The club crest is derived from the Manchester City Council coat of arms, although all that remains of it on the current crest is the ship in full sail.
The devil stems from the club's nickname "The Red Devils"; it was
included on club programmes and scarves in the 1960s, and incorporated
into the club crest in 1970, although the crest was not included on the
chest of the shirt until 1971 (unless the team was playing in a Cup
Final).
A photograph of the Newton Heath team, taken in 1892, is believed to
show the players wearing red-and-white quartered jerseys and blue
shorts. Between 1894–96, the players wore distinctive green and gold jerseys which were replaced in 1896 by white shirts, which were worn with blue shorts. After its name change in 1902, the club colours were changed to red
shirts, white shorts, and black socks, which has become the standard
Manchester United home kit.
Very few changes were made to the kit until 1922 when the club adopted
white shirts bearing a deep red "V" around the neck, similar to the
shirt worn in the 1909 FA Cup Final. They remained part of their home kits until 1927.
In 1934, players sported cherry and white hooped shirts, but the
following season the red shirt was recalled after the club's lowest ever
league placing of 20th in the Second Division.
The black socks were changed to white from 1959 to 1965, where they
were replaced with red socks up until 1971, when the club reverted to
black. The current home kit is a red gingham-pattern shirt with dark red checks and a black v-neck collar, worn with white shorts and black socks.
The Manchester United away strip has often been a white shirt, black
shorts and white socks, but there have been several exceptions. These
include an all-black strip with blue and gold trimmings between 1993 and
1995, the navy blue shirt with silver horizontal pinstripes worn during
the 1999–2000 season,
and the 2011–12 away kit, which had a royal blue body and sleeves with
hoops made of small midnight navy blue and black stripes, with black
shorts and blue socks.
An all-grey away kit worn during the 1995–96 season was dropped after
just five games because players claimed to have trouble finding their
team-mates against the crowd.
In 2001, to celebrate 100 years as "Manchester United", a reversible
white/gold away kit was released, although the actual match day shirts
were not reversible.
The club's third kit is often all-blue. This was most recently the
case during the 2008–09 season, to celebrate 40 years since it was worn
for the club's first European Cup win in 1968.
Exceptions include a green-and-gold halved shirt worn between 1992 and
1994, a blue-and-white striped shirt worn during the 1994–95 and 1995–96
seasons and once in 1996–97, an all-black kit worn during the
Treble-winning 1998–99 season, and white shirts with black-and-red
horizontal pinstripes worn between 2003 and 2005. In recent seasons, the third kit has usually been the previous season's away kit.
Minggu, 17 Maret 2013
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar