France Jersey 1984 Home Retro
PRICE:
- 1-1 pcsUS$33.99
- 2-9 pcsUS$31.99
- 10-20 pcsUS$29.99
- 21-50 pcsUS$27.99
- 51-100 pcsUS$25.99
PRICE:
- 1-1 pcsUS$33.99
- 2-9 pcsUS$31.99
- 10-20 pcsUS$29.99
- 21-50 pcsUS$27.99
- 51-100 pcsUS$25.99
SIZE:
CUSTOMIZE
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DESCRIPTION
1984 France Home Blue Retro Soccer Jerseys Shirt
Model Year: 1984
Material: Polyester
Type of Brand Logo: Embroidered
Type of Team Badge: Embroidered
Version:Fan
Made for: Man
This is the blue jersey with red stripes that went down in the history of the French football team at the 1984 euro. France won an official competition for the first time in its history by beating Spain 2-0 in the Euro final.
Details of Retro France Adidas Jersey
Since Adidas became their supplier in 1972, France's kits got more and more remarkable. The Adidas France 1970s and 1980s home kits were all relatively classic, while the 1990s herald an era of very outstanding France kits. The France national team utilizes a three color system for their home uniform, composed of blue shirt, white socks and red socks. The team's three colors originate from the national flag of France, known as the tricolore.
However, this France 1984 shirt is a much more modern take on the traditional look. It comes with the eye-catching red stripe andt the Three white pinstripes. what's more, it has lighter horizontal stripes.
There is also no classic collar, no sleeve cuffs and other elements. The red stripe is also thciker than the one of the original designs.
The1984 European Championship took place in France and, ad hosts, their team managed to win the cup in a hard-fought final against Spain. Michel Platini was the top scorer of the tournament.
With a small winged collar in blue and the classic FFF badge proudly sat on the red stripe, this was a design that reinforced the bleu-blanc-rouge national colours at the perfect moment in time.
And, knowing a good thing when they saw it, adidas retained the classic red stripe from the '84 shirt and used it again and again. It appeared in a stylised, reinvented form on the France shirt for Euro 2000 (another win), Euro 2004, Euro 2008 and World Cup 2010 (the last adidas shirt before Nike replaced them in 2011). Notable these days by its absence, it became almost an essential element of many France shirts over a 25-year period.
Maybe you would wonder why such a shirt with just a few simple elements was so unique and popular? Right? It is, at the end of the day, just a blue shirt with one broad red stripe, three thinner white ones below it and three more along the sleeves (as seen on all adidas shirts at the time). So why is it such a beautiful thing?
Perhaps it's that red stripe - the first time red had ever been used on a France shirt as a bold feature in its own right (save for a bit of trim on the collar in the late-'60s/early-'70s). Perhaps it was the three white stripes below - sweeping away the pinstripes of previous shirts with a simplified, bolder look, rotated through 90 degrees. More likely, it seems, it was the sheer fact that the twin-colour twin-thickness nature of the stripes had never been tried before, let alone designed with such panache.
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