Classic Retro England Shirts

December 17, 2008 by edd  
Filed under Classic Retro Shirts

englandfeature

From the highs of 1966 to the lows of Italia 90 we look at some iconic England shirts from the last 60 years. Since the success of beating West Germany at Wembly in ‘66 England have run the whole gamut of emotions on the pitch. England have produced some great performances since winning the world cup, a 5-1 win over Germany in Berlin and a 4-1 over Holland in the 1996 European championships. Theirs been humiliations along the way too!  Defeats by Croatia and Denmark stand out as real low points for the English game. But lets be positive and concentrate on those performances that made us proud to be English.

Classic England Shirts

England 4 West Germany 2

So far the World Cup Final on 30th July 1966 is England’s greatest result to date. Playing in front of the home crowd at Wembley England lifted the ‘Jules Rimet’ Trophy after beating West Germany 4 ~ 2 after extra time. The unconventional formation employed by England became known as the “wingless wonders” with a narrow attacking formation, described at the time as a 4-3-3 (although the formation was nearer a 4-1-3-2).

The actual match still remains controversial to this day, largely down to the 3rd English goal which hit the crossbar and bounced into the net and back out again. The German players always stated that the ball did not cross the goal line, the Russian linesman that day disagreed and awarded the goal which made it 3~2 to the Allies England. The 4th English goal which broke German and Scottish hearts was scored in the last seconds of the match by Geoff Hurst, giving the player a very rare World Cup final hat-trick.

The controversial 3rd goal is often talked about, but few people remember that the 2nd West German goal appeared to strike the hand of Karl-Heinz Schnellinger whilst travelling through the penalty area. In Germany a ball that hits the crossbar and bounces in the net is known as a ‘Wembley-Tor” or Wembley goal! To English fans the game is best remember for the legendary commentators line “And here comes Hurst. He’s got… some people are on the pitch, they think it’s all over. It is now! It’s four!”.

Germany 1 England 5

A 2002 World Cup qualify saw England tear Germany apart at the Olympiastadion in Munich on September 1, 2001. A German victory would have confirmed their qualification and seen England competing with Greece and Finland for a place in the qualification playoffs. Germany had been unbeaten at the Olympiastadion stadium since 1973. After just six minutes it seemed Germany would remain unbeaten at the stadium when Carsten Jancker was able to tap the ball past England’s goalkeeper David Seaman.

The lead did not last long, on the 12th minute, England were given a free kick. Nicky Barmby headed down to Owen, who volleyed the ball past Oliver Kahn. Just before the end of the half Steven Gerrard shot the ball into the corner of the German goal from 25 yards out, putting the score at Germany 1, England 2.

Three minutes after the kick-off, a cross from David Beckham found Emile Heskey, who headed the ball down to Michael Owen, who was unmarked. Owen hit the ball into right-hand corner of the net. Although Germany were able to create further chances in the second half, it was England who struck again in the 66th minute. Steven Gerrard’s successful tackle gave him possession, and he set up a great through ball for Owen, who sprinted into the box and fired the ball over Kahn’s head to give England a 4-1 lead. This made Michael Owen the first England player since 1966 World Cup winner Geoff Hurst to score a hat-trick against Germany.

England began to defend their heavy lead. However, in the 74th minute, they managed to extend it through a counter attack. Rio Ferdinand won the ball in defense and gave it to Paul Scholes. He progressed up the pitch through a one-two passing move with David Beckham. Scholes passed the ball to Emile Heskey, who sprinted past German defender Marko Rehmer and hit the ball low past Oliver Kahn to make it 5-1.

Holland 1 England 4

A European Championship Finals game at Wembley Stadium Tuesday June 18 1996 saw England were getting to grips with the game early on and were preventing Holland from playing their usual game. There was a scare though in the 20th minute when Cruyff flew past Anderton, but Pearce was able to prevent further danger when the ball deflected from him for a corner. The corner didn’t create anything for Holland but it did for England.

On the break from this play England charged forward through Sheringham and McManaman. The Liverpool winger found Ince who went past Blind. The Holland defender then turned after Ince and tripped him. The only action which could possibly have been taken was a penalty, which the referee awarded. Shearer coolly converted the spot-kick to break the deadlock.

England began the second period as they had started the first. Only six minutes had elapsed in the second half when from a corner, Sheringham headed the ball into the top of the net. There was jubilation around Wembley as England’s lead increased to two. Playing in control England didn’t sit back and defend but carried on trying to better their tally, and did so in the 57th minute. McManaman teamed up with Gascoigne for the Rangers star to find Sheringham, needing only to tap the ball to Shearer, who made no doubt of making the score 3-0. That was Shearer’s fourth goal in 3 games.

The scoreline was remarkable and still England kept going for more. The fourth came when a driving shot from Anderton flummoxed van der Sar, who couldn’t keep hold of the ball and Sheringham seized the opportunity of Holland’s mistake to give England a four goal margin over the Dutch. England were in defiant mood.

Classic Brazil Retro Shirts

December 16, 2008 by edd  
Filed under Classic Retro Shirts

Brazil Retro

If it’s samba style you’re after then take a look at classic Brazil shirts from the past. A retro Brazil shirt won’t help you play better but at least you’ll look the part!

The Brazilian national teams first ever match was against English club side Exeter City in 1914! To this day Exeter fans claim to have taught Brazilians how to play football! The result of the game (a 2 – 0 defeat for Exeter) suggest that the Brazilians already had a fairly good grasp of the basic rules. The famous quote about the game of football is “The English invented it, the Brazilians perfected it.

When we think of the Brazil team we always imagine the famous yellow shirts and electric blue shorts, but Brazil only started to wear the yellow and blue kit from the mid 1950’s. Before then Brazil flirted with a number of different colour combinations including: Red shirts & white shorts, white shirt & white shorts, yellow & green vertical striped shirts, yellow & black striped shirts and a few more variations besides! After an embarrassing defeat at home in the 1950 world cup the Brazilian public blamed the current kit (white shirt with blue collars) for the lose! claiming it wasn’t patriotic enough.

In 1951 a Brazilian daily newspaper held a competition to design a kit incorporating the four colours of the Brazilian flag. The design of nineteen year old Aldyr Garcia Schlee from the town of Pelotas was chosen as the winning entry. The new kit of yellow shirt with green trim and blue shirts echoed the design of the brazilian flag perfectly. The kit was first used in 1954 and has remained largely unchanged ever since.

You can view a full our full range of retro Brazil football shirts in our store ~ Click Here

Classic Cheaters Retro Shirts

December 15, 2008 by edd  
Filed under Classic Retro Shirts

Get that authentic bad boy look with our selection of world class cheaters shirts. Players like Maradona, Cristiano Ronaldo and Didier Drogba have taken cheating and diving to a next level. If you want to be instantly unpopular on the terraces or down the pub then get yourself a bad boy retro football shirt.

*Thierry Henry* coming soon!

Cheeky Winker

 

£34.95
Christino Ronaldo the player everyone loves to hate (even United fans) endeared himself to his adopted country by getting England player Wayne Rooney (his United team mate) sent off in a World Cup Quarter Finals match in Portugal. Ronaldo ran the length of the pitch to plead with the referee to give Rooney a red card.  

Rooney duly received his marching orders from the ref and Ronaldo gave a cheeky wink and smile to the Portuguese bench, Portugal went on to win the match and Ronaldo later said “He is my team-mate and a player of international level. I felt very sorry for him [Rooney] because we are team-mates and very good friends.”  With friends like that…

You can get you very own C. Ronaldo bad boy look with a retro Portugal shirt, to complete the look you’ll need a cheeky wink and a gallon of grease for your hair!

Hand Of Knob

 

£34.99
Often called the greatest player that ever lived, in reality Maradona is just a knob! The only thing he is legendary for is cheating! His ‘Hand Of God’ incident against England in the Mexico World Cup is the stuff of legend. How the match officials could think a player who stands at only 3.2 ft could out jump England goalkeeper Peter Shilton at 6ft is beyond me!

We should also remember that Maradona was a world class diver, his dramatic tumbles in the ‘94 World Cup should have earned him a place on the Argentina Olympic Diving team.

You can take your pick of shirts for Maradona, he cheated his way around the globe playing for Barcelona, Napoli, Savilla and Boca Juniors. We think his cheating is best remembered in his number 10 Argentina shirt. To get the authentic ‘Maradona’ look you may also need to purchase 500 meat pies, afro wig and walk on your knees!

Remember Versaille!

 

The 1982 World Cup Semi Final: This wasn’t the first time Germany delivered a knock out blow to France, this time it happened on the footballs fields of Spain rather than the battle fields of Europe. Micheal Paltini’s French team had won many admirers with their free flowing attacking football style, which had seen them progress to the 1982 World Cup semi finals where Germany awaited them.

By comparision the Germany’s had only reached the final stages of the competition by engineering a result with Austria, in a disgracfull performence the German and Austrian teams played out a 1-0 win for Germany which guaranteed both teams would reach the next stage of the competition, players strolled around the pitch, passing the ball sideways and backwards. The outraged, largely Spanish crowd yelled ‘Fuera, fuera’ (‘OUT, OUT’). The result of the match meant that Algeria who had beaten German in the opening game would go out of the competition.

£36.99
Unfortunately the semi final match will only be remembered for one horrific tackle. The most controversial, and still talked-about incident of the game came mid-way through the second half, when Platini’s lofted through ball sent substitute Patrick Battiston in for a run on goal. German goalkeeper Schumacher could see that Battiston would have a clear scoring opportunity. Without hesitation German keeper Schumacher ran out of this area and launched himself at Battiston, the Frenchmen just had enough time to lift the ball over the keeper before being flatten. Battiston was knocked unconscious by the challenge, lost two teeth and broke three ribs! the match referee didn’t even book Schumacher for the tackle! We looked all over the web but we couldn’t find a retro German keepers shirt from ‘82 but you can play the part of Battiston with a great retro France shirt.