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	   Not worn in play |  
      | Description |  |  |  |  |  
      | Pale-blue short-sleeved 
		shirt, with multi-layered shadow pattern, including large striped square 
		rhombus shapes, some with the right-hand side blank, small square 
		rhombus shapes, some blank and some dark, and long thin-striped panels. 
		Navy-blue winged collar, with small white stripes in a strip near the 
		outer edge. Large navy-blue upside-down triangular insert beneath the 
		neck, split down the middle, with a navy-blue button fastening via a 
		loop of navy-blue material attached to the left side of the insert. Navy-blue diagonal stripes rising from left to right in a white strip near 
		the edge of the sleeves, with two navy-blue concentric diamonds after 
		every fourth stripe. Embroidered emblem on left breast, with 
		
		
		 'FIFA WORLD CUP' and then 'ITALY '90' 
		centralised in capitalised navy-blue lettering underneath. 
		Two embroidered navy-blue concentric diamonds on right breast, with 'umbro' in navy-blue 
		lower-case lettering underneath. Navy-blue numbers on back, in the same 
		font as on the previous Umbro England shirts, with a pale-blue 
		border, outlined in navy blue. 
		Pale-blue shorts, with white 
		drawstring. A white strip comprising upper-third of seams, with navy-blue diagonal stripes rising from right to left, with two navy-blue 
		concentric diamonds after every fourth stripe. Large white triangle, 
		overlapped with a slightly lower large navy-blue triangle, underneath 
		navy-blue stripes. Two 
		embroidered navy-blue concentric diamonds on left thigh, with 'umbro' in 
		navy-blue 
		lower-case lettering underneath. Navy-blue numbers on right thigh in the 
	  same font as on the 1986 World Cup and 1988 European Championship shorts, with embroidered emblem 
		underneath. 
	  .jpg) Pale-blue socks, with 
		navy-blue turnover, three white lions on each. |  
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This sky-blue shirt, the 1990 
  	second choice, including the World Cup insignia, was issued to the
  England squad but never worn in match play.  England wore the 
1990
  white home shirt in all seven of their matches in Italy. Yet again, a blue kit was 
	surplus to requirements. It seems that only England were prepared to take three 
	choices of kit to the World Cup finals, when they were only instructed to 
	register two. An indication of its marketable value, however, came in the 
	weeks leading up to the tournament. The England squad recorded a song (World 
	in Motion), with the band, New Order, whose lead singer, Bernard Sumner, was 
	filmed in the promotional video for the single in May, wearing this new blue 
	shirt (without the World Cup lettering). The single shot to the top of the 
	UK charts and the shirt got plenty of subliminal advertising, no doubt 
	prompting replica sales to rise during a successful tournament for England. 
This design did 
actually appear, the following year, for one international match, without 
the World Cup lettering, where the white band across the chest of Turkey's red 
shirts, gave the FA a reason to replace the white home shirt with the 
blue. 
The first two photos at the top left of the page 
are of the shirt issued to Neil Webb. They appear by kind permission of the 
		Neville Evans National Football Shirt Collection (curator Simon Shakeshaft). 
Next picture along (the number 17 shirt) 
is signed by the whole squad and 
it was issued to David Platt. This shirt is part of 
Richard Clarke's Morrell Collection. |  
        
        ____________________ CG/PY/JB |  |