Liverpool 19-20 Kits To Be Made By New Balance
Over the past few months, there had been rumors that New Balance could be replaced as Liverpool kit supplier from the 2019-20 season. Now we can reveal that those rumors will not happen, at least for the 2019-2020 season.
Liverpool earns £45million-a-year from the New Balance kit deal. Despite the current New Balance Liverpool FC kit deal ends at the end of the 2019-20 season, they gave been already linked to be in talks with Adidas and Nike about a new kit deal from Summer 2019.
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New Balance To Make Liverpool 2019-20 Jerseys
The New Balance Liverpool 2019-20 jerseys will be made by New Balance. Nothing about the design of a Liverpool 2019-20 kit is known yet.
New Balance will again release three new Liverpool kits - a home, an away and a third jersey. The Liverpool 19-20 home kit is again expected to be released already in April 2019.
Do you like that the Liverpool 2019-2020 jerseys will be again made by New Balance? Do you look forward to see them? Let us know in the comments below.
Vintage Football Shirts
from Cult Kits
2006 Japan Adidas Samurai Blue Supporters Tee (M)
1994 USA 94 *BNWT* World Cup Cap Twins
1992/94 Umbro Pro Training Shirt (L)
1990'S Puma 'Midfielder Top' Football Boots (Size 6)
2020/21 South Korea Away Shirt (L) Nike
Croatia Boban Bootleg Tee
1985/86 Schalke L/S Home Shirt (S) Adidas
1995/97 Adidas GK 'Terminator' Template Shirt (S)
2015/16 Raith Rovers Polo Shirt (S) Puma
1997/99 Rangers Gascoigne #8 Home Shirt (L) Nike
New Adidas Three Stripes Become Even Thicker Sometimes
The new Adidas 2026-2027 kits have been worn around the whole of Europe this weekend. With more and more on-pitch debuts, another feature of the new kits becomes obvious.
Instead of utilizing traditional stitched-on fabric strips or standard heat-pressed decals, the famous Three Stripes are now directly engineered into the woven fabric of the side panels. This has the effect that the bigger 3 stripes get even bigger when the shirt is stretched.
Umbro Launches Nations 2026 Collection
Umbro has released the Nations collection, inspired by the 2026 World Cup. The designs are available for **Brazil, Argentina, France, England, Japan and Morocco**. Rather than official team replicas, the pieces feature authorial reinterpretations with custom color palettes, exclusive graphics, crests and typography developed specifically for the project.
Each jersey includes symbolic details tied to the respective nation's identity, balancing minimalist and bolder approaches. Umbro Brazil director Eduardo Dal Pogetto noted that the aim was to go beyond traditional sportswear and create pieces representing the energy and identity of various nations with a modern outlook for daily use.
The jerseys are available now on the official Umbro Brazil website and select retailers, priced at R$349.99.
Arsenal Switches to Home Kit for Title Celebrations
After securing the Premier League title while playing in their Trefoil-adorned third kit, the Arsenal squad made a deliberate wardrobe change into their traditional 25-26 red and white home kit to actually lift the trophy.
This evokes memories of FC Barcelona, who famously wore orange but switched to their home shirt for the title lifting. In contrast to Arsenal, Barcelona just switched the shirt and kept the orange shorts and socks.
Do you like teams switching into their primary colors after the final whistle to ensure historic celebrations are captured in their iconic home kits?
Manchester City Debuts 26-27 Home Kit
Man City did not wear the special golden inscription for Pep Guardiola. This edition was exclusively available at the stadium store, limited to 500 shirts.
Atalanta, Marseille & Wolfsburg Change Logos for 26-27 Season
Vietnamese kit freaks Chuyện Áo Đấu have created a nice infographic of three European teams' logo changes for the 26-27 season. All of them have one thing in common - they are circular.
The underlying reasoning for this widespread circular design trend across modern football is primarily driven by digital functionality and commercial scalability. Circular, stripped-down logos provide a sense of visual balance and are significantly easier to apply across various media, ranging from tiny social media avatars to global lifestyle merchandise.
However, this rush toward extreme minimalism is increasingly alienating traditional football supporters and risking a severe homogenization of the sport's visual landscape.
For Wolfsburg, the change was praised by fans, as the Zinnen crest has been the fans' favorite design ever since. For Atalanta, it was also rooted in history, while OM was the biggest update.



