Espanyol 19-20 Home Kit Released
La Liga side Espanyol this afternoon released their new 2019-20 home kit, which is once again be produced by Spanish brand Kelme. Espanyol took on Atlético Madrid on May 4th at 4:15 PM wearing the new home shirt.
Espanyol has been a pioneer in LaLiga, before finishing the season, releasing the shirt of the next campaign. This decision has had a great acceptance among the fans according to the club.
💙 Orgullosos d'on venim. Segurs d'on anem.
— RCD Espanyol de Barcelona (@RCDEspanyol) 4. Mai 2019
💙 Orgullosos de dónde venimos. Seguros de dónde vamos.
💙 Proud of our origins. Confident of where we are heading.
💙 我们自豪的源泉。我们前进的方向。
👉 Buy it now: https://t.co/LuZvzw0GOm#RCDE | #Volem | #EspanyoldeBarcelona pic.twitter.com/4oGfIAYdYD
Espanyol 2019-2020 Home Jersey
This is the new Espanyol 19-20 home jersey.
The new Espanyol 2019-2020 home kit by technical sponsor Kelme is inspired by the 1929 shirt with which Espanyol won its first title in club history, the 1928-29 Copa del Rey. It comes with wide strips, a pic-shaped neck and several slogans associated with the club.
The inner back of the shirt incorporate a detail of the stained glass window of the Sagrada Familia.
Blue shorts and white / sky blue socks complete the new Espanyol 2019-2020 home kit.
The price of the new Espanyol kit is € 79.95 (€ 71.96 wfor memebrs), while the child's shirt is priced at € 69.95 (€ 62.96 for members).
Do you like the new Espanyol kit by Kelme? Comment below.
FC Barcelona 26-27 Home Kit Leaked - 6 New Real Images
5 new images of the Barcelona 26-27 home kit were shared by Barcelona shirt collector @memorabilia1899. Footy Headlines just a few hours before leaked 6 new real pictures of the Nike Barcelona 26-27 home kit.
The FC Barcelona 26-27 home kit features a unique design with three shades of red and three shades of blue in each stripe, paying tribute to the renovated Camp Nou's exterior.
Adidas 2026 World Cup Final Ball Leaked - New Images
Thanks to football collector Christopher Carrera, we have new images of the Adidas Trionda 2026 World Cup final soccer ball.
South Africa Debut Silver Adidas Climacool Cooling Jacket At 2026 World Cup
South Africa debuted the new Adidas Climacool cooling jacket in a striking silver colorway at the 2026 World Cup. The look evoked memories of spacesuits.
The Adidas Climacool system is engineered specifically to lower core body temperature and improve heat tolerance in hot and humid conditions - exactly the kind of environment teams face at a summer World Cup in the USA and Mexico. The system consists of three components: a cooling vest, jacket and overshoe, with the vest worn over the player's jersey containing a specialised gel that is frozen before use and slowly thaws to keep players cool as they prepare to take the pitch.
FIFA Orders Egypt to Remove 7 Stars From 2026 World Cup Kit And Change Numbers Color
FIFA has instructed the Egyptian Football Association to remove the seven stars from their 2026 World Cup kit. The stars, which represent Egypt's record seven Africa Cup of Nations victories, violate FIFA's strict equipment regulations for the tournament. Under these rules, stars displayed on national team jerseys at the World Cup are exclusively reserved for nations that have won the FIFA World Cup.
In addition to the removal of the stars, FIFA has directed Egypt to change the color of the player names and numbers on their shirts. The original design featured gold lettering, which FIFA deemed insufficient for broadcast visibility, requiring the team to switch to white text instead.
Brazil Did Not Leave Enough Space for FIFA 2026 World Cup 'Debut' Patch
The 2026 FIFA World Cup has introduced a highly detailed new system of sleeve badges, including a special "DEBUT" patch for players making their very first appearance in the tournament. However, on-pitch visuals of Brazil have revealed a glaring spatial issue: the Brazilian kit men did not leave enough space for it.
As seen on players like Danilo during their opening fixtures, the "DEBUT" patch has to be crammed awkwardly against the bottom stitching - the World Cup badge has been placed too low.
Brazil's kit managers apparently ignored the official application guidelines provided by badge manufacturer Avery Dennison. According to the leaked application manual, kits must have 55mm free under the regular badge for the debut patch - 20mm for the debut badge, plus spacing of 15mm (top) and 20 mm (bottom).






