Sunday, February 03, 2008

Obscure Kits From British Football History #5

Crystal Palace (home)
1971/1972 season


When it comes to football kits, there are only so many different designs you can create which are simple, distinguished and can last the test of time. Whoever it was that decided black and white stripes were a winning combination must still be receiving royalties from Juventus, Newcastle United, Botafogo and many other clubs to this day.

Similarly, that pairing up of green and white hoops must have put a very large tick in the box for the people running Celtic and Sporting Lisbon when they were trying to work out what their team should wear.

As for Ajax, they must be have one of the most exclusive niches of all, thanks to that very individualistic broad red stripe running down the middle of their clean white shirts.

We can only guess it was this last example that prompted the chairman of Crystal Palace to go for something similar in the early 1970's when he opted to change the team's strip, but a big red stripe was too obvious. What they needed was something that nodded noticeably in that direction yet had a degree of distinction that would make the design all their own.

And so it was that in the 1971/72 season, Crystal Palace FC unleashed the following kit onto an unsuspecting world:



Yes, witness one and all the Double Stripe of Crystal Palace, replete in claret and blue.

Now at this point, the younger folk amongst you may be starting to make comparisons with the kit Crystal Palace wore on and off from 1976 onwards - you know, the one with the red and blue diagonal sash on a white background.

The thing to note here, though, is that while these days we're all used to seeing Palace wearing red and blue the whole time, back then their kit sported decidedly Burnleyesque hues.

So this was something of a radical departure from either claret and blue shirts or plain white ones as had been worn before it. This was a bold move and one which perhaps epitomised a brave new identity for the team and one which would would spark a change of fortunes for Crystal Palace.

It was. Call it coincidence if you will, but the introduction of the double-stripe initiated a gradual decline for the club which would see them drop from the First Division to the Third in the space of three seasons. As if to admit the new styling had had a derogatory effect on them, Crystal Palace altered their kit slightly for 1972/73, separating the claret and blue stripes with a thin white one.

It had no effect. Palace languished in the Second and Third Divisions until 1980 when Terry Venables' managerial expertise put them back where they were a decade earlier, but by then the claret and blue had gone, as had that distinctive two-stripe design.

It's interesting to note that this jinx of a design has never been reintroduced by the club since, although it was chosen by the fans as the basis for a special kit to be worn in celebration of Palace's centenary in 2005. In the two games it appeared in, both of them ended as 2-0 wins for Crystal Palace.

Maybe they were a bit harsh to abandon that design after all...

9 comments:

Terry Duffelen said...

The white stripe was, in fact, worn by the great Don Rogers and paddy Mulligan as they swept aside Manchester United 5-0 at Selhurst Park. Of Palace's finest hours so it wasn't all bad.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRPvJ-fYqDA

Chris O said...

Great clip - thanks Duffman! Are you a Palace fan yourself?

That was definitely a United team in freefall, wasn't it? I only a recognised a few of the names in their team.

Great third goal by Rogers. A pretty good fourth as well!

Terry Duffelen said...

Hi Chris. Yes I am a Palace fan for my sins.

United were indeed a poor side back then and I believe were relegated at the end of the season. I also think that United manager Wilf McGuiness paid for that result with his job. But I stand to be corrected.

As for Palace, well the performance proved to be a false dawn and did not prevent to arrest the clubs decline. Nevertheless, a cracking result.

Chris O said...

Having looked into Wilf McGuinness' time at Man United, I'm reliably informed that it was Frank O'Farrell who lost his job following that 5-0 win. It all amounts to the same thing though - Palace cost someone their job that night!

How do you rate your team's chances of promotion this season?

Anonymous said...

I remember having crystal palace as one of my subbuteo teams. You could tell whoever did the painting had trouble with the two stripes as the colours generally overran. Looked a right mess.

Terry Duffelen said...

A healthy dose of pessimism is required whenever talking about Palace. My personal view is that we will make it into the play offs. From there, who knows? Our record in the “post season”, if I can call it that, is quite good. I’m extremely pleased with the way Warnock has turned around some of the under-achievers there and brought some of the kids through.

Instinctively though, I feel it’s a season too soon for Palace. Promotion would almost certainly lead to humiliation in the Premier League… again.

Chris O said...

lol @ thegreatdandini!!! Great shout!!

Sounds like Warnock's not doing too bad a job there then, Duffman? Looking at your recent results, they generally look pretty good, but would you say consistency's also a bit of an issue?

Terry Duffelen said...

Well one defeat in seventeen is pretty consistent. However I take your point. What worries me is if we don't get back to winning ways soon we could end up sliding back down the table as quickly as we climbed it. Much depends on Friday's derby game at the hated Charlton. Its a cliche I know but I would love it if we beat them... love it.

Chris O said...

I shall keep my eyes peeled for *that* result... :-)

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