|
|
P 13 W 6 D 5
L 2 F 20:A 9
65% successful |
Description |
|
|
|
|
White short-sleeved shirt.
Zig-zag shadow pattern includes three huge emblems down right-hand side,
the top one being underneath the embroidered Umbro logo, but overlapping
the emblem beneath, which, in turn, overlaps the lower emblem. Shadow
pattern across left breast comprises the left halves of two sets of two
huge concentric diamonds, the top set being underneath the large
embroidered emblem, but overlapping the lower set of diamonds. Navy-blue
winged collar, edged with a thin red stripe. Small embroidered emblem
below neck, with a diagonal thin red stripe and an adjacent diagonal
thick navy-blue stripe either side of the emblem, forming a 'V' shape,
but without joining in the middle. New-style embroidered emblem, with
white margin,
on left breast. Two embroidered navy-blue concentric diamonds on right
breast, with 'UMBRO' in
capitalised navy-blue
lettering underneath and a registered trademark placed above the gap
between the 'R' and the 'O' in navy blue. Small navy-blue rectangular
tag down right-hand side, with 'ENGLAND' in capitalised white lettering.
Plain red number on back in the same font as that worn on the shorts
at the 1992 European Championship final tournament.
Navy-blue shorts,
with red drawstring, edged with thick red hoop around each leg. Zig-zag
shadow pattern. Two red
rectangular strips on each side of waistband, each containing two
white emblems, one at each end of the strip, and 'ENGLAND' in capitalised
white lettering in the middle of each strip, between the emblems. Two
embroidered white concentric diamonds on left thigh, with 'UMBRO' in
capitalised white lettering underneath and a registered trademark placed
above the gap between the 'R' and the 'O' in white. New-style
embroidered emblem on right thigh. Small white rectangular tag down
left-hand seam, with 'ENGLAND' in capitalised navy-blue lettering.
White socks, with
navy-blue turnover and zig-zag shadow pattern. Sets of two red concentric diamonds repeating around
each turnover, with two red diagonal stripes parallel to top right and
bottom left of each outer diamond, all edged with two red hoops. |
Variations |
- For the first game
in which the shirt was worn, the emblem had not changed from the previous
kit and did not include the white margin, whilst the shorts included the
new-style emblem.
- On the back of
the shirt worn against Brazil, the player's surname was printed above the
number in capitalised plain-red lettering in a different font to that worn in the previous year's
European Championship (pink characters were unused).
- For the last seven
games in which this shirt was worn (from the beginning of the 1993-94
season), two embroidered red concentric
diamonds were worn on the right hip, with OFFICIAL in large black
capitalised letters running right across it, followed by a small black
circle with TM in black inside it, LICENSED in black across the
lower half of the logo and FOOTBALL PRODUCT in black across the bottom of
the logo.
- In the 1993 US Cup
games, against the United States and Brazil, on the right thigh of the shorts, to the left of the emblem, England
wore white numbers in the same font as on the back of the shirt.
|
Most Appearances |
12 - David Platt (1 sub)
11 - Tony Adams
9 - Paul Ince, Ian Wright (5
sub)
-
Nine players made their international debut
in the kit, with Teddy Sheringham going on to win 51 caps, Steve
McManaman, 37, and Graeme Le Saux, 36.
-
Seven players won their last cap in the
shirt, including Paul Parker making his 19th appearance, Carlton
Palmer, his 18th and Tony Dorigo, his 15th.
-
Neil Ruddock was the kit's only
one-cap wonder, starting and ending his international career as the uniform
also appeared for the last time, against Nigeria.
|
Top Scorers |
9 - David
Platt
2 - Les
Ferdinand, Paul Gascoigne, Alan Shearer
-
Platt scored nine of the
twenty goals scored by England in this shirt.
-
Four players scored their first England
goal in this kit, with Ian Wright going on to hit nine.
-
John Barnes scored his eleventh
and last international goal with a spectacular free-kick against the
Netherlands.
-
Carlton Palmer netted his only England goal,
on the
shirt's debut, against San Marino.
|
Captains |
10 - David
Platt
1 - Tony
Adams, Paul Ince, Stuart Pearce
|
|
This was the first England kit in the new
two-year cycle, with Umbro now introducing a new kit every year, alternating
between first and second choices.
It was a smart outfit, and the designers fully
exploited the England name and emblem, which appeared in various places around
the kit. For the first time, a white
margin surrounded the three lions within the emblem, which, as a result, was
larger than previously. This feature was not discontinued until the 1999
home white and
away red
shirts, on which the emblem's traditional design reappeared.
The two complete years in which the kit was
worn straddled the managerial tenures of Graham Taylor, and his successor, Terry Venables, though Taylor's team wore it for eight of their games, all competitive. Venables' fixtures were all friendlies, as England did not have to
qualify for the 1996 European Championship, because they were the host nation.
When the kit first appeared, England had already
dropped a home point in the World Cup qualifying campaign, to Norway, and the
manager would feel obliged to resign at the end of a disastrous year, which saw
England suffer two defeats and another dropped home point, leaving them in third
place behind Norway and the Netherlands in the final group standings.
With over two years to go to Euro
'96, it was time for a new coach to experiment. Results were not as important
and England made steady progress under Venables. Another new kit would take
them through the next year and then the tournament itself.
The
first two photos above, top left, show one of Tony Dorigo's shirts from the
Brazil game in the 1993 US Cup. They appear by kind permission of the Neville
Evans National Football Shirt Collection (curator Simon Shakeshaft).
Next picture along shows one of Carlton Palmer's shirts from
the game against Brazil. This is part of Richard Clarke's Morrell
Collection.
|
Matches in which England wore the
1993 Home White Uniform |
694 |
28 April 1993 -
England 2
Netherlands 2 [2-1]
Wembley Stadium, Wembley, London (73,163) |
Barnes, Platt
Bergkamp, Van Vossen (pen) |
HD |
695 |
29 May 1993 -
Poland 1
England 1
[1-0]
Stadion Śląski, Katowicka, Chorzów (65,000) |
Adamczuk
Wright |
AD |
696 |
2 June 1993 -
Norway 2 England 0 [1-0]
Ullevål Stadion, Ullevål, Oslo (22,256) |
Leonhardsen, Bohinen |
AL |
U.S. Cup |
698 |
13 June 1993 -
England
1
Brazil 1
[0-0]
Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, Washington, D.C. (54,118) |
Platt
Márcio Santos |
ND |
Other match in which England wore
the 1993 Home Blue
Shorts |
697 |
9 June 1993 -
United States 2 England 0
[1-0]
Foxboro Stadium, Boston, Massachusetts (37,652) |
Dooley, Lalas |
AL |
England
wore the 1990 red away shirts and socks with the blue home
shorts, against United States. |
It was also worn on the bench by
unused substitutes, John Beresford, John Scales, Trevor Steven and NIgel Winterburn.
Match in which England B wore the
1993 Home White Uniform |
56 |
13 December 1994 -
England
2 Republic of Ireland
0 [1-0]
Anfield, Liverpool
(7,431) |
Cole, Fowler |
HW |
England: K.Pressman (David James), Warren Barton, J.Beresford, Tim Sherwood,
John Scales (Ugo Ehiogu), Neil Ruddock, Sol Campbell (Jamie Redknapp), Chris
Sutton (Nick Barmby), Andy Cole (Robbie Fowler), R.Fox, Jason Wilcox. |
The Youth teams (Under-19s and
below) wore the same design, except that each wore an embroidered scroll below
the emblem, within which YOUTH was displayed, in navy blue. England's
Under-21, Semi-Professional and B teams wore an identical kit to the full
international team, as did the women's team, beginning in the 1993-94 season.
When the Under-19s played in Australia in the World Youth
Championship in 1993, each player's surname was worn in red on the back of the
shirt above the number, in the same font as was to be used in the US Cup
(Steve Watson also wore his first initial i.e. S. WATSON to distinguish him
from goalkeeper, David Watson, whilst Chris Bart-Williams wore WILLIAMS on his
back). They wore white numbers on the right thigh of
the shorts, to the left of the emblem, in the same font as on the back of the
shirts, and most players wore long-sleeved shirts, with red and navy-blue
striped cuffs. Instead of the 'YOUTH' scroll, the following was displayed below the emblem on the left breast (not
actual font):
WORLD YOUTH CHAMPIONSHIPS
AUSTRALIA 1993
England's Record wearing the 1993 Home
Shirt |
Type |
P |
W |
D |
L |
F |
A |
GD |
FTS
|
CS |
FAv |
AAv |
Pts % |
W/L |
Home |
8 |
5 |
3 |
0 |
16 |
3 |
+13 |
1 |
6 |
2.00 |
0.375 |
81.3 |
+5 |
Away |
4 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
5 |
-2 |
2 |
1 |
0.75 |
1.25 |
37.5 |
-1 |
Neutral |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
=0 |
0 |
0 |
1.00 |
1.00 |
50.0 |
=0 |
Total |
13 |
6 |
5 |
2 |
20 |
9 |
+11 |
3 |
7 |
1.538 |
0.692 |
65.4 |
+4 |
____________________
CG/GI/PY
|
|