Notes
  Prior to World War I, 
  goalkeepers mostly wore the same colours as their team mates, and they were distinguished 
  by donning a cap.  England's goalkeepers, however, chose to wear a 
	different coloured jersey as early as 1891, and perhaps, even earlier. It is 
	difficult to tell what colour was chosen, but the light appearance in the 
	monochrome photographs suggests that it was grey, or maybe, yellow. We can 
	probably surmise that goalkeepers were asked to bring their own club jerseys 
	to wear in the internationals. Unlike the outfield players, the goalkeepers' 
	jerseys were not emblazoned with the Three Lions emblem.
In the early years of the twentieth 
century, the jerseys were noticeably darker, and they could have been red, blue, 
green or grey. We simply cannot tell from photographs. In 1921, the 
International Football Association Board (IFAB) decreed that international 
goalkeepers would wear yellow, but on one notable occasion, 
in Sweden, in 1923, possibly becasue Sweden were wearing yellow, England's custodian took to the field in a hooped shirt, as 
seen
here. We can only speculate on what the colours were, but we imagine that it 
was supplied locally, not the last time that an England goalkeeper would find 
himself wearing the colours of another team (Ray Clemence wore an adidas 
Romanian top in 1980 and Peter Shilton, incredibly, wore a Scotland top with the 
Scottish FA emblem at Hampden in 1989!).
After the Second World War, England's goalkeepers 
were finally issued with yellow roll-neck jerseys, complete with Three Lions 
emblem, for each match. Then, in 1954, when England finally discarded the dress 
shirts that they had been wearing since 1880, so too did the goalkeepers acquire 
a more modern look. Their jerseys had a crew neck, as opposed to the v-necks 
worn by the outfield players. We do not know yet if these jerseys were supplied 
separately to the outfield shirts, so we cannot ascertain who made them.
From 1966 onwards, however, we know that Umbro 
were supplying England goalkeepers' jerseys, as well as the outfield kits. As 
the sixties gave way to the seventies, Umbro began supplying aertex shirts to 
England for games in warmer climes and the goalkeepers were not excluded. Umbro 
also added their distinctive diamond logo onto Gordon Banks' jersey in 1971, 
over three years before the whole team began wearing Admiral logos.
Umbro introduced numbers to the back of the 
goalkeepers' shirts for every match from the beginning of the 1969-70 season. 
Previously, England's 'keepers had only worn digits when squad numbers were 
required, in the four World Cup tournaments from 1954 onwards, plus the European 
Championship finals of 1968, and on selected other occasions.
Up to this point, England's 'keepers had worn 
yellow as first-choice and blue as an alternative. On two occasions in 1970, 
Banks found himself wearing red shirts. One is believed to be England's away 
shirt, when both the yellow and blue tops clashed with Colombia's yellow and 
blue shirt, and the other, inexplicably occurred when Banks wore the yellow 
Aertex shirt against the yellow-shirted Romanians in the opening half of 
England's first defence of the World Cup. For the second half, he appeared in a 
red short-sleeved shirt.
Green shirts were briefly introduced (or 
re-introduced) to the England goalkeeper's locker in 1973, when the outfield 
players wore yellow Airtex shirts for a European tour. This was also the year 
when Peter Shilton became the first England goalkeeper to wear tracksuit 
trousers for an international. The occasion was the Scottish FA's Centenary 
match on a rock-hard Hampden Park pitch in February, so, perhaps, 
understandable. He repeated this on two other occasions, and Ray Clemence and David 
Seaman have both felt compelled to follow suit on occasion.
1974 saw Admiral secure the first official 
contract to supply England exclusively with their kit. This included the first 
ever complete 'keeper's outfit, where black shorts and socks were supplied with 
the yellow shirt. The change blue shirt, however, had to make do with the same 
black shorts and socks, or, alternatively, revert to the old days when the 
'keepers' lower garments matched the outfield players'.
When Umbro returned, in 1984, to take on 
the role, once more, of England's kit supplier, they saw the goalkeeper's 
uniform as a chance to experiment a little with the traditional colours, allied, 
presumably, to an expert marketing onslaught. A grey shirt appeared on the South 
American tour that year, and this was followed up, two years later, by an 
all-grey kit, guaranteed not to clash with any other nation's outfield kit, so 
the yellow equivalent (now only second choice) became redundant.
This was followed by an era when football kit 
designs got more and more bizarre, especially the goalkeepers'. In 1988, England 
switched to green shirts with different shades of green forming stripes. A blue 
equivalent was used throughout the following year. There was a brief respite 
when a more sober yellow shirt appeared in 1990, not unlike the 1974 Admiral 
offering, with black shorts and socks, but the early nineties saw a staggering 
array of 'paint explosions' across the England goalkeeper's shirt, culminating 
in the predominantly red change kit used in 1996. This was included in Dave 
Moor's, 'The Worst Football Kits Of All Time' (The History Press, 2011) and 
described thus: "It had everything - random blocks of clashing colours, 'GLAND' 
written vertically up the front ('ENG' being uncomfortably tucked away where 
only Mrs. Seaman might find it) and part of the England crest disappearing into 
the armpit." Click here 
to see it (if you dare!).
Although the garish designs were reined 
in, in the years that followed, Umbro managed to launch a staggering 14 designs 
in the decade of the nineties, seemingly not restricted to the 'one per year' 
approach of the outfield kit. Indeed, in 1997, they managed to introduce three 
new goalkeeping kits, two of which were blue! There were some 'interesting' new 
colours, as well, such as orange, olive green and teal, but yellow, blue and 
black (separately) managed to re-establish themselves in the new millennium.
Ever more competition rules have meant that kit 
men have had to be on their guard, such as when David James had to change into a 
black training shirt, because the predominantly red sleeves of the first-choice 
shirt clashed with the red-and-white chequered sleeves of Croatia in the Euro 
2004 tournament. Goalkeepers' kits cannot clash anymore with their opposite 
number in tournaments, due to the propensity for 'keepers to venture into the 
other team's penalty area when chasing a result in the closing stages of a game.
More variations of colours have been introduced 
more recently, such as aubergine, racing green, Bermuda green and spearmint 
green, hyper verde(!) and bold berry, but these have been interspersed with more 
traditional colours. In 2013, to mark the FA's 150th anniversary, an all-gold 
kit was introduced.
2014 saw a new trend, when England's goalkeepers 
began wearing the short-sleeved versions of the shirts, with a long-sleeved base 
layer top of the same colour underneath.
England continue to catch us out with new designs 
(usually three or four in each two-year cycle) and it is fascinating to see how the designers can make 
them look different to previous efforts, but we continue to document them as 
they appear, whilst filling in the gaps from the earlier years as new evidence 
surfaces. Please get in touch if there is anything that you can add to this 
story (Contact Us).
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        CG/BD/GI