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P 3 W 2 D 1 L 0
F 4:A 1
83% successful
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Description |
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Two-tone indigo-blue
wide-striped short-sleeved shirt. Each wide stripe edged with a thin
white stripe. Lighter tone achieved with very fine white stripes. Shadow pattern of thick diagonal stripes rising from left to
right. Indigo blue winged collar, with very fine white hoops, edged with thick white stripe and
adjacent thin red-and-navy-blue stripe. Large white curved insert
beneath the neck, split down the middle, with a white button fastening
via a loop of white material attached to the left side of the insert.
Embroidered emblem, with white margin, on darker centre-chest stripe,
with white registered trademark underneath left-hand side of emblem,
'ENGLAND' in capitalised white lettering below it and 'UMBRO' in large
capitalised white lettering above it. White number, with red border, on
back and in the centre of the chest, beneath the emblem, in same font
as previous England shirts.
Two-tone indigo blue shorts,
with white drawstring and shadow pattern of thick diagonal stripes
rising from left to right, as per shirt. Darker centre stripe edged on each side with a
thin diagonal navy-blue-and-red stripe, and adjacent thick diagonal
white stripe, edging the lighter seam-stripes, containing very fine
white stripes. Seam-stripes are wider at the hem
than the waistband. Darker rear of shorts. 'UMBRO'
in large capitalised white lettering on left thigh of seam-stripe. Embroidered emblem on
right thigh of seam-stripe, with white registered trademark underneath
left-hand side of emblem and 'ENGLAND' in capitalised white lettering
below it. White number, with red border in the same font as on the
shirt, but with the inner sections of the numbers 6, 8, 9 and 0 filled
in with red, above the emblem on right thigh, overlaying diagonal stripes when
number includes two digits.
Indigo blue socks
of darker tone, with thick navy-blue hoop across tops and two thick
white hoops around calf, edged with thin navy-blue hoops and with 'UMBRO'
in capitalised white lettering in-between. |
Variations |
- A long-sleeved
version of the shirt was also worn.
The cuffs were indigo blue,
with a thin navy-blue-and-red stripe, and adjacent thick white stripe at the
beginning of the cuffs.
- For the game against
Bulgaria, the number on the reverse was red, with a navy-blue border, in the
same font as for the other games. There were no numbers on the front of the
shirt or on the shorts.
- Against Germany, the player's surname was
printed in an arc in capitalised white lettering, with a red border, above the number on the
reverse of the shirt, in the same font as on the white shirt (pink
characters were unused).
- England had logos sewn on to the upper
sleeves against Germany. The 'Euro '96'
tournament logo was on the right arm and the UEFA Fair Play logo was on the
left arm.
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Most Appearances |
3 -
Paul Gascoigne, Paul Ince, Teddy Sheringham, Gareth Southgate
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21 players wore this shirt
in the three matches.
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Ince and Southgate played
all 300 minutes in the kit. Gascoigne and Sheringham were both
substituted against Bulgaria.
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Robbie Fowler was the only
player to make his debut in the shirt, as a substitute against Bulgaria,
the first of 26 appearances.
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Two players made their last
England appearances in the shirt. Steve Howey appeared for the fourth
time, whilst David Platt's final act as an international, on his 62nd
appearance, was to slot home England's second penalty in the shootout
against Germany.
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Top Scorers |
2 -
Les Ferdinand
1 - Alan Shearer, Teddy
Sheringham
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Ferdinand's goals were his
last two in England colours, and were scored for two different coaches (Venables
and Hoddle). His previous international goal was under the managership
of Graham Taylor.
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Shearer's goal was his fifth
of the European Championship, confirming him as the tournament's top
scorer, two goals clear of the next highest.
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Shearer and Sheringham also
scored in the penalty shootout against Germany.
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Captains |
2 - Tony
Adams
1 -
Stuart Pearce
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Adams led England throughout
the Euro '96 tournament.
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Though Alan Shearer was
appointed captain when Glenn Hoddle took over as coach, he missed the
game in Georgia through injury and Adams stepped in once more.
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Although, as
the Football Association insisted, this Umbro jersey was indigo blue, it
appeared a particularly dull grey to spectators watching from a distance and
to television viewers, and it proved highly unpopular with England fans.
Fortunately, England wore it in only three official international matches.
But it will be long
remembered because its second appearance came in
the European Championship semi-final when Germany eliminated England on penalty kicks. Some superstitious fans even blamed the
colours for
England's failure to advance to the final. England fans overwhelmingly
preferred red as the alternative shirt colour, and the Football Association
responded by reverting back to red change kits as a result.
The shirt
continued
to bear the manufacturer's name in large, capitalised letters above the
three-lions emblem in the middle of the shirt, although now the team name, England, also appeared in
smaller capitalised letters below the emblem, perhaps to dispel the impression
it might give a stranger to football that it was the Umbro team's jersey. It was the first time
that the team name had
appeared on the shirt itself.
Although the semi-final ended in
tears, it could have been a glorious night in England's history. Paul Gascoigne
was literally inches away from getting a touch to Alan Shearer's cross that
would have undoubtedly sealed England's place in the final, due to the 'golden
goal' rule being in operation.
One final appearance for the
kit came in the following season's World Cup qualifying campaign, when
England secured a comfortable three points in Georgia. Their confidence was
about to be tested by Italy in the New Year, however... |
Matches in which England wore the
1996 Away Blue Uniform |
729 |
9 November 1996 -
Georgia 0 England 2 [0-2]
Boris Paichadze National Stadium, Didube-Chugureti, Tbilisi (48,000) |
Sheringham, Ferdinand |
AW |
It was also worn on the bench by
unused substitutes,
Mark Wright (v. Bulgaria),
Nick Barmby
and Phil Neville (v. Germany) and
Matthew Le Tissier (v. Georgia).
1/3
indicates the players that wore the long-sleeved version and the
number of matches in which they wore it (Anderton, Batty, Beckham,
Hinchcliffe, Ince and Sheringham only wore
the long-sleeved version of this shirt). Gascoigne started all three
matches in the short-sleeved version and changed to long sleeves at
half-time on each occasion.
The
youth teams wore the same design, except that each wore an embroidered
scroll below the emblem, within which YOUTH was displayed, in white.
England's Under-21 team wore an
identical kit to the full international team, including numbers on the
front of the shirt and on the shorts, in the 1996-97 season.
England's Record wearing the 1996 Blue
Shirt |
Type |
P |
W |
D |
L |
F |
A |
GD |
FTS
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CS |
FAv |
AAv |
Pts % |
W/L |
Home |
2 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
+1 |
0 |
1 |
1.00 |
0.50 |
75.0 |
+1 |
Away |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
+2 |
0 |
1 |
2.00 |
0.00 |
100.0 |
+1 |
Total |
3 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
1 |
+3 |
0 |
2 |
1.333 |
0.333 |
83.3 |
+2 |
A
shirt believed to have been worn by Jason Wilcox in the unofficial game
against Hong Kong Golden Select on 26 May 1996. What was unusual about this game
was that the numbers 6, 8, 9 and 0 had their inner sections coloured red. These
were changed to show the background of the shirt for the European Championship
finals, but only on the shirts. The smaller numbers on the shorts were filled in
as per the shirt numbers in Hong Kong.
From Richard Clarke's 'Three Lions - England Match Worn Shirts'
Facebook Collection.
____________________
JB/PY/CG/GI
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