| Euro 2008 Kits - Group D |
| Written by Chris T. Ketcham |
| Monday, 09 June 2008 14:20 |
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Well you knew it wouldn't be long before Kit Aesthetics weighed in on Euro 2008 matters. And here Chris is, taking a look at the pros and cons of every team kit in the competition. We'll have four articles, one for each group. And we start it off with Group D.
The richest clubs in the international world of soccer reside in Europe. With deep coffers, savvy marketing, good scouting, and brazen poaching the big clubs stay big and the small clubs stay small. Football imitates life. Watching the big powerhouse league winners like Real Madrid, Inter Milan, and Manchester United is a study in managers and players finding the right blend of ego, skill, depth, injury recovery, and a bit of luck. In all the major soccer leagues the other big clubs that floundered this year were just as fascinating. Watching Barcelona and Arsenal’s magic style of play die slow deaths with unhappy players and bad luck with injuries, both real and questionable, made this an enjoyable campaign all around. Not quite the same in Germany where Bayern Munich, smarting from their weak 2006-2007 season bought a bunch of top-class talent and reasserted their dominance of the Bundesliga.
With all the European seasons over and the Champions League trophy resting in Manchester we turn our attention to the European Championship. Albion Road will delve into the triumphs and disappointments of this tournament. The collective national hand-wringing of England upon their failure to qualify is a spectacle in itself. I love all the teams that never seem to live up to their potential and talent level while a scrappy, well-coached outfit like Greece can seemingly come out of nowhere and take the trophy.
There are four flavors of kits this season: Adidias, Nike, Puma, and Umbro. Each kit manufacturer has not done all that much to distinguish the designs besides use national team colors.
Group D has Spain looking to be in the best position, or at least that is what Jose Mourino said earlier. Since I tend to root for teams that fail to live up to their potential, Spain is perfect—they have a wealth of talent that never seems to come together when it really counts. As for the rest of the teams in Group D, it’s a roll of the dice. I feel like other teams will be more wary of Greece—just like how the sophomore season of a promoted Premiership team is always hard now that the other clubs have figured them out. Russia and Sweden can play really well or really horribly. I never really know what to expect with them.
Spain has my favorite home kit of the whole tournament. It all just comes together well. Adidas has cool numbers and I love the huge team crest for the Spanish national team. I feel the complete opposite about the away strip. What is that gold color and why would anyone want to wear it playing soccer? Yuck! I am not impressed.
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