The “unofficial world champions” beat Alf Ramsey’s World Cup holders. At Wembley. |
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| 45 |
Everton 1969 |
Ball, Kendall and Harvey ran the Goodison midfield in an understated navy blue number. |
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| 44 |
Partick Thistle 1960s (red and gold hoops) |
Glasgow’s alternative club bravely brightened up Maryhill with a unique striped combination. |
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| 43 |
Heart of Midlothian 1960s |
Known as the Jam Tarts - a sort of redcurrant jam, in this case. |
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| 42 |
Bradford City 1968-72 |
A better combination of claret and amber than any of their recent efforts. |
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| 41 |
Sampdoria |
It is claimed that chest bands are unpopular because, visually, they echo women’s bras. Tell it to Vialli, Gullit, Lombardo … |
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| 40 |
Manchester United 1960s |
As worn by George Best. The red socks didn’t show the blood from repeated assaults by clogging defenders. |
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| 39 |
Sheffield United 1972 |
Tony Currie was the great entertainer in a team that was otherwise short on stars. Remember Trevor Hockey? Nice kit, though. |
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| 38 |
Birmingham City 1972 |
The penguin outfit worn by Bob Latchford and Trevor Francis revived a season. There was a red away version and a strange third kit that was black on one side, gold on the other and red down the middle. |
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| 37 |
Aston Villa 1957 FA Cup final |
Worn by the team that spoiled Manchester United’s dream of an FA Cup win four months after the Munich tragedy. |
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| 36 |
Bristol Rovers |
The Football League’s only quarters (apart from Wycombe Wanderers). |
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| 35 |
Tottenham Hotspur 1970s |
Greaves, Chivers, Gilzean - and not a red sponsor’s logo in sight. |
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| 34 |
Poland 1974 |
Okay, so they put England out of the 1974 World Cup - get over it. But once in Germany, Lato, Gadocha and company ran rings round the opposition in a white and red getup. |
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| 33 |
West Bromwich Albion 1960s-70s |
Jeff Astle, Tony Brown and company were “Throstles” in those days. Allegedly. |
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| 32 |
Croatia 1998 World Cup |
The chequered flag look, later copied by Leyton Orient. But the Os didn’t have Prosinecki or Shuker. |
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| 31 |
Juventus |
This “Old Lady” has always had some decent outfits tucked away in her wardrobe. |
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| 30 |
Stoke City 1972 |
George Eastham scored the goal that won the League Cup, Stoke’s first-ever trophy, wearing a tasteful version of the club’s red and white stripes. |
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| 29 |
Arsenal 1970s |
The present design echoes the simple outfit worn by the club’s first double-winning squad. And Arsenal top the league again. Coincidence? |
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| 28 |
Reading 1969-74 |
Robin Friday’s biography was called “The Best Footballer You Never Saw”. The Royals’ blue version of Celtic’s outfit was the best football kit you never saw. Unless you were at Elm Park. |
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| 27 |
Coventry City away 1971 |
The Sky Blues were notorious for their brown road strip, but before that they had a snazzy green and black striped number. Wonder why they changed? |
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| 26 |
Blackburn Rovers 1960s |
There’s something about the blue and white halves that evokes brass bands and Hovis bread commercials rather than Peruvian forwards and Turkish midfield players. |
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| 25 |
Crystal Palace 1972 |
For one memorable afternoon only, Palace lived up to their intended image as the Ajax of South London in a 5-0 win over Manchester United. |
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| 24 |
United States 1994 |
Alexi Lalas looked like a ginger Captain America in a wacky one that worked nonetheless. This one had the stars, the home shirt had wavy stripes that looked like the flag. |
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| 23 |
Arsenal 2005-06 |
A dip into history for the farewell to Highbury. One of few modern kits that works. |
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| 22 |
Manchester City away 1969-73 |
City won FA Cup and League Cup finals at Wembley disguised as AC Milan. |
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| 21 |
Blackpool 1950s |
The Seasiders’ unique hue shone at Wembley in the Matthews final. Shame all the newsreel footage is black and white. Come on you Tangerines! |
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| 20 |
West Ham United 1960s-70s |
The Hammers were persuaded to change to red when they won the 1966 World Cup final against West Germany. |
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| 19 |
Fiorentina |
Violet is an unusual colour normally reserved for third kits in England, but Gabriel Batistuta wore it with pride for the Viola. |
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| 18 |
Crystal Palace 1970 |
Palace once wore the same combination of claret and blue as West Ham, but their distinctive pinstriped version accompanied them into the top flight for the first time. |
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| 17 |
QPR 1969 |
Rodney Marsh (yes, THAT Rodney Marsh) inspired Rangers from third division to first in the blue and white hoops. |
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| 16 |
Barcelona |
As worn by Cruyff and Maradona, as copied by Malcolm Allison for Crystal Palace in 1973. Funnily enough, no-one ever chanted “Are you Barcelona in disguise?” |
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| 15 |
Hungary 1950s |
Puskas, Hidekguti and friends destroyed England twice wearing the kit based on Hungary’s national flag. Chelsea copied it for their away kit in the 1970s. |
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| 14 |
Internazionale 1960s |
Okay, the ‘catenaccio’ put back the cause of attacking football for many years. But you couldn’t fault the gear. |
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| 13 |
France 1984 |
Before Michel Platini became the interfering busybody of world football, he led a sublime attacking team that won a European Championship but fell agonisingly short in two World Cups. |
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| 12 |
England 1960s |
Before Don Revie brought Admiral on board to make a mess of the England shirt, the three lions sat alone on a simple white jersey. |
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| 11 |
Argentina 1978 |
Forget the hand of God and unproven reports that Peru were bribed to lose 6-0 to put Argentina into the final. Osvaldo Ardiles and company were worthy World Cup winners in this classic outfit. |
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| 10 |
England 1966 |
Plenty of teams have worn red shirts and white shorts. But only one has ever won a World Cup final. |
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| 9 |
Wolves |
Old gold shirts, black shorts. A proud and simple tradition, from Billy Wright to Steve Bull and beyond. |
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| 8 |
Celtic 1967 |
What, no shirt numbers? The Lions of Lisbon knew who they were. |
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| 7 |
Newcastle United 1969 |
The Fairs Cup win was Newcastle’s last trophy. Maybe they should try going back to the classic kit they wore to win it. |
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| 6 |
Ajax |
Unique, simple, iconic. You can’t ask for much more from a football kit. |
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| 5 |
Liverpool 1960s |
Bill Shankly decided that adding red shorts and socks would make his red-shirted players appear more imposing. Ron Yeats looked around seven feet tall as a result. |
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| 4 |
Holland 1974-78 |
Die Oranje lost two World Cup finals despite a host of great players, but the kit was a winner. |
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| 3 |
Italy 1970 |
There have been minor variations - remember the figure-hugging version? - but the Azzurri have always been Europe’s best turned-out national team. |
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| 2 |
Real Madrid 1960s |
The iconic kit, unspoilt by logos and motifs and worn by Gento and Di Stefano. Copied by every club from Leeds United to LA Galaxy. |
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| 1 |
Brazil 1970 |
An unlikely combination of yellow, green, blue and white, which proved a challenge to early colour television technology during the Mexico World Cup, but no team has ever looked better than Pele, Jairzinho, Carlos Alberto and company. |
Wheres Werder Bremens Green and Orange home strip from last season
Fantastic work Marco, putting together all the kit images must have been tough work.
Great job making this. Im surprised the iconic and eye catching Boca Juniors and River plate jerseys are not on the list though.
AS Roma have had some pretty sweet shirts in the last 10-15 years as well, but very good job putting the list together.
Interestingly enough, the Croatia kit from 98 is widely considered to be one of the worst(in Croatia, that is). But, at least the team was good. As for Barca, nothing beats their double-winning shirt from 05-06, the one with thin stripes and red shorts. A fucking masterpiece.
I don’t know what shirt you’ve got at no. 39; but it’s not a United shirt!
I love that Croatia kit! I did then and I do now.
Napoli kit sponsored by mars when Maradona was playing. Great kit.
where is ARGENTINA GREECE GERMANY PORTUGAL?
[...] The top 50 kits of all time (Soccerlens) [...]
i like modern day kits more but still a really good collection in there
Croatian one is the best!
i think its suker and not shuker
Actually, it’s Šuker, pronounced as Shuker. No, really, a majority of people in Croatia didn’t like that shirt. It was too white compared to the usual design, and people joked that the FA didn’t have enough money to cover the whole shirt. But, of course, later it became associated with the success of ‘98, so many people like it now. But they didn’t back then, and many still don’t. Well, anyway, it is a good shirt, from the golden age of lotto. They had Milan and tons of other good teams, and produced some cool jerseys. Now they make crap for Arsenal Kiev and such, while Adidas, Nike and Puma have all the cool teams. Fucking capitalism.
Tough work indeed Ahmed.
Sorry about the Suker mispelling. I copied each kit description straight from the Times article, if I’d have noticed it sooner I’d have corrected it myself.
I like that Croatia shirt as well, they’re the only ones to have that unique chequered flag design, as far as I know.
Boavista also has chequered shirts, black and white. There’s also a Mexican team (don’t remember the name) that has same kits as Croatia.
The “Hand of god” was in 1986 and not in 1978… I think that is a nice way to see diferents shirts.
ttts: That is true, Boavista has a nice chequered black & white design as well.
I couldn’t find the shirt of the Mexican team you were talking about… perhaps you were thinking of one of the colorful designs of goalkeeper Jorge Campos?
Germán: Darnit! Another mistake I didn’t pick up… Also true.
No, I reckon that Campos would find red-and-white chequers not coloroul enough:) I looked it up, and the Mexican team is named Club Tecos de la UAG. I’m sure that I saw a team somewhere wearing green-and-white chequers. I think they were from Germany or Austria or something.
look at aek athens 1995-98 kits
Ahhh bring back the Celtic kit with no numbers or sponsors - ruins those wonderful hoops!
Best shirt of all-time? Has to be Roma’s, from the late 70s.
The #7 jersey should be the PAOK Thessaloniki kit given that Newcastle copied that kit many years ago and Juventus copied Newcastle.