Saturday, April 12, 2008

Obscure Kits From British Football History #6

Sunderland (home)
1981-1983


We've talked before about how some teams are synonymous with a particular look to the kit they wear. Many teams prefer a bold strip of just one colour (think Real Madrid and Liverpool), others like to wear hoops (a la Queens Park Rangers and Sporting Lisbon) while a distinct minority have adopted an interesting half-an-half appearance (such as Feyenoord and Blackburn Rovers).

For many though, it always was and always will be stripes for their club's kit. One such team that falls into that category is Sunderland, and as you'll all be aware, they consider their red and white stripes to be the perfect antidote to the black and white of their near neighbours Newcastle United.

Those big red and white bands running the full length of the Sunderland shirt have almost always been accompanied by black shorts, except for a spell between 1961 and 1973 when they were white. The stripes seemed a non-negotiable facet to the club's identity, but when Sunderland returned to the old First Division in 1980 after a three-season lay-off, a change to the kit was not far off.

Someone somewhere decided that as this was the start of a new era in the top flight for The Rokerites, the kit should reflect the new beginning that was underway. For the 1980-81 season, Sunderland were to wear a home strip featuring no bold red and white stripes, no black shorts - not even white shorts. This was something utterly different than anything they'd worn before.

The new kit was made by Le Coq Sportif who, back then, were a major manufacturer of football attire for people like Aston Villa, Tottenham Hotspur and even the Argentinean national team. They took on the Sunderland brief and gave them a design which, like all individual and revolutionary designs, would go down in history as either an unsurpassable classic or a never-to-be-repeated aberration.

The new shirt was predominantly white but featured a series of double tramlines in red running from top to bottom. These weren't stripes in the old-fashioned sense, nor were they the pinstripes that were so prevalent in the game around this time. These were 'thin stripes' and they were about as popular as they were visible from not-too-far away.

Even the shorts were red - another dramatic break from tradition - but then that's probably the only colour they could have been as white or black might have looked a bit silly. Finish off the job with a pair of red socks and there you have it - a kit that lasted for two seasons and has never been matched before or since.

It didn't go down well and the design was scrapped in 1983, as were the manufacturers. When Nike arrived as a new name on the British sportswear scene, they did the decent thing and wasted no time in reinstating the thick red and white stripes again. The old kit didn't even have the kudos of being worn by anyone famous (apart from Ally McCoist, pictured) such was the very ordinary team they had back then.

We can therefore say this was just an interesting experiment that's best left in the scrapbook of British Football Kit Design for another twenty-five years until someone else stumbles upon it. Sometimes you just don't win anything for trying to be revolutionary. Tradition is what people like, and more often than not as a football kit designer, you're best of just staying with the tried and trusted. It's just a shame no-one at Le Coq Sportif knew that.

6 comments:

Keving said...

Chris O: others like to wear hoops (a la Queens Park Rangers and Sporting Lisbon)

Headmasters office....school boy error. Do I need to go further?

#;-)

Only one team wears hoops.

Keving said...

That top is horrible. Or is it just the annoying smurking wee fud that is wearing it wie his dodgy hair ala second rate Charlie Nick mullet?

Anonymous said...

Could any mackems tell of any book or any anecdotal evidence they have that the Sunderland kit was the inspiration for Athletic Bilabo's. I always believed that it was, until recently hearing that Bilbao's kit was red & white stripes because that was the material used to make matresses - and was therefore cheap when bought in bulk.

So,is the Sunderland story a myth?

Chris O said...

Keving, what can I say... I've been such a fool... how could I mention Sporting Lisbon and overlook The Bhoys?!?!? I feel so ashamed... :)

Ah yes, a pubescent Ally McMoist... a picture worthy of a public health warning if ever there was one...

I've never heard the story about the mattress material, Lee. I've heard the one about Sunderland being the inspiration for the kit, but without some further research I can't say for certain which story's correct!

Keving said...

I think the story is a worker from Sunderland went to work in Bilboa....

Chris O said...

Yes - apparently Bilbao had many tin mines but no expertise on how to excavate the material. I think the story goes that they sent people to Britain where there were already 'experts' on the subject, and when they returned to the Basque country, they decided to try out their new-found game of football.

It's quite possible that Sunderland would have been one of their stopping off points, I'd suggest.

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