Puma Powercat Black / Yellow / Blue Boot Colorway Released
Puma today unveiled a new colorway of the Puma Powercat boot range. The new Puma Powercat 2 Black / Fluo Yellow / White / Brilliant Blue Boot will be worn by Dortmund player Marco Reus in the Champions League final against Bayern München. Puma released the new evoSPEED 1.2 Boot series in the same colors.
Puma Powercat 2 Black / Fluo Yellow / White / Brilliant Blue
This is the new Puma Powercat colorway released today.
The new Puma Powercat Boot features the main color black with blue and fluorescent yellow applications making them look similar to the kit of Borussia Dortmund. The new Puma Powercat Boot will make its debut in the most important match of the season, the Champions League Final in Wembley.
The design of the new Powercat Boot
Puma Powercat 2 Boot features striking new colors.
The new Puma Powercat Boot is mainly black with fluorescent yellow applications like the laces and the outside of the boot. Some parts of the new Boot are kept in blue while the Puma logo is white at the outside. The cleats of the new Puma Powercat 2 Boot are yellow and the sole is devided verticaly in one black and one fluo yellow part with the blue lettering PWR C.
Which players will wear the new Puma Powercat Boot colorway?
The new Puma Powercat Boot is worn by Marco Reus.
Puma Powercat Boot is worn by Cesc Fabregas, Nemanja Vidic, Roman Weidenfeller and Rosicky. Puma will release the Puma Powercat Boot also in Orange and White colorways in September 2013.
All 2026 World Cup Boots - Adidas, Nike, Puma, Mizuno, Skechers, Under Armour, New Balance,
With only two days left until the start of the 2026 World Cup, all major brands have unveiled special boot collections for their star players ahead of football's biggest tournament. Coincidentally, shades of pink are set to dominate the green pitches across North America this summer. Big thanks to bootsculture.
Many brands have chosen vibrant pink and red tones as the main colors for their latest football boot collections, including the "Big Three": Nike, Adidas, and Puma. Other brands such as Skechers and New Balance have also embraced the trend.
- Adidas: 'Road to Glory' Pack
- Nike: 'Breakout' Pack
- Puma: 'Showtime' Pack
- Mizuno: 'Prism White' Pack
- Skechers: 'Sunset' Pack
- New Balance: 'Pure Ambition' Pack
FC Barcelona 26-27 Third Kit Leaked - Long-Sleeve Version
Footy Headlines can now leak a new image of the Nike Barcelona 26-27 third jersey, long-sleeve version. Although it is a fake, the design is identical to the real one.
The FC Barcelona 26-27 third kit features a half-and-half design with 'Green Frost' and 'Dusty Cactus' shades, split by a jagged graphic.
Kilmarnock 2026-27 Home & Away Kits Released
Scottish Premiership club Kilmarnock FC have officially unveiled their new home and away kits for the 2026-27 season. Made by Hummel, the new shirts feature James Frew Ltd as the main front-of-shirt sponsor.
The Hummel Kilmarnock 2026-27 home jersey introduces a clean design in the club's traditional blue, complemented by Hummel's iconic chevrons on the shoulders. Offering a vibrant alternative, the Hummel Kilmarnock 2026-27 away shirt is predominantly yellow. Both kits share a cohesive design language characteristic of Hummel's recent templates and are available to purchase through the club's official channels.
RFEF Official Store AI Chatbot Recommends Fake Spain Jerseys
The official store of the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) has experienced an embarrassing glitch, as its AI-powered chatbot is reportedly advising fans to purchase counterfeit Spain national team jerseys instead of the official merchandise.
A viral post by X user @Free_y_thinker highlighted the issue, sharing a screenshot of the chatbot recommending a fake jersey as a better and cheaper alternative to the official kits. The post quickly gained massive traction with nearly a million views, prompting other users to share their own bizarre interactions with the shop.rfef.es AI, which included further recommendations for fakes, specific unauthorized sellers, and even seemingly random Python code. This incident highlights the potential pitfalls of implementing AI customer service without strict guardrails.








