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      P 38 W 21 D 8
      L 9 F 111:A 5766% successful
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  Bukta brought to an end the four-year reign of 
Umbro as England's kit suppliers, albeit through various distributors, at the 
end of the 1950s. At first, it was for three games only in 1959, but 
as the 1960s began, so did a new era for England's kit. 
Few will have noticed, as the shirt still appeared 
to be the same v-necked t-shirt with the emblem sewn 
  on that they had worn since
1954. The practice of adding the opponents' name and 
the year 
  in a scroll underneath the emblem continued until the end of the season.
England's trip to Budapest in May 1960 was the last occasion that the opponents' name 
would appear on the shirt until 
  the day of David Beckham's free-kick heroics in 
2001. 
The eagle-eyed may have spotted that the style of 
number had changed on the back of the shirt and that it was now occasionally navy blue 
	  as well as red, instead of being colour-coordinated with the socks, as had been the 
norm since the war. However, by the 1963-64 season, it had switched to red for 
	  all games and would remain 
red until 1995 (as far as we can tell). 
There seemed to be some debate as to what colour the socks should be. 
  They began the 1960-61 season in the same red pair with the white band around the calf. 
These had been the first choice since 1957, but they then tried out three 
  different designs in consecutive matches before reverting back to the trusty 
  red pair for their end-of-season games in Portugal and Italy. The 
  following season saw a couple more variations, but it was the white pair, with 
  a red and a blue stripe, that finally got the nod as the preferred design in 
  the run-up to the 1962 World Cup in Chile. White 
  was, presumably, felt to be a colour that fewer teams clashed with than red and 
  this decision was borne out by the fact that white has been well and truly 
  established as the first-choice sock colour ever since (aside from a brief 
retro-dalliance with red again in
2016-17). There was still 
  further tinkering to be done, however. At the 1962 World Cup quarter-final, 
  against Brazil, half of the England team appeared to be in plain white socks, though 
it was probably due to the stripes being hidden from view by creating a large turnover. The red 
  and blue cadet stripes were eventually discarded when England went on tour at 
the end of the 1963-64 season, creating 
  the most simple strip combination possible of white and navy blue. 
 The introduction of short sleeves for every game since 1954 was certainly a step forward in 
  terms of lightweight attire, but it was still recognised that England had to 
  play some games in cold weather and it didn't get much colder than the early 
	  months of 1963, known as 'The Big Freeze'. This was probably behind the reason to 
  introduce a long-sleeved version of the v-neck shirt for the colder months. It 
  was also the year of the Football Association's centenary and 
  to commemorate this, a special emblem was introduced
  (left). 
	  The shirt top left was worn by Johnny Haynes in the 1962 World Cup and 
is from the
	  Neville Evans National Football 
	Shirt Collection, kindly supplied by curator, Simon Shakeshaft, as is the 
number-five shirt (second and third from the left), worn by Maurice Norman 
against East Germany (GDR). Richard Clarke's 'Three Lions - England Match Worn 
Shirts' Facebook Collection supplied the shirt (to the right) bearing a blue 
number 11 and worn in 1960.
 This shirt was then replaced by a 
  crew-neck long-sleeved 
version for the Football Association's Centenary celebration match and the 
	  following winter, until the short-sleeved v-neck was 
  reinstated briefly at the end of each of the next two seasons in warmer conditions before being 
  replaced permanently by the crew neck for the 1965-66 season.
 
Thanks to Dave Hewett for spotting that the socks 
worn against Spain in October 1960 had calf stripes, and to Dave Moor 
	and Simon Monks from 
  
historicalkits.co.uk for clarifying the colour of the socks worn 
	against Wales in 1960. |  
  
  
    
      
    | Matches in Which England Wore the 
        1959 Home White Uniform |  
    | 1958-59 | Please 
    note, 
    between 
    1957 and 1962, England's first choice socks were red with a white band 
    around the calf. |  
    | 329 | 11 April 1959 | 1-0 
    vs. Scotland, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | BC | HW |  
    | 334 | 28 May 1959 | 8-1 
    vs. United 
	States, 
    Wrigley Field, Los Angeles | Fr | AW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt, with blue shorts and 
    (blue change) 
    socks, against USA. |  
    | 1959-60 |  
    | 336 | 28 October 1959 | 2-3 
    vs. Sweden, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HL |  
    | 338 | 9 April 1960 | 1-1 
    vs. Scotland, 
    Hampden Park, 
	Mount Florida, Glasgow | BC | AD |  
    | 339 | 11 May 1960 | 3-3 
    vs. Yugoslavia, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HD |  
    | Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    a red and a blue stripe around the calf, against Yugoslavia. |  
    | 340 | 15 May 1960 | 0-3 
    vs. Spain, 
    
    El Estadio Santiago Bernabéu, Madrid | Fr | AL |  
    | Notes | England 
    wore all white; the 
    white home shirt, with the white away change shorts and 
    
    white socks, with 
    
    a red and a blue stripe around the calf, against Spain. |  
    | 341 | 22 May 1960 | 0-2 
    vs. Hungary, 
    
    Népstadion,
      Budapest | Fr | AL |  
    | 1960-61 |  |  
    | 342 | 8 October 1960 | 5-2 
    vs. Northern 
    Ireland, 
    Windsor Park, Belfast | BC | AW |  
    | 343 | 19 October 1960 | 9-0 
    vs. Luxembourg, 
    Stade Municipal, Stad Lëtzebuerg | WCP | AW |  
    | 344 | 26 October 1960 | 4-2 
    vs. Spain, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    
    a red and a blue stripe around the calf, against Spain. |  
    | 345 | 23 November 1960 | 5-1 
    vs. Wales, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | BC | HW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with red, blue and white hooped 
    socks, against Wales. |  
    | 346 | 15 April 1961 | 9-3 
    vs. Scotland, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | BC | HW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    a red and a blue stripe around the calf, against Scotland. |  
    | 347 | 10 May 1961 | 8-0 
    vs. Mexico, 
    
    Empire
      Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    a red and a blue stripe around the tops, against Mexico. |  
    | 348 | 21 May 1961 | 1-1 
    vs. Portugal, 
    Estádio Nacional, 
    Jamor, Lisboa | WCP | AD |  
    | 349 | 24 May 1961 | 3-2 
    vs. Italy, 
    Stadio Olimpico, 
    Roma | Fr | AW |  
    | 1961-62 |  
    | 351 | 28 September 1961 | 4-1 
    vs. Luxembourg, 
    Arsenal Stadium, Highbury, London | WCP | HW |  
    | 352 | 14 October 1961 | 1-1 
    vs. Wales, 
    
    Ninian Park, Sloper Road, Cardiff | BC | AD |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue 
    shorts and socks, with a white band around the calf, against Wales. |  
    | 353 | 25 October 1961 | 2-0 
    vs. Portugal, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | WCP | HW |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    a red and a blue stripe around the tops, against Portugal. |  
    | 354 | 22 November 1961 | 1-1 
    vs. Northern 
    Ireland, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | BC | HD |  
    | Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with white socks with 
    a red and a blue stripe around the tops, against Northern Ireland. |  
    | 355 | 4 April 1962 | 3-1 
    vs. Austria, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HW |  
    | 356 | 14 April 1962 | 0-2 
    vs. Scotland, 
    
    Hampden
      Park, Mount Florida, Glasgow | BC | AL |  
    |  | Please 
    note, 
    
    although the red socks continued to be worn at several 
    matches up until 1963, the white socks, with a red and a blue stripe across 
    the tops, first worn against Mexico, in 1959, began to take 
    precedence from hereon in. |  
    | 357 | 9 May 1962 | 3-1 
    vs. 
    Switzerland, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HW |  
    | World Cup Finals 1962 |  
    | 359 | 31 May 1962 | 1-2 
    vs. Hungary, 
    Estadio Braden
        Cooper Co., Rancagua, Chile | WCF | NL |  
    | 360 | 2 June 1962 | 3-1 
    vs. Argentina, 
    Estadio Braden
        Cooper Co., Rancagua, Chile | NW |  
    | 
    Notes | England 
    wore all white; the 
    white home shirt and socks, with the white change 
    shorts, against 
    
    Argentina. |  
    | 362 | 10 June 1962 | 1-2 
    vs. Brazil, 
    
    
    Estadio Sausalito, Viña del Mar, Chile | WCF | NL |  
    | 
    Notes | England 
    wore all white; the 
    white home shirt and socks, with the white change 
    shorts, against 
    
    Brazil. |  
    | 1962-63 |  
    | 363 | 3 October 1962 | 1-1 
    vs. France, 
    Hillsborough, Sheffield | ECP | HD |  
    | 364 | 20 October 1962 | 3-1 
    vs. Northern 
    Ireland, 
    Windsor
      Park, Belfast | BC | AW |  
    | 365 | 21 November 1962 | 4-0 
    vs. Wales, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | HW |  
    |  | Please 
    note, 
    
    
    throughout the Football Association's 
	centenary year of 1963, a commemorative 
    emblem was worn on the shirt. |  
    | 366 | 27 February 1963 | 2-5 
    vs. France, 
    
    Parc
      des Princes, Paris | ECP | AL |  
    | 367 | 6 April 1963 | 1-2 
    vs. Scotland, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | BC | HL |  
    | 368 | 8 May 1963 | 1-1 
    vs. Brazil, 
    Empire Stadium, Wembley, London | Fr | HD |  
    | 
    Notes | England wore the white home shirt and blue shorts, with red socks, with a 
	white band around the calf, against Brazil. |  
    | 370 | 2 June 1963 | 2-1 
    vs. GDR, 
    
    Zentralstadion,
      Leipzig | Fr | AW |  
    | 371 | 5 June 1963 | 8-1 
    vs. 
    Switzerland, 
    Sankt Jakob Stadium, Basel | Fr | AW |  
    | 1963-64 |  
    | 372 | 12 October 1963 | 4-0 
    vs. Wales, 
    
    Ninian Park, Sloper Road, Cardiff | BC | AW |  
    |  | Please 
    note, 
    
    from this point onwards, England's first-choice socks were 
	plain white. |  
    | 378 | 24 May 1964 | 3-1 
    vs. Republic 
    of Ireland, 
    Dalymount
      Park, Dublin | Fr | AW |  
    | Taça das Nações 
    1964 |  
    | 380 | 30 May 1964 | 1-5 
    vs. Brazil, 
    
    Estádio Jornalista Mário Filho, Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro | TC | AL |  
    | 
    Notes | England 
    wore all white; 
	the 
    white home shirt and socks, with the white change shorts, against  
    
    Brazil. |  
		
    | 1964-65 |  
    | 389 | 9 May 1965 | 1-1 
    vs. Yugoslavia, 
    Stadion Crvena Zvezda, 
    Beograd | Fr | AD |  
    | 391 | 16 May 1965 | 2-1 
    vs. Sweden, 
    Nya Ullevi Stadion, Göteborg | Fr | AW |  
      
    | 
    Notes | England wore all white; the white home shirt and 
	socks, with the white away change shorts, against Sweden. |  
  
          
          
            
    | England's Record wearing the 1959 Home 
    Shirt |  
    | Type | P | W | D | L | F | A | GD | FTS | CS | FAv | AAv | Pts % | W/L |  
    | Home | 16 | 10 | 4 | 2 | 52 | 20 | +32 | 0 | 4 | 3.250 | 1.250 | 75.0 | +8 |  
    | Away | 19 | 10 | 4 | 5 | 54 | 31 | +23 | 3 | 2 | 2.842 | 1.632 | 63.2 | +5 |  
    | Neutral | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 6 | -1 | 0 | 0 | 1.67 | 2.00 | 33.3 | -1 |  
    | Total | 38 | 21 | 8 | 9 | 111 | 57 | +54 | 3 | 6 | 2.921 | 1.50 | 65.8 | +12 |  
        ____________________ GI/CG/PY/JB |  |