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Showing posts from July, 2018

ALGERIA HOME 2010-11

Last time I looked at a shirt from non-league English team Dronfield Town , so today I thought I’d get as far away as possible from that with a shirt from an African national team. Not physically as far away as possible, then (I suppose that’d mean a kit from New Zealand) but far away in terms of culture, climate and skill level. A treat for animal lovers, this one – it’s Algeria’s 2010-11 home shirt. Of all the colours for a football shirt to be, I’d say white is probably my least favourite. I’m not entirely sure why this is. Perhaps it’s because white is the definition of “plain” and I prefer the uglier, gaudier end of the football kit spectrum. Or maybe it’s because of the clubs I associate with white shirts: the arrogance of Real Madrid, the years of disappointment watching England teams wearing white, the fact that, as the saying goes, everyone hate Leeds. There are still plenty of predominantly white shirts that I do like, though, and this is one of them. The colou

DRONFIELD TOWN HOME - UNKNOWN YEAR

Every now and then I stop and think about just how many football clubs exists around the world. “A lot” doesn’t quite seem to cut it. 737 teams took part in last year’s FA Cup, and that’s just English clubs that qualified. Multiply that by all the countries around the world where football is played at least semi-professionally (so almost all of them) and you have a mind-boggling amount of players, fixtures, results, small pennants with fringe around the edge, old blokes in pubs telling you that they were there for That Famous Match, badges and, yes, kits. Dronfield Town FC are definitely one of those teams, and here’s one of their home shirts. Dronfield’s a small Derbyshire town located fairly near to where I live, which is probably why I managed to find this shirt in a local charity shop. I can’t tell you what year it’s from, but there’s not a huge window to chose from given that Dronfield Town were formed in 1998. I’d guess around the turn of the millennium. The Dronfield

ROTHERHAM UNITED AWAY 1993-94

For Football Laundry’s inaugural post, it seemed appropriate to look at a shirt from the team I actually support. That would be Rotherham United, my home-town club, a club almost entirely without glamour whose most famous celebrity fans are the Chuckle Brothers . Still, I feel like Rotherham United punch above their weight a lot of the time, with the upcoming season being another one spent in the Championship - Premier League, here we come. Anyway, let’s check out Rotherham’s 1993-94 away shirt, shall we? Made by Matchwinner, this is perfect example of mid-nineties away kit design. While the home shirts were (mostly) kept fairly straightforward in deference to the traditions of the clubs and to avoid upsetting the fans, away shirts were fair game for experimentation. Yellow has been a pretty common colour for Rotherham’s away shirts over the years, and here it’s complemented - perhaps not the right word – by a swirling spray of black that could be intended to evoke tiger st